Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 8, 1694-1703, Copyright © 1988 by Society for Neuroscience
Modulation of calcium current and diverse K+ currents in identified Hermissenda neurons by small cardioactive peptide B
J Acosta-Urquidi
Friday Harbor Laboratories, Friday Harbor, Washington 98250.
The molluscan neuropeptides, small cardioactive peptides A and B (SCPA,B),
are known to modulate the responses of many molluscan central and
peripheral target cells (see review by Lloyd, 1986), but their full range
of physiological actions remains unknown. External application of SCPB
(1-10 microM) modified diverse ionic conductances in a set of giant
identifiable neurons in the brain of the marine mollusk Hermissenda
crassicornis. SCPB caused a transient depolarization and increased input
resistance that enhanced or promoted cell firing. Under voltage-clamp, SCPB
reduced a "background" residual current (IR), reduced early transient K+
current (IA), reduced a delayed K+ current (IK(V], and enhanced ICa, IBa,
and a Ca2+-activated K+ current, IK(Ca). In tetraethylammonium chloride
(TEA) saline, SCPB enhanced the amplitude and duration and reduced the
threshold of evoked Ca and Ba spikes. Immunocytochemical staining
techniques have localized an endogenous SCPB-like peptide in numerous
somata and their neurites in the nervous system of Hermissenda (Longley and
Longley, 1985; Watson and Willows, 1986). These data are consistent with a
role for SCPB as a neurotransmitter/neurohormone modulator of neuronal
excitability in Hermissenda. A neurotransmitter role for endogenous SCPs
has been proposed for a synaptic pair of cultured neurons in the Aplysia
buccal ganglion (Lloyd et al., 1986). SCPB has been implicated in the
control of feeding motor output in Aplysia (Sossin et al., 1986) and
Tritonia (Willows and Watson, 1986), and in the presynaptic facilitation of
sensory neurons mediating the gill and siphon defensive withdrawal reflex
in Aplysia (Abrams et al., 1984).