A, bath application of adenosine (100 µm) attenuated EPSCs (b). CPT (0.5 µm) reversed this adenosine effect (c). Sample records on the top are averaged EPSCs before (a) and during (b) adenosine application, and during addition of CPT (c, superimposed). Averaged EPSCs before (a) and after (b) adenosine application, when normalized in peak amplitude, completely overlapped with each other (bottom, superimposed). B, CPA (1 µm) attenuated EPSCs (b), and this effect was reversed by CPT (0.5 µm, c). C, adenosine inhibits EPSCs in a concentration-dependent manner. Data are shown for a single cell (left) together with a concentration-inhibition curve for pooled data from four cells (right). The fitted curve derived from:
y = maximum inhibition/[1 + (IC50/adenosine concentration)nH],
indicated a maximum inhibition of 40 %, an IC50 of 12 µm, and a Hill coefficient (nH) of 0.92. D, left panel, cumulative amplitude histograms of mEPSCs recorded in the presence of TTX, before and after (superimposed) application of adenosine (100 µm) showed no significant difference (Kolomogolov-Smirnov (K-S) test). Sample traces are averaged mEPSCs before and after application of adenosine (superimposed). Right panel, mean amplitude of mEPSCs before and after adenosine applications in five cells. No significant difference in paired t test. Data derived from P6 and P7 rats.