Ulrich Musshoff

Universitätsklinikum Münster, Münster, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany

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Publications (12)51.88 Total impact

  • Article: Effects of monomethylarsonic and monomethylarsonous acid on evoked synaptic potentials in hippocampal slices of adult and young rats.
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    ABSTRACT: Arsenite and its metabolites, dimethylarsinic or dimethylarsinous acid, have previously been shown to disturb synaptic transmission in hippocampal slices of rats (Krüger, K., Gruner, J., Madeja, M., Hartmann, L.M., Hirner, A.V., Binding, N., Mubetahoff, U., 2006a. Blockade and enhancement of glutamate receptor responses in Xenopus oocytes by methylated arsenicals. Arch. Toxicol. 80, 492-501, Krüger, K., Straub, H., Binding, N., Mubetahoff, U., 2006b. Effects of arsenite on long-term potentiation in hippocampal slices from adult and young rats. Toxicol. Lett. 165, 167-173, Krüger, K., Repges, H., Hippler, J., Hartmann, L.M., Hirner, A.V., Straub, H., Binding, N., Mubetahoff, U., 2007. Effects of dimethylarsinic and dimethylarsinous acid on evoked synaptic potentials in hippocampal slices of young and adult rats. Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 225, 40-46). The present experiments investigate, whether the important arsenic metabolites monomethylarsonic acid (MMA(V)) and monomethylarsonous acid (MMA(III)) also influence the synaptic functions of the hippocampus. In hippocampal slices of young (14-21 days-old) and adult (2-4 months-old) rats, evoked synaptic field potentials from the Schaffer collateral-CA1 synapse were measured under control conditions and during and after 30 and 60 min of application of the arsenic compounds. MMA(V) had no effect on the synapse functions neither in slices of adult nor in those from young rats. However, MMA(III) strongly influenced the synaptic transmission: it totally depressed the amplitudes of fEPSPs at concentrations of 50 micromol/l (adult rats) and 25 micromol/l (young rats) and LTP amplitudes at concentrations of 25 micromol/l (adult rats) and 10 micromol/l (young rats), respectively. In contrast, application of 1 micromol/l MMA(III) led to an enhancement of the LTP amplitude in young rats, which is interpretable by an enhancing effect on NMDA receptors and a lack of the blocking effect on AMPA receptors at this concentration (Krüger, K., Gruner, J., Madeja, M., Hartmann, L.M., Hirner, A.V., Binding, N., Mubetahoff, U., 2006a. Blockade and enhancement of glutamate receptor responses in Xenopus oocytes by methylated arsenicals. Arch. Toxicol. 80, 492-501). These effects are probably not mediated by changes in cell excitability or in presynaptic glutamate release rates, since antidromically induced population spikes and paired-pulse facilitation failed to show any MMA(III) effect. The impairment of the excitatory CA1 synapse is more likely caused by the action of MMA(III) on postsynaptic glutamatergic receptors and may be jointly responsible for dysfunctions of cognitive effects in arsenic toxicity.
    Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology 02/2009; 236(1):115-23. · 4.45 Impact Factor
  • Article: Effects of dimethylarsinic and dimethylarsinous acid on evoked synaptic potentials in hippocampal slices of young and adult rats.
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    ABSTRACT: In this study, the effects of pentavalent dimethylarsinic acid ((CH(3))(2)AsO(OH); DMA(V)) and trivalent dimethylarsinous acid ((CH(3))(2)As(OH); DMA(III)) on synaptic transmission generated by the excitatory Schaffer collateral-CA1 synapse were tested in hippocampal slices of young (14-21 day-old) and adult (2-4 month-old) rats. Both compounds were applied in concentrations of 1 to 100 micromol/l. DMA(V) had no effect on the amplitudes of evoked fEPSPs or the induction of LTP recorded from the CA1 dendritic region either in adult or in young rats. However, application of DMA(III) significantly reduced the amplitudes of evoked fEPSPs in a concentration-dependent manner with a total depression following application of 100 micromol/l DMA(III) in adult and 10 micromol/l DMA(III) in young rats. Moreover, DMA(III) significantly affected the LTP-induction. Application of 10 micromol/l DMA(III) resulted in a complete failure of the postsynaptic potentiation of the fEPSP amplitudes in slices taken both from adult and young rats. The depressant effect was not reversible after a 30-min washout of the DMA(III). In slices of young rats, the depressant effects of DMA(III) were more pronounced than in those taken from adult ones. Compared to the (absent) effect of DMA(V) on synaptic transmission, the trivalent compound possesses a considerably higher neurotoxic potential.
    Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology 12/2007; 225(1):40-6. · 4.45 Impact Factor
  • Article: Effects of arsenite on long-term potentiation in hippocampal slices from young and adult rats.
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    ABSTRACT: The effects of trivalent arsenite were tested at the Schaffer collateral-CA1 synapse of adult (2-4 month) and young (14-21 days) rats. Exposure of 100micromol/l arsenite led to a slight and reversible reduction of the amplitudes of evoked excitatory postsynaptic field potentials in adult and young rats, while exposure of 0.1 and 1micromol/l arsenite had no effects. The long-term potentiation (LTP) was significantly inhibited by arsenite in adult but not in young rats. Exposure of 0.1, 1 and 100micromol/l arsenite to slices of adult rats before and during the LTP stimulus led to a significant reduction in the potentiated amplitudes amounting to a maximum of 50% of the control values. In young animals, however, exposure of 1micromol/l arsenite showed no effect on the LTP potentiated amplitudes, while exposure of 100micromol/l arsenite led initially to a significant reduction in the amplitudes, compared to the control level, which was completely reversible 20min after washout. Exposure of 100micromol/l arsenite did not affect the paired-pulse facilitation, indicating that arsenite does not exert its effects by influencing presynaptic transmitter release mechanisms.
    Toxicology Letters 09/2006; 165(2):167-73. · 3.23 Impact Factor
  • Article: Blockade and enhancement of glutamate receptor responses in Xenopus oocytes by methylated arsenicals.
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    ABSTRACT: Pentavalent and trivalent organoarsenic compounds belong to the major metabolites of inorganic arsenicals detected in humans. Recently, the question was raised whether the organic arsenicals represent metabolites of a detoxification process or methylated species with deleterious biological effects. In this study, the effects of trivalent arsenite (AsO(3) (3-); iA(III)), the pentavalent organoarsenic compounds monomethylarsonic acid (CH(3)AsO(OH)(2); MMA(V)) and dimethylarsinic acid ((CH(3))(2)AsO(OH); DMA(V)) and the trivalent compounds monomethylarsonous acid (CH(3)As(OH)(2), MMA(III)) and dimethylarsinous acid ((CH(3))(2)As(OH); DMA(III)) were tested on glutamate receptors and on voltage-operated potassium and sodium channels heterologously expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Membrane currents of ion channels were measured by conventional two-electrode voltage-clamp techniques. The effects of arsenite were tested in concentrations of 1-1,000 micromol/l and the organic arsenical compounds were tested in concentrations of 0.1-100 micromol/l. We found no significant effects on voltage-operated ion channels; however, the arsenicals exert different effects on glutamate receptors. While MMA(V) and MMA(III) significantly enhanced ion currents through N-methyl-D: -aspartate (NMDA) receptor ion channels with threshold concentrations <10 micromol/l, DMA(V) and DMA(III) significantly reduced NMDA-receptor mediated responses with threshold concentrations <0.1 micromol/l; iA(III) had no effects on glutamate receptors of the NMDA type. MMA(III) and DMA(V) significantly reduced ion currents through alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid (AMPA)-receptor ion channels with threshold concentrations <10 micromol/l (MMA(III)) and <1 micromol/l (DMA(V)). MMA(V) and iA(III) had no significant effects on glutamate receptors of the AMPA type. The effects of MMA(V), MMA(III), DMA(V) and DMA(III )on glutamate receptors point to a neurotoxic potential of these substances.
    Archive für Toxikologie 08/2006; 80(8):492-501. · 4.67 Impact Factor
  • Article: Intrinsic excitability, synaptic potentials, and short-term plasticity in human epileptic neocortex.
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    ABSTRACT: Although studies of epileptic human hippocampus suggest changes of synaptic and intrinsic excitability, few changes, save the appearance of spontaneous field/synaptic potentials, are known in epileptic neocortical tissue. However, invasive EEG and histological studies suggest that neocortical tissue, even in mesial temporal lobe epilepsy, can play an important role as an irritative zone or extrahippocampal focus. We hypothesized that intrinsic neuronal and synaptic excitability, as well as short-term plasticity, are altered in neocortical areas, particularly with elevated K+ levels as occur during seizures. We analyzed neuronal firing properties, synaptic responses, and paired-pulse plasticity in human neocortical slices from tissue resected during epilepsy surgery, both under normal and under pathological conditions, i.e., after elevating K+ (4/8 mM), with rat neocortical slices as controls. Neuronal firing properties were not different. We did find, however, alterations of synaptic responsiveness in epileptic tissue, i.e., an elevated network excitability with K+ elevations, and reduction of paired-pulse depression.
