Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 1, 259-270, Copyright © 1981 by Society for Neuroscience
Snake alpha-toxin effects on cholinergic and noncholinergic responses of Aplysia californica neurons
JK Ono and PM Salvaterra
The effects of alpha-toxins from Bungarus multicinctus (alpha BuTX) and
Naja naja siamensis (alpha NTX) were studied on synaptic responses and on
extrasynaptic responses to focally applied acetylcholine (ACh), histamine
(Hm), gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), and glutamate (glu) in neurons of the
marine mollusc, Aplysia californica. Binding of 125I- alpha BuTX to Aplysia
ganglia homogenates was pharmacologically characterized and compared with
the pharmacological sensitivity of 125I- alpha BuTX binding to rat brain
membrane preparations. Both alpha BuTX and alpha NTX at 10(-5) M reversibly
inhibited the ACh-induced increase in Cl- conductance (GCl) without
affecting ACh responses mediated by an increase in Na+ conductance (GNa) or
an increase in K+ conductance (GK). In addition, both alpha-toxin
reversibly inhibited the GCl responses induced by Hm and, in some cases,
glu. GABA-induced GCl responses were not affected by either toxin even at
concentrations as high as 10(-3) M. Both toxins also inhibited synaptic
cholinergic GCl responses as well as the GCl component of postsynaptic
potentials mediated by noncholinergic presynaptic neurons. Studies of
125I-alpha BuTX binding to Aplysia ganglia homogenates demonstrated the
presence of a single saturable, high affinity site with a dissociation
constant (KD) of 3.6 X 10(-9) M. The pharmacological profile of agents
which inhibit 125I-alpha BuTx binding to Aplysia ganglia was similar to the
profile of vertebrate ganglionic and brain preparations; d- tubocurarine,
nicotine, and carbamylcholine effectively and competitively inhibit
binding, whereas hexamethonium and decamethonium are less effective and
noncompetitive. Strychnine and bicuculline, agents known to block responses
to a variety of agonists in Aplysia, were effective competitive inhibitors
of toxin binding in Aplysia and in rat brain. Strychnine is not as potent
in inhibiting toxin binding to electric organ preparations. Chloride
channel blockers, such as penicillin and picrotoxin, and noncholinergic
agonists, such as Hm and glu, had no effect on toxin binding. The
alpha-toxins appear to inhibit noncholinergic GCl responses through a
cholinergic receptor associated with the Cl- conductance mechanism for the
noncholinergic agonist.