dFBr reactivates desensitized receptors. Acetylcholine or cytisine were bath-applied to Xenopus oocytes expressing α4β2 receptors at a rate of 3 ml/min for 30 s. During the desensitized portion of the response, 3-s pulses of either acetylcholine (A, top) or dFBr (A, bottom, B, and C) were repeatedly applied at a perfusion rate of 20 ml/min in the continued presence of agonist. Solid bars above the traces show the application of ACh or cytisine (continuous bar) and the repeated pulsed application of 1 μM dFBr (short lines on A, bottom, B, and C plots). A top, control trace showing repeated pulses of 10 mM acetylcholine applied during the desensitization period of a response to bath-applied 10 mM ACh. Minimal current was observed under these conditions. A bottom, application of 3-s pulses of 1 μM dFBr during the desensitization period produces large currents that decline back to baseline with repeated pulses of dFBr. B, application of 3-s pulses of 1 μM dFBr during the desensitization period of responses to 1 mM ACh produces similar effects to A bottom except pulses are broadened and show possible hump currents. C, application of 3-s pulses of 1 μM dFBr during the desensitization period of responses to 100 μM cytisine. Large currents were observed similar to those shown in A bottom but with a slower rate of decline. Each experiment was repeated at least four times on different oocytes harvested from at least two different frogs. The slope of the rising phase of the first peak generated by application of dFBr during the desensitizing period in each case was determined (activation slope): A bottom, −1020 ± 130 nA/s; B, −190 ± 9 nA/s; C, −66 ± 26 nA/s.