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The Journal of Neuroscience, December 1, 1998, 18(23):9766-9779
Pituitary Adenylate Cyclase-Activating Polypeptide Expression and
Modulation of Neuronal Excitability in Guinea Pig Cardiac Ganglia
Karen M.
Braas,
Victor
May,
Susan A.
Harakall,
Jean C.
Hardwick, and
Rodney L.
Parsons
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, The University of Vermont,
College of Medicine, Burlington, Vermont 05405
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ABSTRACT |
Cardiac output is regulated by the coordinate interactions of
stimulatory sympathetic and inhibitory parasympathetic signals. Intracardiac parasympathetic ganglia are integrative centers of cardiac
regulation, and modulation of the parasympathetic drive on the heart is
accomplished by altering intrinsic cardiac ganglion neuron
excitability. The pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide
(PACAP)/vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) family of peptides
modulates cardiac function, and in guinea pig heart, PACAP appears to
act directly on intrinsic parasympathetic cardiac ganglia neurons
through PACAP-selective receptors. A multidisciplinary project tested
whether cardiac PACAP peptides act through PACAP-selective receptors as
excitatory neuromodulators amplifying the parasympathetic inhibition
from guinea pig cardiac ganglia. The in vivo sources of
regulatory PACAP peptides were localized immunocytochemically to
neuronal fibers and a subpopulation of intrinsic postganglionic cardiac
neurons. RT-PCR confirmed that cardiac ganglia expressed proPACAP
transcripts and have PACAP peptide biosynthetic capabilities. Messenger
RNA encoding PACAP-selective PAC1 receptor isoforms were also present
in cardiac ganglia. Alternative splicing of PAC1 receptor transcripts
produced predominant expression of the very short variant
with neither HIP nor HOP cassettes; lower levels of the PAC1HOP2
receptor mRNA were present. Almost all of the parasympathetic neurons
expressed membrane-associated PAC1 receptor proteins, localized
immunocytochemically, which correlated with the population of cells
that responded physiologically to PACAP peptides. PACAP depolarized
cardiac ganglia neurons and increased neuronal membrane
excitability. The rank order of peptide potency on membrane
excitability in response to depolarizing currents was
PACAP27>PACAP38>VIP. The PACAP-induced increase in excitability was
not a function of membrane depolarization nor was it caused by
alterations in action potential configuration. These results support
roles for PACAP peptides as integrative modulators amplifying, through
PACAP-selective receptors, the parasympathetic cardiac ganglia
inhibition of cardiac output.
Key words:
pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide; vasoactive intestinal peptide; PACAP receptor; cardiac ganglia; parasympathetic ganglia; neuropeptide receptors; autonomic nervous
system
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INTRODUCTION |
Cardiac output reflects the net
dynamic opposing excitatory sympathetic noradrenergic and inhibitory
parasympathetic cholinergic signals (Loffelholz and Pappano, 1985 ).
Although classic models regarded autonomic ganglia as simple relay
stations propagating regulatory signals from sympathetic and
parasympathetic efferent pathways, more recent studies have
demonstrated that the neurochemical modulation of intracardiac
parasympathetic ganglia is more complex. Parasympathetic cardiac
ganglia receive not only cholinergic preganglionic inputs, but also
peptidergic afferent and sympathetic postganglionic signals that affect
the activity of intrinsic cardiac parasympathetic neurons (Loffelholz
and Pappano, 1985 ; Konopka et al., 1992 ; Randall and Wurster, 1994 ;
Hardwick et al., 1995 ; Kennedy et al., 1998 ). Furthermore, because most
of the cholinergic cardiac neurons coexpress other endogenous
neuromodulators, including nitric oxide, somatostatin, neuropeptide Y
(NPY), vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), and enkephalins, the
resultant parasympathetic drive on the heart represents an integration
of parasympathetic preganglionic inputs, as well as extrinsic and
intrinsic signals that modulate cardiac ganglia neuron excitability
(Steele et al., 1994 ; Mawe et al., 1996 ; Kennedy et al., 1998 ).
Among cardiovasoregulatory neuropeptides, pituitary adenylate
cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP), a member of the
VIP/secretin/glucagon family of peptides, has potent cardiovascular
functions (Warren et al., 1991 ; Ishizuka et al., 1992 ; Basler et al.,
1995 ; Champion et al., 1996 ; Cardell et al., 1997 ). The 175 amino acid
proPACAP precursor molecule is tissue-specifically processed to either the -amidated PACAP38 [proPACAP(131-168)] or PACAP27
[proPACAP(131-157)] (Miyata et al., 1989 ; Kimura et al., 1990 ; Ogi
et al., 1990 ); both peptides exert tissue-specific effects through
activation of specific isoforms of the G-protein-coupled
PACAP-selective (PAC1) receptors [The names of the receptor subtypes
in this manuscript conform to the nomenclature approved by the
International Union of Pharmacology (IUPHAR). The PAC1 receptor has
been termed alternatively as the type I-PACAP,
PACAP1, or PVR1 receptor. The VPAC1 receptor replaces the VIP1/PACAP, VIP1R, and PVR2 receptor
nomenclature; the VPAC2 receptor supplants
VIP2/PACAP, VIP2R, and PVR3.], and/or through the
VPAC1- or VPAC2-nonselective receptors (Ishihara et al., 1992 ;
Hashimoto et al., 1993 ; Hosoya et al., 1993 ; Lutz et al., 1993 ;
Spengler et al., 1993 ; Inagaki et al., 1994 ). Although many
species-specific PACAP effects have been attributed to direct actions
on vascular smooth muscle and/or cardiac myocytes, some studies have
suggested that PACAP has potent direct neuroregulatory effects on
cardiac ganglia function with consequences on cardiac output (Seebeck
et al., 1996 ; Yonezawa et al., 1996 ; Hirose et al., 1997 ). In guinea
pig heart tissue, for example, PACAP elicits negative chronotropic
effects through stimulation of acetylcholine release from intracardiac
neurons (Seebeck et al., 1996 ). These effects on intrinsic cardiac
neurons appear to be mediated by PACAP-selective receptors, implicating
PACAP participation in the parasympathetic control of cardiac function.
The present studies were designed to test the hypothesis that cardiac
PACAP peptides act as excitatory neuromodulators amplifying the
parasympathetic inhibition from guinea pig cardiac ganglia. Studies of
the direct electrophysiological responses of cardiac ganglia neurons to
PACAP were complemented with molecular and morphological approaches to
elucidate the expression of PACAP and PACAP-selective receptors in
ganglia tissues. We demonstrate that PACAP peptides are expressed in
neuronal fibers and a subpopulation of intrinsic cardiac ganglia
parasympathetic neurons, which correlates with endogenous proPACAP mRNA
expression. PACAP peptides exert potent excitatory influences through
cardiac neuron PAC1 receptors, amplifying the parasympathetic
inhibitory drive on the heart. These results implicate PACAP peptides
among the principal integrative peptidergic systems in the guinea pig
parasympathetic cardiac ganglia that determine cardiac output.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Tissue preparation. The studies used parasympathetic
postganglionic neurons in cardiac ganglia whole-mount preparations from adult Hartley guinea pigs (250-300 gm, mixed sex). Animals were euthanized by stunning or decapitation followed by exsanguination, and
the hearts were removed and dissected in cold Krebs' solution. The
cardiac ganglia lying in the epicardium of the atrial wall was exposed
by removal of muscle bundles and connective tissue layers as described
previously (Hardwick et al., 1995 , 1997 ; Mawe et al., 1996 ; Kennedy et
al., 1998 ). For some studies, ganglia were dissociated, and the neurons
were plated onto glass coverslips (Jeong and Wurster, 1997 ).
