The effect of the neuropeptide substance P on desensitization of ATP receptors of PC12 cells

Abstract
1. Patch clamp recording (whole cell configuration) was employed to investigate the modulatory action of substance P on inward currents elicited by adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP, focally applied via a pressure pipette) from phaechromocytoma (PC12) cells usually held at -70 mV. 2. Bath-applied substance P (0.2-20 microM) had no effect on baseline membrane current but reversibly reduced ATP peak currents in a concentration-dependent fashion. The depressant effect was not associated with a change in the ATP current reversal potential. 3. Equiamplitude peak responses induced by 50 microM or 5 mM ATP were differentially affected by substance P which preferentially reduced currents evoked by 5 mM ATP. In the presence of substance P a conditioning pulse of ATP evoked a stronger depression to subsequent test pulses of the same agonist. 4. Combined patch clamping and confocal laser imaging of intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) of single PC12 cells showed that substance P (applied by a pressure pipette) per se had no effect on [Ca2+]i or current baseline, although it reduced the inward current and associated [Ca2+]i rise elicited by ATP. 5. These results are interpreted as due to facilitation by substance P of desensitization of ATP-gated P2x2 receptors of PC12 cells. It is proposed that the novel modulation by this peptide of ATP responses may serve as a model for further studies aimed at elucidating the action of substance P on purinergic neurotransmission.