Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 10, 3069-3078, Copyright © 1990 by Society for Neuroscience
Effects of aging on nicotinic and muscarinic autoreceptor function in the rat brain: relationship to presynaptic cholinergic markers and binding sites
DM Araujo, PA Lapchak, MJ Meaney, B Collier and R Quirion
Department of Psychiatry, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
The main objective of the present work was to determine whether the
regulation of ACh release by nicotinic and muscarinic autoreceptors is
compromised in the aged rat brain. For this, the effects of the nicotinic
agonist N-methylcarbamylcholine (MCC) and the muscarinic-M2 antagonist
AF-DX 116 on ACh release from brain slices of young (3-month- old), adult
(9-month-old), and aged (27-month-old) rats were tested. The ability of MCC
to enhance spontaneous ACh release in hippocampal, cerebral cortical, and
cerebellar slices was only modestly altered with age. In contrast, the
sensitivity of muscarinic autoreceptors in the aged hippocampus and
cerebral cortex, but not the striatum, to blockade by the muscarinic-M2
antagonist AF-DX 116 was severely attenuated. To assess whether the
age-related changes in cholinergic autoreceptor function may be due to
deficits in presynaptic cholinergic markers, we tested whether choline
acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity, basal and evoked ACh release, and
nicotinic and muscarinic binding sites are altered in the aged rats. ChAT
activity in forebrain regions was decreased in the aged compared to the
young and mature adult rats. Furthermore, the potassium-evoked, but not the
spontaneous, release of ACh was markedly depressed in striatal,
hippocampal, and cortical slices of aged rats. The densities of nicotinic
and muscarinic-M2 binding sites, assessed using 3H-MCC and 3H-AF-DX 116 as
selective ligands, respectively, were markedly reduced in homogenates of
the striatum, hippocampus, cerebral cortex, and thalamus of aged rats. In
contrast, muscarinic-M1 sites, selectively labeled with 3H-pirenzepine,
were not affected. Therefore, it appears that age-related decrements in
ChAT activity and in muscarinic-M2, but not nicotinic, binding sites in the
rat brain are reflected in a decreased function of muscarinic-M2
autoreceptors. However, the positive correlation between loss of ChAT
activity, decreased muscarinic-M2 binding sites, and impaired muscarinic
autoreceptor function is clearly tissue dependent.