Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 7, 443-452, Copyright © 1987 by Society for Neuroscience
Forskolin's effect on transient K current in nudibranch neurons is not reproduced by cAMP
J Coombs and S Thompson
Forskolin, a diterpene extracted from Coleus forskolii, stimulates the
production of cAMP in a variety of cells and is potentially an important
tool for studying the role of cAMP in the modulation of neuronal
excitability. We studied the effects of forskolin on neurons of nudibranch
molluscs and found that it caused characteristic, reversible changes in the
amplitude and waveform of the transient K current, IA, and also activated
an inward current similar to the cAMP- dependent inward current previously
described in molluscan neurons. Forskolin altered the time course of IA
activation and inactivation but did not affect the voltage dependence or
the reversal potential of the current. IA normally inactivates
exponentially, but in forskolin the time course of inactivation can be fit
by the sum of 2 exponentials with an initial rate that is faster than the
control and a final rate that is much slower. On depolarization in
forskolin, IA begins to activate at the normal rate, but a slower component
of activation is also seen. The changes in IA in the nudibranch cells were
qualitatively different than the changes caused by forskolin in Aplysia bag
cell neurons (Strong, 1984). Experiments were performed to determine
whether these effects of forskolin require cAMP. Intracellular injection of
cAMP, application of membrane-permeable analogs of cAMP, application of
phosphodiesterase inhibitors, and intracellular injection of the active
catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase did not affect the
amplitude or waveform of IA. Also, the changes in IA that are caused by
forskolin were not prevented or reversed by intracellular injection of an
inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Cyclic AMP did, however,
activate inward current at voltages near the resting potential. We conclude
that the changes in IA and the activation of inward current represent
separate affects of forskolin. The inward current appears to depend on an
increase in intracellular cAMP, while the changes in IA do not. These
experiments show that, in addition to activating adenylate cyclase,
forskolin may have a separate direct affect on the transient K current.