    Journal of Neuroscience Research 07/2005; 80(5):715-26. · 2.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Blockade of glutamatergic and GABAergic receptor channels by trimethyltin chloride.
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    ABSTRACT: 1. Organotin compounds such as trimethyltin chloride (TMT) are among the most toxic of the organometallics. As their main target for toxicity is the central nervous system, the aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of TMT on receptor channels involved in various processes of synaptic transmission. 2. The Xenopus oocyte expression system was chosen for direct assessment of TMT effects on voltage-operated potassium channels and glutamatergic and GABAergic receptors, and hippocampal slices from rat brain for analyzing TMT effects on identified synaptic sites. 3. TMT was found to be ineffective, at 100 micromol l(-1), against several potassium- and sodium-operated ion channel functions as well as the metabotropic glutamate receptor. 4. The functions of the ionotropic glutamate and the GABA(A) receptor channels were inhibited by TMT in micromolar concentrations. Thus, at a maximum concentration of 100 micromol l(-1), around 20-30% of the alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid and GABA(A) receptor-mediated ion currents and 35% of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor-mediated ion currents were blocked. 5. In the hippocampal slice model, the inhibitory effects of TMT were much stronger than expected from the results on the ion channels. Bath application of TMT significantly reduced the amplitudes of evoked excitatory postsynaptic field potentials in a concentration-dependent and nonreversible manner. 6. Induction of long-term potentiation, recorded from the CA1 dendritic region, was inhibited by TMT and failed completely at a concentration of 10 micromol l(-1). 7. In general, TMT affects the excitatory and inhibitory synaptic processes in a receptor specific manner and is able to disturb the activity within a neuronal network.
    British Journal of Pharmacology 02/2005; 144(2):283-92. · 4.41 Impact Factor
  • Article: Contribution of the cytoskeleton and the phospholipase C signaling pathway to fluid stream-induced membrane currents.
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    ABSTRACT: A fluid stream induced by a concentration clamp system evokes in Xenopus oocytes a deformation of the membrane which results in transient chloride currents of high amplitude (stream-evoked inward current, I(i,st)) during calcium-activated chloride current oscillations. The involvement of cytoskeleton elements and of components of the phospholipase C-dependent signaling pathway on the generation of the I(i,st) were investigated. Incubation of the oocytes with cytoskeleton-disrupting agents exerted no effects on generation of the I(i,st), suggesting that the mechanotransduction is not mediated by these structures. The fluid stream induced an elevation of the submembraneous calcium concentration, as measured by an increase of Fluo-4-mediated fluorescence after the stimulus. Lowering the intracellular calcium concentration by injection of calcium chelators or depleting inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (InsP(3))-sensitive calcium stores by blockers of the calcium pumps suppressed the generation of the I(i,st) in most cases. Furthermore, the phospholipase C inhibitor U73122 reversibly blocked the I(i,st). The results suggest that the fluid stream leads to a membrane stretch which modulates directly or indirectly the activity of a membrane-bound phospholipase C. The phospholipase C transiently elevates the InsP(3) concentration, in turn releasing calcium from InsP(3)-sensitive internal calcium stores, thus evoking an enhanced calcium-sensitive chloride current.
    Cell Calcium 05/2004; 35(4):333-43. · 3.77 Impact Factor
  • Article: Diurnal actions of melatonin on epileptic activity in hippocampal slices of rats.
    Ulrich Musshoff, Erwin Josef Speckmann
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    ABSTRACT: Since melatonin receptors have been found in the hippocampus of mammals it has been suggested that melatonin can modulate neuronal functions of hippocampal cells. The effect of melatonin (10 nM/l and 1 microM/l) on frequency and amplitude of epileptiform field potentials (EFP) elicited by low Mg(2+) or by bicuculline was tested in the CA1 region of hippocampal slices of rats. In the low Mg(2+) model, melatonin, applied in a near physiological concentration of 10 nM/l, exerts no effect on EFP in slices prepared at night or during the day. In a concentration of 1 microM/l, however, melatonin enhances the frequency of EFP to approximately 140% in slices prepared during the day. This effect was suppressed through simultaneous administration of the melatonin receptor antagonist luzindole (10 microM/l). In contrast, melatonin did not affect epileptic activity in slices prepared at night. Epileptiform discharges elicited by blocking the GABAergic inhibition (bicuculline model) were not affected by melatonin, either during the day or at night. The results indicate that melatonin affects epileptic activity in a diurnal manner and that the action of melatonin is different in relation to the epilepsy model.