Immunocytochemistry. Morphological localization was
performed as described previously (Braas et al., 1994a ; May et al.,
1995 ; Mawe et al., 1996 ; Brandenburg et al., 1997 ). In brief, PACAP immunoreactivity was localized in atrial whole-mount preparations fixed
with 2% paraformaldehyde and 0.2% picric acid in 0.1 M
sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, containing 150 mM NaCl
(PBS) at 4°C for 2 hr. After washing, the tissues were permeabilized
and blocked in PBS containing 5% normal goat serum and 0.5% Triton
X-100 for 30 min, and incubated with 1:500- 1:2000 rabbit anti-PACAP
(PACAP27 antiserum, RAS-8922N; PACAP38 antiserum, RAS-8920N; Peninsula Laboratories, Belmont, CA) and 1:2000 mouse anti-microtubule-associated protein-2 (MAP-2; Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) for 24 hr at
4°C. The whole mounts were washed and incubated for 90 min at 22°C
with indocarbocyanine (Cy3)-labeled anti-rabbit IgG and fluorescein
isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled goat anti-mouse IgG (Jackson
ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA).
To localize the PAC1 receptor, neurons were labeled with
affinity-purified antisera raised against the extracellular amino terminal region of the receptor (ERIQRANDLMGLNESSPGC; amino acid residues 35-53) (May et al., 1998 ). Atrial whole-mount preparations were fixed and stained as described above. Dissociated cardiac ganglion
neurons were fixed for 15 min with 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, and washed with the same
buffer. The neurons were permeabilized with 0.1% Triton X-100, blocked
with 2% normal donkey serum, and incubated for 24 hr at 4°C with
1:2000 anti-PAC1 receptor and 1:2000 anti-MAP-2. The cells were exposed
to species-specific antibodies as described.
The specificities of the stains were determined by absorption and
method controls including use of preimmune serum, omission of either
primary or secondary antisera, and preabsorption of primary antisera
with immunogen, or homologous/related peptides, as described previously
(Braas et al., 1994a ; May et al., 1995 , 1998 ; Mawe et al., 1996 ;
Brandenburg et al., 1997 ). No staining was observed in tissues under
these control staining conditions. The PACAP antisera have been
characterized by radioimmunoassay to be highly specific and lack
cross-reactivity with other peptides (Brandenburg et al., 1997 )
(Peninsula Laboratories). The PAC1 receptor antiserum was characterized
by Western analysis (May et al., 1998 ) and also failed to stain cell
lines known to express only VPAC receptors (V. May, unpublished results).
Messenger RNA analysis. Total RNA was prepared from
individual guinea pig atrial whole-mount preparations containing the
cardiac ganglia using the RNA STAT-60 total RNA isolation reagent
(Tel-Test B, Friendswood, TX) as described previously (Braas et al.,
1994a , b ; May and Braas, 1995 ; Brandenburg et al., 1997 ; Kennedy et
al., 1998 ). First-strand cDNA was produced using SuperScript II Reverse Transcriptase and oligo dT primers with the SuperScript
Preamplification System (Gibco-BRL Life Technologies, Grand Island,
NY). Single-stranded cDNA was amplified 30-40 cycles as described
previously with Expand High Fidelity PCR System thermostable DNA
polymerase mixture (Boehringer Mannheim) using the AmpliWax PCR
gem-facilitated hot start (Perkin Elmer, Norwalk, CT) (May and Braas,
1995 ; Braas and May, 1996 ; Brandenburg et al., 1997 ). PCR was
conducted using primer templates specific to regions of the rat
proPACAP or proPAC1 receptor transcripts with high interspecies
homology (Table 1). Amplified products were resolved on 1.6% agarose gels and visualized by ethidium bromide
staining under UV illumination. Routine controls included cDNA
synthesis in the absence of either RNA or reverse transcriptase; amplification with omission of template, primers, or DNA polymerase failed to yield products (data not shown). Synthesis of cDNA and amplification of samples from tissues with established presence or
absence of PACAP or PAC1 receptor expression were compared; each
transcript was examined with multiple primer pairs designed to span
multiple exons and different regions of the molecule.
Verification of the reverse transcription proPACAP PCR products was
performed using sequence-specific hybridization (Brandenburg et al.,
1997 ). The amplified DNA, fractionated on agarose gels, was denatured,
neutralized, and rapidly downward-transferred to Nytran-Plus membranes
(Schleicher and Schuell, Keene, NH). The membranes were hybridized at
65°C for 48 hr with the radiolabeled synthetic antisense internal
oligonucleotide probe,
5'-TGGTCTGATCCCAGGGAAGCTGAGTCCGGCGGCAGGTGAACA-3', washed under high
stringency, and apposed to REFLECTION film (DuPont NEN, Wilmington, DE)
as described previously (Brandenburg et al., 1997 ).
The identities of the peptide and receptor amplified products were
confirmed by restriction enzyme digestion. The product bands were
excised from the agarose gels, frozen/thawed, eluted by microfiltration
through 0.45 µm polyvinylidene fluoride membranes (Millipore,
Bedford, MA), and precipitated in the presence of 20 µg of glycogen.
The 445 base pair proPACAP product amplified with primers PCPX1 and
PCPX2 was digested with Hph I, Ban II, Mse I, or BstX I for diagnostic restriction
analysis. Similarly, the major 303 base pair PAC1 receptor product
obtained using primers PACAPR1 and PACAPR2, corresponding to the
isoform without cassettes in the third cytoplasmic loop coding region,
was digested with SfaN I, Hae III or
HinF I. The 447-nucleotide receptor product amplified using
PACAPRX3 and PACAPRX4, which span the alternative splice site in the
region coding the PAC1 receptor amino terminal extracellular domain,
was digested with PflF I, Tsp509 I,
Bbs I, or Tse I.
For sequencing of the PACAP and PAC1 receptor PCR products, the ends of
the purified amplified fragments were polished with Pfu DNA
polymerase, and the blunt-ended products were ligated into the
pCR-Script Amp SK(+) cloning vector (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) using
the Srf I restriction endonuclease and T4 DNA ligase. These
ligated vectors were used for transformation into MAX Efficiency DH5 F'IQ competent cells (Gibco-BRL Life Technologies, Inc.), and
the presence of inserts in positive colonies was verified by PCR.
Automated fluorescent dideoxy dye terminator sequencing was performed
in both directions using the T3 and T7 primer sites. Sequence analyses
were performed using the DNASTAR software (Lasergene, Madison, WI).
