Tachykinin receptors and intestinal motility
1997; NRC Research Press; Volume: 75; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1139/cjpp-75-6-696
ISSN1205-7541
AutoresCarlo Alberto Maggi, R.-M. Catalioto, Marco Criscuoli, Paola Cucchi, Sandro Giuliani, Alessandro Lecci, Annalisa Lippi, Stefania Meini, Riccardo Patacchini, Anna Rita Renzetti, Paolo Santicioli, Manuela Tramontana, Vladimir Zagorodnyuk, Antonio Giachetti,
Tópico(s)Receptor Mechanisms and Signaling
ResumoSubstance P (SP) and neurokinin A (NKA) are synthesized by enteric cholinergic motorneurons that project to the longitudinal and circular muscle of the mammalian intestine. Thus, acetylcholine, SP, and NKA are the excitatory neuromuscular transmitters in the intestine. Tachykinin NK1 and NK2 receptors are expressed by smooth muscle cells in most regions of the intestine: the corelease of SP and NKA from nerves thus realizes paradigms of tachykininergic cotransmission. Examples have been found in which a cooperative model can be applied to account for the action of SP-NKA acting at NK1 and NK2 receptors (e.g., circular muscle of guinea-pig duodenum), as well as examples in which the message produced by activation of the two receptors diverges sharply in producing responses that have a markedly different time course and use different effector systems (e.g., circular muscle of guinea-pig colon). NK3 receptors are expressed on both excitatory and inhibitory motor neurons: indirect contractions (via release of acetylcholine and tachykinins) and relaxations (via release of nitric oxide) can be evoked in the gut by selective stimulation of NK3 receptors. Although a role of NK3 receptors in certain enteric reflexes has been evidenced, the importance of this system in mediating hexamethonium-resistant enteric transmission appears less important than previously speculated.
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