Tachyphylaxis to 5-HT3-receptor-mediated activation of vagal afferents is prevented by co-activation of 5-HT2 receptors

2006 
Abstract Functional studies have provided evidence that 5-HT 3 ion-channel receptors (5-HT 3 Rs) on vagal cardiopulmonary afferents mediating the Bezold–Jarisch reflex (BJR) rapidly desensitize upon repeated exposure to selective 5-HT 3 R agonists. G-protein-coupled 5-HT 2 receptors (5-HT 2 Rs) also exist on vagal afferents, although activation of these receptors does not elicit the BJR. However, there is in vivo evidence that 5-HT 2 Rs may regulate the activity of 5-HT 3 Rs. The aim of this study was to determine whether co-activation of 5-HT 2 Rs prevents desensitization of 5-HT 3 Rs mediating the BJR in conscious rats. The principal findings were that (1) tachyphylaxis rapidly developed to the BJR-mediated hemodynamic responses elicited by successive injections of 5-HT 3 R agonists and (2) co-injection of the selective 5-HT 2 R agonist, α-methyl-5-HT, prevented tachyphylaxis to the BJR-mediated hemodynamic responses elicited by the 5-HT 3 R agonists. Additional studies provided evidence that (1) tachyphylaxis to the 5-HT 3 R agonists was not due to impairment of the central or efferent processing of the BJR, and (2) the pressor responses elicited by α-methyl-5-HT were not responsible for preventing tachyphylaxis to the BJR reflex responses elicited by 5-HT 3 R agonists. These results suggest that the loss of response to 5-HT 3 R agonists is due to desensitization of 5-HT 3 Rs on vagal afferents mediating the BJR and that co-activation of 5-HT 2 Rs prevents the desensitization of these 5-HT 3 Rs.
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