Electrophysiology. For electrophysiological recording, the
atrial whole-mount preparations were maintained in a standard Krebs' solution containing (in mM): 121 NaCl, 5.9 KCl, 2.5 CaCl2, 1.2 MgCl2, 25 NaHCO3, 1.2 NaH2PO4,
and 8 glucose, maintained at pH 7.4 by aeration with 95%
O2/5% CO2. The intracardiac ganglia
within the tissue epicardia were exposed by removal of the atrial
muscle and blood vessels, facilitating visualization and impalement of the parasympathetic neurons. The whole-mount preparations were pinned
in a 2.5 ml Sylgard-lined chamber and superfused continuously at a rate
of 6-10 ml/min with oxygenated Krebs' solution at 35-37°C. For
specific experiments, the direct effects of PACAP were examined in the
presence of 300 nM tetrodotoxin in a calcium-deficient buffer (no added calcium with 5 mM magnesium);
alternatively, 200 µM cadmium was added to the Krebs'
solution. Electrophysiological recordings were obtained using an
Axoclamp-2A amplifier from guinea pig cardiac ganglia neurons impaled
with 2 M KCl-filled glass microelectrodes (40-60 M ) as
described previously (Hardwick et al., 1995 , 1997 ; Kennedy et al.,
1998 ). PACAP27, PACAP38, or VIP were applied by either superfusion or
local pressure ejection (Picospritzer; General Valve, Fairfield, NJ)
through 5- to 10-µm-diameter pipettes positioned 50-100 µm from
the neurons. Stock solutions of the peptides were prepared in 1 mM HCl and were diluted to final concentrations with
Krebs' solution; peptides applied by pressure ejection were used at 50 µM concentrations.
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RESULTS |
PACAP immunoreactivity is expressed in cardiac ganglion neuronal
fibers and soma
PACAP peptides have been shown to modulate cardiac function, and
in guinea pig atrial tissue, PACAP appeared to exert negative chronotropic effects through a PACAP-selective pattern of stimulated acetylcholine release from parasympathetic intracardiac neurons (Seebeck et al., 1996 ). Because the in vivo sources of this
regulatory PACAP were unclear, the presence of PACAP peptides in the
neural elements within the guinea pig cardiac ganglia was examined
using morphological and molecular techniques. The postganglionic
cardiac neurons of the atrial whole-mount preparations are
essentially cell monolayers, allowing localization of PACAP in fibers
and neurons in situ (Hardwick et al., 1995 ; Mawe et al.,
1996 ; Kennedy et al., 1998 ). We and others have established that
specific neuropeptides and transmitters are preferentially colocalized
in cardiac ganglia fibers and neurons (Steele et al., 1994 ; Hardwick et
al., 1995 ; Kennedy et al., 1998 ). All of the parasympathetic neurons
are cholinergic and exhibit MAP-2 immunoreactivity, and subpopulations of intrinsic neurons express other modulators, including neuropeptides. Concomitant immunocytochemical staining for PACAP peptides and MAP-2
defined the structural relationships between the PACAP-immunoreactive elements and neural tissue within the parasympathetic ganglia (Fig.
1A, B).
PACAP-immunoreactive neuronal fibers were identified within cardiac
ganglia and interganglionic fiber tracts (Fig. 1B).
The majority of the PACAP-containing fibers and varicosities in
individual ganglia surrounded neuronal clusters, often forming pericellular complexes surrounding MAP-2-positive neurons. In addition,
peptide immunoreactivity was observed in processes within large and
small nerve trunks coursing across the whole-mount preparations; the
PACAP-immunoreactive fibers did not exit these fiber bundles to
innervate adjacent myocardial or vascular tissues (data not shown). The
neuronal fiber staining patterns were similar with antisera against
either PACAP27 or PACAP38, although the PACAP27 antisera produced more
consistent staining; no staining was observed in absorption and method
control preparations (data not shown).

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Figure 1.
Neural elements within the cardiac parasympathetic
ganglia exhibit PACAP peptide immunoreactivity. Guinea pig atrial
whole-mount preparations were fixed, immunocytochemically labeled for
PACAP27 (Cy3, red) and MAP-2 (FITC, green), and
examined under fluorescence microscopy. A, PACAP
immunoreactivity was localized to a subpopulation of MAP-2-labeled
ganglia neurons. B, PACAP peptide staining was prominent in
fiber trunks and processes frequently enveloping the principal
parasympathetic neurons. Scale bar, 50 µm.
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A subpopulation of the MAP-2-immunoreactive parasympathetic
intracardiac neurons exhibited PACAP immunoreactivity (Fig.
1A). The staining intensity and number of
PACAP-labeled perikarya were heterogeneous among ganglia; a small
population of the total parasympathetic neurons appeared to demonstrate
preferential cytoplasmic labeling with the PACAP38 antisera. This
pattern of PACAP expression in cardiac ganglia neurons was similar to
expression in a number of other autonomic ganglia (Mulder et al., 1995 ;
Tobin et al., 1995 ; Zhang et al., 1995 ; Sundler et al., 1996 ;
Brandenburg et al., 1997 ; Elsas et al., 1997 ). Together, these results
indicated that PACAP expression in the cardiac ganglia may have both
extrinsic and intrinsic components with integrative roles in modulating cardiac function.
Cardiac ganglia express proPACAP mRNA
The identification of cardiac ganglion neuron PACAP
immunoreactivities was consistent with intrinsic PACAP production. A
requisite for endogenous peptide production is the expression of mRNA
encoding the proPACAP precursor molecule. To investigate whether
intrinsic cardiac neurons have the biosynthetic capability to
synthesize PACAP peptides, the expression of proPACAP mRNA was examined
using RT-PCR. First-strand cDNA synthesized from total RNA extracted from cardiac ganglia whole-mount preparations was amplified using oligonucleotide primer templates specific for neuronal proPACAP mRNA
(Table 1). Amplification with all three of the primer sets (PCP1/PCP2,
PCPX1/PCPX2, or PCPX5/PCPX6) produced the anticipated neuronal PACAP
cDNA products. Using primers PCP1 and PCP2, PACAP precursor transcripts
were identified when the amplified products from individual cardiac
ganglia whole-mount preparations were separated by agarose gel
electrophoresis and visualized with ethidium bromide staining (Fig.
2). Parallel amplification of cDNA from guinea pig superior cervical ganglia demonstrated that as in rat (Brandenburg et al., 1997 ), a population of the principal
postganglionic neurons of guinea pig autonomic sympathetic ganglia also
express proPACAP mRNA (data not shown). The amplified proPACAP
fragments from cardiac ganglia were transferred subsequently to a nylon membrane, and sequence-specific hybridization was performed with a
radiolabeled oligonucleotide probe that recognized a sequence internal
to the PACAP primers. Under stringent gene-specific hybridization and
washing conditions, a single band of the expected size was produced,
supporting the expression of PACAP transcripts by cardiac ganglia (Fig.
2).

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Figure 2.
Cardiac ganglia express proPACAP mRNA. Total RNA
from individual atrial cardiac ganglia preparations was
reverse-transcribed, and each of three oligonucleotide primer sets
spanning the proPACAP transcript coding region (schematic
diagram, top) was used for PCR. The cDNA templates were amplified
using primers PCP1 and PCP2, and the products were resolved on 1.6%
agarose gels, stained with ethidium bromide, and visualized by UV
illumination. A single proPACAP band was produced (left panel,
top). The identity of the RT-PCR product was substantiated using
sequence-specific hybridization. When the proPACAP amplified products
were transferred to Nytran and hybridized to a radiolabeled PACAP
oligonucleotide probe internal to the primer sites, a single band of
the appropriate size was identified (left panel, bottom).
The 445 base pair product amplified using the primer pair PCPX1 and
PCPX2 was isolated for diagnostic restriction analyses using
Hph I, Ban II, Mse I, and
BsfX I (center and right panels). The
amplified products were digested with each enzyme for 4 or 16 h,
fractionated on agarose gels, stained, and examined under UV
illumination. In each instance, digestion with endonuclease generated
the predicted cleavage products. Control represents undigested
amplified product. The schematic diagram is based on the rat neuronal
proPACAP cDNA sequence reported by Ogi and coworkers (1990) (GenBank
M63006). Gray, 5' untranslated region (5' UTR);
white, coding region; black, 3' untranslated
region (3' UTR); thick lines, regions amplified by the
specified primers.
