| Literature DB >> 31255710 |
Jordi Molgó1, Sébastien Schlumberger2, Makoto Sasaki3, Haruhiko Fuwa4, M Carmen Louzao5, Luis M Botana5, Denis Servent6, Evelyne Benoit7.
Abstract
Gambierol is a marine polycyclic ether toxin, first isolated from cultured Gambierdiscus toxicus dinoflagellates collected in French Polynesia. The chemical synthesis of gambierol permitted the analyses of its mode of action which includes the selective inhibition of voltage-gated K+ (KV) channels. In the present study we investigated the action of synthetic gambierol at vertebrate neuromuscular junctions using conventional techniques. Gambierol was studied on neuromuscular junctions in which muscle nicotinic ACh receptors have been blocked with d-tubocurarine (postsynaptic block), or in junctions in which quantal ACh release has been greatly reduced by a low Ca2+-high Mg2+ medium or by botulinum neurotoxin type-A (BoNT/A) (presynaptic block). Results show that nanomolar concentrations of gambierol inhibited the fast K+ current and prolonged the duration of the presynaptic action potential in motor nerve terminals, as revealed by presynaptic focal current recordings, increased stimulus-evoked quantal content in junctions blocked by high Mg2+-low Ca2+ medium, and by BoNT/A, reversed the postsynaptic block produced by d-tubocurarine and increased the transient Ca2+ signals in response to nerve-stimulation (1-10 Hz) in nerve terminals loaded with fluo-3/AM. The results suggest that gambierol, which on equimolar basis is more potent than 3,4-diaminopyridine, can have potential application in pathologies in which it is necessary to antagonize pre- or post-synaptic neuromuscular block, or both. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Honoring Ricardo Miledi - outstanding neuroscientist of XX-XXI centuries.Entities:
Keywords: Ca(2+) transients; botulinum type A neurotoxin; marine biotoxin; nerve terminal; potassium current; quantal transmitter release
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31255710 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2019.06.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroscience ISSN: 0306-4522 Impact factor: 3.590