Publication | Open Access
FURTHER STUDY ON THE EFFECT OF MERSALYL, AN ORGANIC MERCURIAL, ON RELAXING RESPONSE OF A MOLLUSCAN SMOOTH MUSCLE TO MONOAMINES
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Citations
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References
1978
Year
NeurotransmitterOn Relaxing ResponseNerve EndingsPeripheral Nervous SystemNeuromuscular BlockadeNeurochemistryHealth SciencesNeuropharmacologyNervous SystemNeuromuscular PhysiologyPharmacologyDopamineAn Organic MercurialNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyPhysiologyMonoamine NeurotransmittersNeuroscienceVarious MonoaminesCentral Nervous SystemMedicineJunctional Clefts
The effect of mersalyl on the relaxation of catch by various monoamines was studied in the anterior byssal retractor muscle of Mytilus. As has already been reported, mersalyl blocked the relaxing response to indoleamines but not block that to catecholamines. The relaxations in response to catecholamine-related compounds (dopa, octopamine, tyramine, phenylephrine, beta-phenylethylamine and phenylethanolamine) and hexylamine were, however, antagonized more or less effectively with mersalyl. It was suggested that the catecholamine-related compounds and hexylamine can act on relaxing nerve endings to increase neurotransmitter serotonin in the junctional clefts, and mersalyl antagonizes the relaxation in response to these compounds by blocking the serotonin.
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