2015 Jun 27. pii: S0306-4522(15)00586-2. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2015.06.045. [Epub ahead of print]
Abstract
Sustained administration of cannabinoid agonists acting on neuronal CB1 receptors (CB1Rs) are proposed for treating spasticity and chronic pain. The impact of CB1Rs on mammalian locomotor networks remains, however, incompletely understood. To clarify how CB1Rs may control synaptic activity and locomotor network function, we used the rat spinal cord in vitro which is an advantageous model to investigate locomotor circuit mechanisms produced by the local central pattern generator. Neither the CB1 agonist anandamide nor the CB1R antagonist AM-251 evoked early (<3 h) changes in mono or polysynaptic reflexes or in locomotor rhythms. Application of anandamide (24 h) significantly decreased the ability of dorsal root afferents to elicit oscillatory cycles, and left synaptic responses unchanged. Similar application of LY 2183240, or JZL 184, inhibitors of endocannabinoid uptake processes, produced analogous results. Application of the antagonist AM-251 (or rimonabant) for >3-24 h largely impaired locomotor network activity induced by dorsal root stimuli or neurochemicals, and depressed disinhibited bursting without changing reflex amplitude or inducing neurotoxicity even if CB1R immunoreactivity was lowered in the central region. Since CB1R activation usually inhibits cAMP synthesis, we investigated how 24 h application of anandamide or AM-251 affected basal or forskolin-stimulated cAMP levels. While anandamide decreased them in an AM-251 sensitive manner, AM-251 per se did not change resting or stimulated cAMP. Our data suggest that CB1Rs may control the circuit gateway regulating the inflow of sensory afferent inputs into the locomotor circuits, indicating a potential site of action for restricting peripheral signals disruptive for locomotor activity.
Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
KEYWORDS:
AM-251; Anandamide; Cannabinoid receptor-1; Endocannabinoids; Fictive locomotion; cAMP
- PMID:
- 26126926
- [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]