    Life Sciences 11/2003; 73(20):2603-10. · 2.53 Impact Factor
  • Article: Gene expression and functional characterization of melatonin receptors in the spinal cord of the rat: implications for pain modulation.
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    ABSTRACT: Recently, a species-dependent distribution of melatonin binding sites have been found in lamina I-V and lamina X of the spinal cord. In order to learn more about the function of spinal melatonin receptors, we investigated (i) the gene expression for melatonin receptor subtypes in lumbar and thoracal spinal cord tissue by means of the reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) technique, and (ii) the electrophysiological and pharmacological properties of melatonin receptors heterologously expressed in Xenopus oocytes after injection of spinal cord mRNA by means of the voltage clamp technique. Because ample evidence indicates an antinociceptive effect of melatonin, (iii) the role of spinal melatonin receptors for maintaining mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia was studied in a rat model for postoperative pain. The RT-PCR data revealed that transcripts for MT1 and MT2 melatonin receptors are present in the dorsal and ventral horn of lumbar and thoracal spinal cord tissue. Injection of mRNA from lumbar spinal cord tissue into Xenopus oocytes led to the functional reconstitution of melatonin receptors which activate calcium-dependent chloride inward currents. Melatonin responses were abolished by simultaneous administration of the antagonists, 2-phenylmelatonin and luzindole and were unaffected by the MT2 antagonist 4-phenyl-2-propionamidotetralin. Intrathecal administration of different melatonin doses (10-100 nmol) did not inhibit mechanical or thermal hyperalgesia. However, intrathecal application of a low dose of morphine together with melatonin caused a brief antinociceptive effect suggesting an enhanced morphine analgesia by melatonin. In conclusion, the present study demonstrated for the first time the presence of transcripts of MT1 and MT2 receptors located in the dorsal and ventral horn of the spinal cord. Furthermore, spinal melatonin enhanced the antinociceptive effect of morphine indicating that melatonin acts as a neuromodulator in the spinal cord.
    Journal of Pineal Research 09/2003; 35(1):24-31. · 5.79 Impact Factor
  • Article: Molecular site of action of the antiarrhythmic drug propafenone at the voltage-operated potassium channel Kv2.1.
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    ABSTRACT: The effects of the antiarrhythmic drug propafenone at Kv2.1 channels were studied with wild-type and mutated channels expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. Propafenone decreased the Kv2.1 currents in a time- and voltage-dependent manner (decrease of the time constants of current rise, increase of block with the duration of voltage steps starting from a block of less than 19%, increase of block with the amplitude of depolarization yielding a fractional electrical distance delta of 0.11 to 0.16). Block of Kv2.1 appeared with application to the intracellular, but not the extracellular, side of membrane patches. In mutagenesis experiments, all parts of the Kv2.1 channel were successively exchanged with those of the Kv1.2 channel, which is much more sensitive to propafenone. The intracellular amino and carboxyl terminus and the intracellular linker S4-S5 reduced the blocking effect of propafenone, whereas the linker S5-S6, as well as the segment S6 of the Kv1.2 channel, abolished it to the value of the Kv1.2 channel. In the linker S5-S6, this effect could be narrowed down to two groups of amino acids (groups 372 to 374 and 383 to 384), which also affected the sensitivity to tetraethylammonium. In segment S6, several amino acids in the intracellularly directed part of the helix significantly reduced propafenone sensitivity. The results suggest that propafenone blocks the Kv2.1 channel in the open state from the intracellular side by entering the inner vestibule of the channel. These results are consistent with a direct interaction of propafenone with the lower part of the pore helix and/or residues of segment S6.
    Molecular Pharmacology 04/2003; 63(3):547-56. · 4.88 Impact Factor
  • Article: Receptor (MT(1)) mediated influence of melatonin on cAMP concentration and insulin secretion of rat insulinoma cells INS-1.