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To further identify the amplified products and characterize the guinea
pig cardiac ganglia PACAP cDNA, the PCR fragments were recovered from
the agarose gels for diagnostic restriction analyses, subcloning, and
sequencing. After amplification with primers PCPX1 and PCPX2,
restriction endonucleases selected to cleave at specific sites within
the 445 base pair product corresponding to the segment of DNA spanning
the translational initiation methionine through the first 13 amino
acids of the PACAP peptides produced the pattern of cleavage fragments
expected for the transcript (Fig. 2).
The 5' coding region amplified products obtained using PCPX1 and PCPX2,
and the 3' coding region amplified products obtained using primers
PCPX5 and PCPX6, were subsequently subcloned and sequenced. Analyses of
the cDNA encoding the guinea pig PACAP precursor protein demonstrated a
high conservation of the nucleotide sequence compared with the rat,
mouse, sheep, and human transcripts; nucleotide identity of the coding
region of the guinea pig proPACAP cDNA was 84-87% compared with these
species. The predicted proPACAP protein of guinea pig was composed of
180 amino acid residues, whereas the ovine and human sequences
contained 176 amino acids, and the rat and mouse cDNA had 175 residues.
Similar to the sheep and human proteins, the guinea pig precursor had
one amino acid residue inserted at position 29; in contrast, only the
guinea pig protein possessed a four amino acid insert in the highly
variable region between the putative PACAP related peptide (PRP) and
the PACAP peptides. Overall, the guinea pig preproPACAP exhibited 82-86% amino acid identity with the rat, mouse, sheep, and human proteins; the guinea pig precursor molecule had 93% homology with the
consensus sequence among these mammalian species. The region within the
guinea pig transcript encoding the mature PACAP38 and PACAP27 peptides
contained six to seven degenerate base substitutions (~94%
nucleotide identity) compared with rat, mouse, ovine, and human,
resulting in the preservation of all of the peptide amino acid residues
(Fig. 3) (Ogi et al., 1990 ; Ohkubo et
al., 1992 ; Okazaki et al., 1995 ). In addition, the dibasic amino acid
post-translational endoproteolytic cleavage sites flanking the peptides
as well as the amidation glycine residues were completely conserved
among all of the species. These molecular studies determined the
predicted amino acid sequence of the guinea pig PACAP peptides, further demonstrated the high conservation of the PACAP peptides among species,
and implicated endogenous PACAP biosynthesis by a population of ganglia
neurons.

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Figure 3.
Guinea pig PACAP is homologous to other mammalian
forms. Guinea pig cardiac ganglia cDNA was amplified with the
oligonucleotide primer pairs PCPX1/PCPX2 and PCPX5/PCPX6. The products
were purified, blunt-ended, and ligated into the pCR-Script cloning
vector for transformation into competent cells. Automated fluorescence
dideoxy dye terminator sequencing was performed in both directions
using the T3 and T7 primer sites. The nucleotide sequence for the
region of the guinea pig (cavia parcillus) transcript
encoding the mature PACAP peptides is aligned with analogous regions of
the rat [rattus norvegicus; Ogi et al. (1990) ; GenBank
M63006], mouse [mus musculus; Okazaki et al. (1995) ;
GenBank D14716], sheep (ovis aries; Ohkubo et al. (1992) ;
GenBank S83511], and human [homo sapiens; Ohkubo et al.
(1992) ; GenBank S83513) sequences. Nucleotides that differ from the
guinea pig sequence are shown in white; regions of identity
are shaded. The predicted amino acid sequences for the PACAP
peptides are shown below. All base substitutions were degenerate,
resulting in the conservation of all the amino acid residues encoding
the PACAP peptides among species.
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Cardiac ganglia neurons express multiple isoforms of the
PAC1 receptor
Three G-protein-coupled PACAP receptors (PACAP-selective PAC1
receptors and the nonselective VPAC1 and VPAC2 receptors) have been
described, and the physiological responses of neuroendocrine cells to
PACAP38, PACAP27, and VIP reflect the tissue-specific expression of
these receptor subtypes (Spengler et al., 1993 ; Harmar and Lutz, 1994 ).
Functional complexity also arises from the expression of PAC1 receptor
splice variants resulting from alternative splicing within transcript
regions encoding the amino terminal extracellular domain and the third
cytoplasmic loop. The ligand high-affinity binding site resides in the
amino terminal extracellular domain (Cao et al., 1995 ), and the
presence or absence of a 21 amino acid (63 base pair) insert into the
amino terminal segment has been suggested to alter PACAP27 and PACAP38
binding potencies (Pantaloni et al., 1996 ; Chatterjee et al., 1997 ).
Alternative splicing of two 84 base pair (28 amino acid residue) HIP
and/or HOP cassettes into the third cytoplasmic loop domain produces variants that exhibit differential patterns of cyclic AMP and inositol
phosphate production by the two molecular forms of PACAP peptides
(Spengler et al., 1993 ). Previous studies suggest that pharmacologically, parasympathetic cardiac neurons express PAC1 receptors (Seebeck et al., 1996 ). Accordingly, to understand the functional relevance and prevalence of the different PAC1 receptor isoforms in cardiac ganglia, expression of PAC1 receptor splice variants was examined by RT-PCR.
Sets of oligonucleotide primer templates were designed to flank the DNA
segments corresponding to the alternatively spliced exons in the amino
terminal extracellular domain (PACAPRX3/PACAPRX4) (Table 1) and third
cytoplasmic loop (PACAPR1/PACAPR2) (Table 1) of the PAC1 receptor
(Spengler et al., 1993 ; Pantaloni et al., 1996 ). The amplified products
from these primer sets therefore not only indicated tissue PAC1
receptor mRNA expression but also were diagnostic of the receptor
isoforms expressed by the cardiac neurons, providing insights into
potential differences in peptide potency and receptor coupling to
multiple intracellular signaling cascades.
RT-PCR of cardiac ganglia total RNA with either of these primer sets
identified PAC1 receptor expression in the guinea pig atrial
preparations (Figs. 4,
5). The
presence or absence of exons 4 (21 nucleotides) (Chatterjee et al.,
1997 ) and 5 (42 nucleotides) of the PAC1 receptor gene [numbered as
exons 5 and 6 by Pantaloni et al. (1996) ], resulting in the insertion
or deletion of a 21 amino acid segment in the amino terminal
extracellular domain, produces the short and very
short receptor variants, respectively. Amplification using primers
PACAPRX3 and PACAPRX4, which flank the amino terminal alternative
splice site of exons 4 and 5, produced a prominent 447 base pair
amplified product, suggesting that the cardiac ganglia expressed
predominantly the very short PAC1 receptor variant (Fig. 4).
