Protein Information

ID 340
Name Substance P
Synonyms Hs.2563; PPT; NK2; NKA; NKNA; Neurokinin 1; Neurokinin 2; Neurokinin A…

Compound Information

ID 1822
Name sodium cyanide
CAS sodium cyanide (Na(CN))

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
3921196 Zapata P, Eyzaguirre C: Bioelectric potentials in the carotid body. . Brain Res. 1985 Apr 1;331(1):39-50.
Simultaneous recordings of focal slow potentials (sVs) and chemosensory discharges were made from cat carotid body-nerve preparations in situ. Chemoreceptor stimulants (100% N2, asphyxia, NaCN, ACh and nicotine), and depressants (100% O2, spontaneous gasps and dopamine) changed receptor polarization. sVs evoked by stimulants had a negative polarity whereas depressants elicited positive deflections. There was a direct correlation between maximal frequency of chemosensory discharges and peak sV amplitude when NaCN injections or N2 inhalation were used. However, cholinergic agents, dopamine and substance P evoked sVs which lacked correlation in time-course, amplitude or polarity with changes in sensory frequency. After a 6-day carotid nerve crush, different stimuli still evoked sVs even in the absence of sensory discharges. Both sVs and chemosensory discharges were abolished after 1 h ischemia produced by ligature of carotid body blood vessels. Thus, sVs from carotid body chemoreceptors probably include a neuronal component (the generator potential) directly responsible for the origin of chemosensory discharges, and a non-neuronal component (receptor or secretory potentials) probably originating in glomus and/or sustentacular cells.
1(0,0,0,1)