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    ABSTRACT: Recent functional, autoradiographic, and molecular investigations have shown that the pineal secretory product melatonin reduces the forskolin-stimulated insulin secretion from isolated pancreatic islets of neonate rats. Autoradiographic and binding studies as well as reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) experiments proved that these effects are mediated through specific, high-affinity pertussis-toxin-sensitive Gi-protein-coupled MT(1) receptors and subsequent inhibition of the adenylyl cyclase/cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) system. This hypothesis was proved by blocking the intracellular signal transduction pathway using the non-hydrolyzable guanosine triphosphate analog guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTPgammaS) or the competitive melatonin receptor antagonist luzindole. Both GTPgammaS and luzindole diminished the melatonin effect. We have published these prior results elsewhere. So far, however, no information is available on both whether the MT1 receptors are located on the beta-cells and whether the consecutive functional reactions are based on a direct influence of melatonin on the insulin producing beta-cells. In order to examine this question, we used a glucose responsive insulin producing insulinoma cell line INS-1 isolated from rats. Comparable with the results of islets the competitive receptor antagonist luzindole diminished the insulin-decreasing effect of melatonin. In addition, our RT-PCR experiments, using specific primers for the rat melatonin receptor MT(1) showed that this melatonin receptor mRNA is also expressed in the INS-1 cells. Furthermore we radioimmunologically analyzed the forskolin-stimulated cAMP concentration in the superfusate. Similar to insulin secretion, the cAMP concentration was significantly reduced by melatonin. Following the hypothesis that cAMP is actively secreted from INS-1 cells by an energy-dependent mechanism based on either a OAT1/ROAT1 like anion exchanger or MDR-like transport systems, we used probenecid (p-[dipropylsulfamoyl] benzoic acid), a known inhibitor of cAMP extrusion. Probenecid blocks the export of cAMP by acting on transport mechanisms which are as yet not completely understood. Consistently, insulin secretion was increased and cAMP concentration diminished. The application of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor IBMX (3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine) caused a marked rise of insulin secretion as well as cAMP concentration in the perifusate. From these data we conclude that the MT1 receptor is located on the INS-1 cell and therefore in general on pancreatic beta-cells.
    Journal of Pineal Research 10/2002; 33(2):63-71. · 5.79 Impact Factor
  • Article: Melatonin receptors in rat hippocampus: molecular and functional investigations.
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    ABSTRACT: Since binding sites for melatonin have been found in the hippocampus of several mammals, it has been suggested that the pineal hormone melatonin is able to modulate neuronal functions of hippocampal cells. In order to get more insight into the role of melatonin for the functions of hippocampal cells, the following experiments were performed: male rats, maintained under a 12/12-h light-dark cycle, were sacrificed by decapitation at zeitgeber times (h) ZT2, ZT8, and ZT15 (ZT0 = lights on); for experiment 1, gene expression for melatonin receptors was detected in the hippocampus and in hippocampal subfields by means of the RT-PCR technique; for experiment 2, electrophysiological and pharmacological properties of melatonin receptors heterologously expressed in Xenopus oocytes after injection of mRNA from the hippocampus were analyzed by means of voltage clamp technique; and for experiment 3, effects of melatonin on the spontaneous firing rate of action potentials in the CA1 regions of hippocampal slices were analyzed by means of extracellular recordings. The RT-PCR data revealed that transcripts for both the MT1 and MT2 melatonin receptors are present in the dentate gyrus, CA3, and CA1 regions, and the subiculum of the hippocampus. Injection of mRNA from rat hippocampus into the Xenopus oocytes led to the functional reconstitution of melatonin-sensitive receptors, which activates calcium-dependent chloride inward currents. The melatonin responses were abolished by simultaneous administration of the antagonists 2-phenylmelatonin and luzindole, and were unaffected by the MT2 antagonist 4-phenyl-2-propionamidotetralin. Bath-applied melatonin (1 micromol/l) enhances the firing rate of neurons in the CA1 region. The effect was small in experiments performed at ZT8 (<2 times the initial level) and large in experiments performed at ZT15 (>6 times). The changes of neuronal firing rate induced by melatonin were completely suppressed with simultaneous administration of the melatonin receptor antagonist luzindole (10 micromol/l). The results indicate that melatonin may play an important role in modulating neuronal excitability in the hippocampus.
    Hippocampus 02/2002; 12(2):165-73. · 5.18 Impact Factor