A larger, 510 base pair product that appeared to correspond to the
short receptor isoform containing the alternatively spliced
exons 4 and 5 was also present, but at much lower levels. Restriction
endonuclease digestion of the predominant 447 base pair product yielded
the cleavage pattern expected for the region of the PAC1 receptor cDNA
without the 63 base pair insert; neither PflF I, which
requires an intact exon 3 and 4 border for cleavage, nor
Tsp509 I, which cleaves within exon 5, digested the
amplified receptor cDNA fragment (Fig. 4). Because this amplified
segment of receptor DNA results from the splicing of several exons, the 447 base pair PCR product was subcloned and sequenced to confirm that
the observed receptor transcript resulted from the expected alternative
exon usage. The sequence data verified that the major guinea pig
transcript represented the very short receptor variant, lacking both exons 4 and 5. This region of amplified receptor cDNA
exhibited 86-90% nucleotide identity to the rat, mouse, cow, and
human sequences; the guinea pig fragment had 92% identity with the
consensus sequence among the various species. The predicted amino acid
sequence of the guinea pig receptor segment displayed 90-93% identity
to the deduced residues present in the receptor proteins from other
species. Other studies demonstrated that most neuronal tissues
exhibit the short receptor variant (Pantaloni et al., 1996 ;
K. Braas and V. May, unpublished results); consequently, this
tissue-specific expression of the very short PAC1 receptor variant in cardiac ganglia may be unique.

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Figure 4.
Cardiac ganglia express the very short
PAC1 receptor isoform. Complementary DNA templates were
reverse-transcribed from guinea pig atrial cardiac ganglia tissue total
RNA, and a segment spanning the extracellular amino terminal splice
sites of the PAC1 receptor mRNA was amplified using primers PACAPRX3
and PACAPRX4 (schematic diagram, top). The prominent
amplified product was 447 base pairs in size corresponding to the
very short isoform of the PAC1 receptor, which does not
contain exon 4 (21 nucleotides) and exon 5 (42 nucleotides)
(right panel, top). The 510 base pair product corresponding
to the short variant containing the two alternatively
spliced exons was lower in abundance. The 447 base pair amplified
product was recovered from 1.6% agarose gels for diagnostic
restriction analyses with a panel of enzymes (left
panel). Enzymes PflF I and Tsp509 I,
with sites unique to the short receptor variant,
failed to cleave the 447 base pair product. Endonuclease digestion of
the product with Bbs I or Tse I yielded the
anticipated fragments for the region of the PAC1 receptor cDNA without
the 63 base pair insert (left panel; right panel, bottom).
Control is the undigested amplified 447 base pair product. The mRNA
schematic diagram is based on the rat PAC1 receptor sequence [Spengler
et al. (1993) ; GenBank Z23272]. Dark gray, Short region
containing exons 4 and 5; light gray, HIP cassette;
black, HOP cassette; thick line, region amplified
using PACAPRX3 and PACAPRX4. Numbers in the schematic
diagram of the restriction enzyme cleavage sites in the 447 bp fragment
refer to the regions of the exons represented in the product
(Chatterjee et al., 1997 ).
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Figure 5.
PAC1 receptor variants in cardiac ganglia also
result from alternative splicing within transcript regions encoding the
third cytoplasmic loop. Reverse-transcribed cDNA templates from guinea
pig atrial cardiac ganglia preparation RNA were used for PCR using
primers PACAPR1 and PACAPR2, which span a segment of the PAC1 receptor
transcript corresponding to the alternative splice site for the HIP and
HOP cassettes within the third cytoplasmic loop (schematic,
top). Two products were amplified: the predominant 303 base pair
product corresponded to the receptor with neither the HIP nor HOP
cassettes, whereas the 384 base pair product represented a one-cassette
receptor variant (right panel, top). The 303 nucleotide
product was isolated for diagnostic restriction endonuclease digestion
with SfaN I, Hae III, or HinF I. The
resulting enzymatic cleavage products corresponded to the predicted
fragments for the receptor variant without either cassette (left
panel; right panel, bottom). Control represents the undigested
amplified 303 base pair product. The receptor mRNA schematic is
described in Figure 4. Thick line, Region amplified using
PACAPR1 and PACAPR2.
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Amplification of the templates using the primers PACAPR1 and PACAPR2
revealed that the cardiac neurons also expressed multiple receptor
isoforms resulting from alternative splicing of exons into the region
of the transcript encoding the third cytoplasmic loop (Fig. 5). The
predominant 303 base pair product corresponded to the receptor variant
containing neither the HIP nor HOP cassettes. The identity of
the amplified product was verified by restriction analyses using
SfaN I, Hae III, or HinF I, which
produced the expected endonucleolytic cleavage fragments (Fig. 5).
Expression of the message encoding the PAC1 receptor isoform containing
one cassette was lower. To identify the one cassette variant, the fragment was subcloned and sequenced. From eight clones sequenced in
both directions, this guinea pig cardiac ganglia PACAP-selective receptor splice variant corresponded to the rat HOP receptor isoform; furthermore, all of the clones were the shortened HOP2 variant containing 384 nucleotides (Fig. 6). In
rat, alternative usage of contiguous splice acceptor sites in the HOP
cassette produces either the 387 nucleotide HOP1 or 384 nucleotide HOP2
variants (Spengler et al., 1993 ); accordingly, these results suggested that similar splicing events generate the PACAP receptor HOP2 variant
in guinea pig cardiac ganglia. The sequence of the HOP2 isoform
previously identified only in rat varied in the guinea pig by only one
nucleotide, resulting in a degenerate codon for the same leucine
residue. The same nucleotide substitution was observed in the bovine
HOP1 variant (Miyamoto et al., 1994 ). The predicted amino acid sequence
was identical for the guinea pig, rat, mouse, and cow HOP cassettes
(Fig. 6) (Hashimoto et al., 1993 , 1996 ; Hosoya et al., 1993 ; Spengler
et al., 1993 ; Miyamoto et al., 1994 ). This high level of both
nucleotide and amino acid conservation among species suggests that the
sequence encoded by the HOP exon may be critical to the function of the
PAC1 receptor isoform. The entire 384 base pair amplified region of the
guinea pig cDNA, which encompasses both the 303 nucleotide fragment and the alternatively spliced HOP2 cassette, exhibited a high degree of
nucleotide homology with the other reported PAC1 receptor sequences. The guinea pig PACAPR1/PACAPR2 product demonstrated 92-94% identity to the rat, mouse, and cow receptor transcripts. The reported human
receptor sequence does not contain either the HIP or HOP exons, but the
alternative 303 nucleotide fragment exhibited 92% identity to the
corresponding guinea pig sequence (Ogi et al., 1993 ). Interestingly,
the deduced amino acids encoded by the entire fragment amplified using
the PACAPR1 and PACAPR2 primers are identical among the various species
except for one conservative valine to isoleucine substitution at
residue 95 (HOP2 numbering) of the guinea pig, and alanine and valine
substitutions at positions 123 and 124 of the human sequence.

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Figure 6.
The alternatively spliced PAC1 receptor isoform
containing one cassette in the third cytoplasmic loop represents the
HOP2 variant. The guinea pig PACAP-selective receptor 384 base pair
product amplified using the PACAPR1 and PACAPR2 primers (see Fig. 4)
was isolated and subcloned for automated fluorescence dideoxy dye
terminator sequencing. All of the clones represented the HOP variant
shortened at the alternative splice junction, consistent with the
expression of the HOP2 form reported in rat (Spengler et al., 1993 ).
The base sequence for the guinea pig (cavia parcillus) HOP2
cassette is aligned with the HOP1 sequences reported for the
corresponding regions of the rat [rattus norvegicus;
Spengler et al. (1993) ; GenBank Z23275 and Z23274], mouse [mus
musculus; Hashimoto et al. (1996) ; GenBank D82935], and cow
(bos taurus; Miyamoto et al. (1994) ; GenBank D17290]).
Nucleotides differing from the guinea pig sequence are in
white; regions of identity are shaded with gray.
