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The FASEB Journal, Vol 7, 1171-1178, Copyright © 1993 by The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology


RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS

Sigma receptors modulate nicotinic receptor function in adrenal chromaffin cells

IA Paul, AS Basile, E Rojas, MB Youdim, B De Costa, P Skolnick, HB Pollard and GA Kuijpers
Laboratory of Neuroscience, National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.

Neither the physiological function of sigma (sigma) receptors nor the cellular mechanism responsible for the pharmacological effects of sigma receptor ligands is known. We now report that sigma receptor ligands noncompetitively inhibit nicotine-stimulated catecholamine release from bovine adrenal chromaffin cells in a concentration-dependent and reversible manner. The rank order of potency of ligands to inhibit nicotine-stimulated catecholamine release is significantly correlated (P < 0.005) with that observed in radioligand binding assays selective for the sigma 1 receptor subtype. This naltrexone-insensitive effect is paralleled by an inhibition of nicotine-stimulated increases in [Ca2+]i. Sigma ligands were without effect on catecholamine release or [Ca2+]i in the absence of nicotine. In addition, nicotine accelerated the association of the sigma receptor selective radioligand, [3H](+)pentazocine, to adrenal medullary homogenates while having no effect on the rate of ligand dissociation, consistent with a sigma ligand binding site closely associated with and allosterically modulated by the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. Thus, the actions of agonists at the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor in bovine chromaffin cells are modulated by sigma 1 receptor selective ligands.


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M. Schaefer, U. F. Habenicht, M. Bräutigam, and T. Gudermann
Steroidal Sigma Receptor Ligands Affect Signaling Pathways in Human Spermatozoa
Biol Reprod, July 1, 2000; 63(1): 57 - 63.
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Copyright © 1993 by The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.