Neurotensin and substance P receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes by messenger RNA from rat brain

Abstract
Xenopus oocytes were induced to acquire sensitivity to neurotensin and substance P, by injecting them with a fraction of poly(A)$^{+}$ mRNA from rat brain. Non-injected oocytes, and oocytes injected with other brain mRNAs, failed to show responses, suggesting that receptors to these peptides were expressed by specific brain mRNAs. Responses to substance P and neurotensin comprised an oscillatory chloride current, and a smooth current having different ionic basis. These currents resembled those seen during activation of muscarinic and serotonergic receptors, but were not blocked by the corresponding antagonists atropine and methysergide. The responses to substance P, and to a lesser extent to neurotensin, showed a long-lasting desensitization. Similarities between the oscillatory currents evoked by the peptides acetylcholine and serotonin suggest that all these receptors may `link in' to a common intracellular messenger pathway.