The three nucleotides deleted from the HOP2 isoform encoding a serine
residue in the HOP1 variant of the rat, produced by alternative usage
of contiguous splice acceptor site, are shaded with black.
The predicted amino acid residues for the HOP PACAP receptor variant
are shown below the nucleotide sequences. The one-base
substitution is degenerate and conserves the leucine residue.
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These results demonstrated that alternative splicing of the PAC1
receptor transcripts encoding uncommon variants appear to be produced
in cardiac ganglia. The predominant receptor isoform expressed is
expected to be the very short variant with neither the HIP
nor HOP cassettes; expression of short and HOP2 variants are
suggested to be much lower. The absence of the 21 amino acid segment in
the amino terminal extracellular domain of the very short receptor may have significant implications in PACAP27
and PACAP38 binding and potency. Alternative splice variants in the region of the third cytoplasmic loop, which is important for G-protein coupling, exhibit specific patterns of cyclic AMP and inositol phosphate production. How the presence of neither cassette or the HOP2 cassette in cardiac neuron PACAP-selective receptors transduces downstream intracellular signaling remains to be established.
PAC1 receptor protein is localized to cardiac neurons
The molecular analyses implicated PAC1 receptor isoform expression
in cardiac neurons; however, the sites of these PACAP-selective receptors in the ganglia preparation were unclear. To identify the
cellular localization and prevalence of PAC1 receptor protein expression in cardiac ganglia, immunocytochemical studies were performed using antiserum directed against a segment in the amino terminus of the receptor common to all isoforms. Similar to the dual-labeling immunocytochemical studies examining PACAP peptide expression in cardiac ganglia neurons, antiserum to MAP-2 was used to
identify unequivocally cardiac neurons in the atrial preparation. Essentially, all of the MAP-2-positive neurons in intact whole-mount preparations and acutely dissociated cardiac neurons expressed PACAP
receptor immunoreactivity, whereas no staining was observed in either
method or absorption control samples (data not shown). Using confocal
microscopy, staining for the PAC1 receptor was observed circumscribing
the neuronal plasma membrane (Fig. 7A, B).

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Figure 7.
PAC1 receptor protein immunoreactivity is
localized to cardiac ganglia neuronal plasma membranes. A,
B, Dissociated cardiac ganglia neurons were immunocytochemically
processed for PAC1 receptor (Cy3, red) and MAP-2 (FITC,
green) and imaged under confocal microscopy. Plasma membrane
labeling for the PAC1 receptor circumscribed the MAP-2-positive cardiac
neurons. Scale bar, 50 µm.
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PACAP27 depolarizes guinea pig cardiac neurons
To complement the morphological and molecular approaches,
electrophysiological studies were performed to examine the direct actions of PACAP peptides on guinea pig cardiac neurons. The majority of the neurons in the guinea pig cardiac ganglia are phasic, initiating one to two action potentials during long depolarizing current pulses.
In contrast, only a few cells are tonic, firing trains of action
potentials on stimulation (Adams and Harper, 1995 ; Akasu and Nishimura,
1995 ; Edwards et al., 1995 ; Hardwick et al., 1995 ). Consistent with the
immunocytochemical studies, nearly all of the cardiac neurons responded
to PACAP. Electrophysiological recordings from >50 individual neurons
in 20 different atrial preparations demonstrated that 88% of the
neurons responded to PACAP27. Local pressure application of PACAP27 (50 µM, 1 sec at ~7 psi) to individual neurons produced a
7 ± 0.7 mV depolarization (n = 11 neurons; mean
resting potential was 51 ± 2.8 mV). The duration of the depolarization varied from 10 to 40 sec among neurons. In one-third of
the neurons tested, a burst of action potentials occurred during the
initial period of depolarization, which subsided before repolarization (Fig. 8A1,
A2). This increase in action
potential frequency was observed in both phasic (Fig.
8A1) and tonic cells (Fig. 8A2). Although an increase in action potentials was not produced during the
PACAP-induced depolarization in the remaining neurons, PACAP27 increased the membrane excitability of all of these cells. After application of PACAP27 to the remaining population of phasic neurons, multiple action potentials were elicited in response to a 500 msec
suprathreshold depolarizing current pulse, which would normally produce
one to two action potentials (data not shown). The PACAP-induced increase in membrane excitability was of long duration, lasting for
minutes after pressure application of peptide.

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Figure 8.
PACAP induces depolarization and increases
membrane excitability of cardiac ganglia neurons. Local application of
PACAP27 (50 µM, 1 sec) depolarized both phasic
(A1) and tonic (A2) cardiac neurons. A 500 msec
depolarizing current pulse (B, 0.3 nA; C, 0.4 nA)
to cardiac neurons typically elicited a single action potential
(B1, C1). Superfusion of the same neurons with 100 nM PACAP27 increased membrane excitability under the same
depolarizing conditions (B2, C3). In this example, three
spikes were elicited after 100 nM PACAP38 application
(C2). After a 10 min recovery, the same cell superfused with
100 nM PACAP27 produced seven spikes under an identical
depolarizing current pulse (C3). In a comparable
experimental paradigm, the changes in neuronal excitability were
compared between 100 nM PACAP27 and 100 nM VIP.
Nine spikes were elicited after PACAP27 application (B2),
whereas only two action potentials were elicited by VIP application in
the same neuron after an ~25 min wash (B3). Additional
experiments indicated that 100 nM VIP produced few or no
changes in excitability. In all cases, PACAP27 was more effective than
the same concentrations of VIP (B3) or PACAP38
(C2). Data are representative of four to five neurons for
each treatment paradigm.
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To ensure that the ability of PACAP27 to depolarize the cardiac neurons
resulted from a direct action on the neurons rather than an induction
of neurotransmitter or neuropeptide release from adjacent nerve
terminals, the effects of PACAP27 were also determined under conditions
that blocked release. In cardiac ganglia whole-mount preparations
bathed in either calcium-deficient solution containing 300 nM tetrodotoxin or Krebs' solution with 200 µM cadmium, PACAP27 depolarized all of the neurons
~5 ± 0.3 mV (mean resting potential was 55 ± 4.0 mV).
These results indicated that the PACAP-induced depolarization resulted
from direct peptide actions on the parasympathetic neurons.
PACAP did not produce any consistent changes in neuronal input
resistance. In four sympathetic neurons examined either by superfusion
with 100 nM PACAP27 or pressure application of 50 µM peptide, the mean input resistance decreased 3.0 ± 3.8%.
PACAP27 increases cardiac ganglion neuron
membrane excitability
PACAP peptides are 100- to 1000-fold more potent than VIP in
eliciting neuronal responses at the PACAP-selective receptor than at
either of the nonselective VPAC1 and VPAC2 receptors (Spengler et al.,
1993 ; Harmar and Lutz, 1994 ; Rawlings, 1994 ; Journot et al., 1995 ; May
and Braas, 1995 ; Rawlings and Hezareh, 1996 ). To examine the relative
potencies of the PACAP and VIP peptides and infer from the
neuropharmacological profiles the PACAP/VIP receptor subtypes involved
in the parasympathetic postganglionic neuron physiological responses,
studies were performed using superfusion application of PACAP27,
PACAP38, or VIP. Depolarization was induced in nearly all neurons
superfused with PACAP; however, with subsequent applications, the
amplitude of the depolarization was diminished or absent. In contrast,
PACAP increased neuronal excitability in almost all of the neurons
(>85%) regardless of measurable PACAP-induced depolarization.
Accordingly, subsequent electrophysiological experiments quantitated
the PACAP-induced increase in membrane excitability. The changes in
membrane excitability for phasic neurons were established by
determining the number of action potentials produced by 500 msec
suprathreshold depolarizing current pulses of increasing magnitude.
Excitability was tested before and immediately after a 30 sec
superfusion with peptide. Initially, the effects of superfusion of
atrial whole-mount preparations with 100 nM PACAP27,
PACAP38, or VIP were compared. As expected, PACAP27 increased
excitability, whereas VIP had little or no effect (Fig.
8B). Surprisingly, PACAP27 appeared more effective in
increasing excitability than PACAP38 (Fig. 8C); the peptides
demonstrated an apparent rank order of stimulation of
PACAP27>PACAP38>VIP.
To establish the concentration dependence of the PACAP-induced increase
in excitability, the effects of different concentrations of PACAP27 or
PACAP38 on individual neurons were determined. At each peptide
concentration, the number of action potentials generated by
depolarizing current pulses of increasing strengths was determined. As
expected for phasic cells, only one action potential typically was
produced before peptide application, regardless of the current intensity (0.1-0.5 nA). However, after PACAP peptide application, multiple spikes were elicited. The number of action potentials was
dependent on stimulus intensity, peptide, and agonist concentration. For example, in a representative experiment, a phasic neuron was superfused with each concentration of PACAP27 for 30 sec. After each
peptide application, a series of 500 msec current pulses ranging from
0.1 to 0.5 nA was delivered to the cell. The neuron was washed between
peptide applications until only one action potential was produced by
the current pulse, to ensure recovery from peptide exposure. As shown
in Figure 9A, in which the
number of action potentials produced with the different current pulse intensities is expressed as a function of the peptide concentration, PACAP27 produced a concentration-dependent increase in neuronal membrane excitability. The concentration dependence for PACAP27 and
PACAP38 was compared among neurons (Fig. 9B). PACAP27 was more potent than PACAP38 in increasing membrane excitability. PACAP27
exhibited an estimated EC50 of <20 nM, whereas
PACAP38 was approximately fourfold less potent. These physiological
studies of guinea pig cardiac ganglia were consistent with the premise that the PACAP effects were mediated through PACAP-selective receptors rather than either of the nonselective VIP/PACAP receptors.

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Figure 9.
The PACAP-induced increase in cardiac neuron
membrane excitability is concentration dependent. A, The
number of action potentials elicited by 500 msec depolarizing current
pulses of increasing intensity (0.1-0.5 nA) was augmented with
increasing concentrations of superfused PACAP27 (0.1-100
nM peptide). B, The concentration dependence of
increased membrane excitability in response to PACAP27 or PACAP38
superfusion was examined by determining the number of action potentials
produced by increasing stimulus intensities (0.1-0.5 nA; 500 msec
duration).
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The observation that the PACAP-induced increase in excitability
occurred in the absence of membrane depolarization suggested that
depolarization per se was not responsible for this effect. Consequently, studies were conducted to determine whether the increases
in excitability could be attributed to changes in action potential
properties such as the hyperpolarizing afterpotential (HAP). Action
potentials were elicited by brief supramaximal current pulses
sufficient to elicit single spikes preceding and following superfusion
with 100 nM PACAP27 for 15-30 sec. PACAP peptide did not
alter action potential characteristics of the cardiac neurons (Fig.
10), indicating that the increase in
excitability was not correlated with a PACAP-induced change in action
potential configuration.

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Figure 10.
PACAP27 does not alter cardiac neuron action
potential characteristics. Five action potentials produced by
depolarizing current pulses (0.3 nA, 5 msec) were collected before and
after neuron superfusion with 100 nM PACAP27. Traces are
the average of five action potentials. The resting potential was 47
mV. Action potential configuration was similar before and during PACAP
exposure. PACAP increased excitability in the neuron shown in this
example. Data are representative of four neurons.
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DISCUSSION |
PACAP peptides have extraordinarily diverse neuroregulatory and
neurotrophic roles in the peripheral nervous system (Arimura et al.,
1994 ; May and Braas, 1995 ; DiCicco-Bloom, 1996 ; Sundler et al., 1996 ;
Tanaka et al., 1996 ; Cardell et al., 1997 ; Lu and DiCicco-Bloom, 1997 ;
Mirfendereski et al., 1997 ; Villalba et al., 1997 ). Among these
effects, recent studies have demonstrated PACAP-induced bradycardia in
isolated atrial tissues, suggesting a role for these peptides in the
control of acetylcholine release from parasympathetic neurons (Seebeck
et al., 1996 ; Hirose et al., 1997 ). Many neuropeptides and factors have
been postulated to participate in cardiac ganglia function;
accordingly, PACAP peptides may represent one of several potent
modulators of the parasympathetic response.
Several key criteria must be established to demonstrate neuronal
PACAP-specific regulation of parasympathetic postganglionic neurons in
the cardiac ganglion, including the following: (1) PACAP peptide
expression must be localized to fiber tracts and/or neurons within the
ganglia; (2) cardiac ganglia must express the PACAP-selective PAC1
receptor; and (3) PACAP peptides must elicit direct physiological
effects on cardiac neurons with a pharmacological profile that is
PACAP-selective. The present studies were conducted to examine these requisites.
Both PACAP immunoreactivity and mRNA were demonstrated in the cardiac
ganglion preparations. RT-PCR and related diagnostic analyses
demonstrated PACAP mRNA expression in the cardiac ganglia tissue
samples, implicating the potential for endogenous PACAP peptide
biosynthesis. Molecular analyses of guinea pig proPACAP cDNA
demonstrated that the predicted amino acid sequences of the mature
PACAP peptides were identical to the human, rat, mouse, and sheep
sequences, which was consistent with the strict evolutionary conservation of PACAP peptides (Ogi et al., 1990 ; Okhubo et al., 1992 ;
Okazaki et al., 1995 ). Parallel immunocytochemical studies identified a
small population of intrinsic PACAP-immunoreactive neurons in the whole
mounts; <5% of the cholinergic cardiac postganglionic neurons
expressed PACAP, suggesting that these peptides may be present in
interneurons with neuromodulatory roles in cardiac ganglia function
(Konopka et al., 1992 ; Hardwick et al., 1995 ; Mawe et al., 1996 ).
By far, the most striking pattern of PACAP immunoreactivity was present
in intraganglionic fibers. Although the sources of these extrinsic
PACAP immunoreactive fibers have not been established, the staining
patterns were distinct from previous neuropeptide immunocytochemical
studies in many respects. In atrial whole-mount studies examining the
distribution of sensory substance P- and CGRP-immunoreactive afferents,
and sympathetic postganglionic neuropeptide Y-containing processes, the
fiber staining patterns were not only intraganglionic but also were
distributed densely over the tissue to innervate vessels and myocardium
(Konopka et al., 1992 ; Hardwick et al., 1995 ; Kennedy et al., 1998 ).
Because PACAP-immunoreactive fibers were not observed to extend into
adjacent atrial tissue, these neuronal processes were most likely not
sensory afferents or sympathetic postganglionic fibers. However, the
PACAP fiber staining patterns did compare favorably with those for
choline acetyltransferase in parasympathetic preganglionic fibers.
Several previous studies have demonstrated PACAP-immunoreactivity in
cholinergic fibers. PACAP was colocalized with choline
acetyltransferase in splanchnic nerves, in preganglionic projection
neurons to the superior cervical ganglion, and in parasympathetic
preganglionic fibers in salivary gland (Tobin et al., 1995 ;
Holgert et al., 1996 ; Beaudet et al., 1998 ). Furthermore,
PACAP-immunoreactive neurons have been identified in brainstem
medullary areas (Legradi et al., 1994 ; Lai et al., 1997 ) and are
thought to contribute vagal fibers into the heart. In sum, these
results suggested that the PACAP immunoreactivity in the cardiac
ganglion fiber plexuses may be both intrinsic from PACAP-containing
cardiac neurons and extrinsic from vagal parasympathetic preganglionic
inputs. The relative contribution of these two sources of PACAP in the
maintenance and regulation of cardiac function remains to be
established. Because ganglionic neuronal PACAP levels can be regulated
by neuronal activity or injury (Zhang et al., 1995 ; May et al., 1996 ;
Brandenburg et al., 1997 ; Moller et al., 1997 ), the intrinsic sources
of PACAP may have more prominent roles during altered cardiovascular states.
Of equal import, these studies also demonstrated the expression of
PACAP-selective receptors in cardiac ganglia neurons. Given the
insensitivity of guinea pig cardiac neurons to VIP, the responses appear to be mediated by neither of the PACAP/VIP nonselective VPAC1 or
VPAC2 receptors, but by the PACAP-selective G-protein-coupled PAC1
receptor. Alternative splicing of the transcripts in the regions
encoding the extracellular amino terminal domain and the third
cytoplasmic loop generate multiple isoforms of the PAC1 receptor, which
were previously shown to exhibit differential patterns of peptide
binding and coupling to intracellular signaling (Spengler et al., 1993 ;
Pantaloni et al., 1996 ). Analyses of the amplified PCR products for the
PACAP-selective receptor demonstrated expression of atypical PAC1
receptor variants in the cardiac ganglia preparations. The predominant
PAC1 receptor in the cardiac ganglia appeared to be the very
short PAC1 variant with neither HIP nor HOP cassette inserts into
the third cytoplasmic loop. The amino terminal extracellular domain of
the VIP/PACAP family of receptors is characteristically long, and the
21 amino acid segment (Val89 to
Ser109) encoded by the 63 nucleotides resulting from
splicing of exons 4 and 5 into the PAC1 receptor mRNA lies within the
receptor domain implicated in ligand binding (Cao et al., 1995 ;
Couvineau et al., 1995 ). Because the segment is strongly acidic and
postulated to impair PACAP27 binding (Pantaloni et al., 1996 ), the
absence of these 21 amino acids in the guinea pig very short
PAC1 receptor may contribute to the observed differences in PACAP27 and
PACAP38 potencies in neuronal membrane excitability. Both PACAP27 and PACAP38 elicited concentration-dependent increases in membrane excitability with half-maximal responses in the nanomolar range, but
the apparent pharmacological rank order of potency for the peptides
(PACAP27>PACAP38>VIP) is consistent with the expression of specific
PAC1 receptor variants in the postganglionic neurons. Because the
predicted amino acid sequences for guinea pig PACAP27 and PACAP38 are
identical to that reported for other mammals, the differences in the
efficacies of the PACAP peptides cannot be attributed to
species-specific differences in the mature peptides. PACAP27 has been
shown to be more potent than PACAP38 in other cardiovascular responses
(Warren et al., 1991 ; Cardell et al., 1997 ). Whether these responses
also reflected expression of the very short receptor isoform
will be of considerable interest in establishing tissue-specific
expression and function of distinctive PAC1 receptor isoforms in
neuroendocrine and cardiovascular physiology.
Among the different receptor isoforms produced by alternative splicing
into the region encoding the third cytoplasmic loop, the minor
expression of the PAC1HOP2 variant by cardiac neurons also appeared
unusual because the HOP1 receptor form is more prevalent than HOP2 in
many neuroendocrine tissues (Rawlings et al., 1995 ; K. Braas and V. May, unpublished observations). In transfected cells, PACAP receptors
containing the HOP1 and HOP2 sequences are coupled to both adenylate
cyclase and phospholipase C (Spengler et al., 1993 ). Whether selective
PAC1HOP2 variant receptor expression imparts unique functional
characteristics to cardiac neurons remains to be established.
The expression of PACAP in cardiac intraganglionic fibers and
postganglionic neurons and the responsiveness of nearly 90% of
postganglionic cardiac neurons to PACAP peptides have crucial implications for the current understanding of parasympathetic ganglia
regulation of heart function. PACAP potently depolarized and increased
markedly the excitability of guinea pig cardiac neurons, implying that
PACAP peptides can act as excitatory neuromodulators amplifying the
parasympathetic inhibition from guinea pig cardiac ganglia. Most of the
guinea pig cardiac neurons are phasic, initiating one to two action
potentials during long depolarizing current pulses, whereas few cardiac
neurons are tonic, firing trains of action potentials on stimulation
(Hardwick et al., 1995 ). The current studies demonstrating the ability
of PACAP peptides to augment neuronal membrane excitability provides
one mechanism by which PACAP may alter neuronal firing characteristics
and transform a neuron with phasic properties to a tonic phenotype.
Conversion of the firing pattern from phasic to tonic would greatly
enhance the response of most cardiac neurons, resulting in increased
parasympathetic inhibition of cardiac output.
The ionic mechanisms underlying the PACAP-induced increase in
excitability remain to be elucidated, but our initial results have
indicated that the changes were not direct consequences of peptide-induced membrane depolarization or alterations in action potential configuration, in particular, a decrease in the
hyperpolarizing after potential. Preliminary results showed that the
PACAP-induced increase in membrane excitability was not eliminated in
the presence of 1 mM barium, indicating that the effects
did not solely reflect inhibition of the noninactivating inward
potassium conductance (IM) (R. Parsons,
unpublished results). Recently, Miura and co-workers (1997) reported
that PACAP produced a similar increase in excitability of rat sacral
preganglionic neurons, which these authors attributed to an inhibition
of the fast inactivating potassium conductance (IA). Inhibition of
IA by PACAP is a potential mechanism for the increase in excitability occurring in the cardiac neurons. The ionic
basis for the observed PACAP response and the intracellular signaling
mechanisms involved in modulating cardiac neuronal excitability are
currently under study.
In summary, the present results demonstrated for the first time the
presence of PACAP and PAC1 receptors in mammalian
parasympathetic cardiac ganglia and provided direct evidence for PACAP
peptide modulation of cardiac neuron excitability. The ability of PACAP peptides to regulate parasympathetic postganglionic cardiac neurons appears to reflect an important mechanism of refining the autonomic signals that determine cardiac output.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 4, 1998; revised Sept. 4, 1998; accepted Sept. 9, 1998.
This work was supported by American Heart Association Grant-in-Aids
975043N (R.L.P.) and 94015540 (K.M.B.), and Grants NS-23978 (R.L.P.),
HD-27468 (V.M. and K.M.B.), and NS-01636 (V.M.) from National
Institutes of Health. We thank Eric Gauthier for assistance with the
confocal microscopy, Peter Durda for oligonucleotide and probe
synthesis, Dr. Cynthia Forehand for assistance with fluorescent
microscopy, Michelle Calupca for dissociated neurons, and Brie
Guilmette for initial cloning and sequencing of the guinea pig proPACAP cDNA.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Rodney L. Parsons, Department
of Anatomy and Neurobiology, The University of Vermont, College of
Medicine, Given Health Science Complex, Burlington, VT 05405.
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