The somatic muscle of Ascaris suum is principally under the excitatory control of neuromuscular junction transmitter,
acetylcholine (ACh). However, it has recently been shown that neuropeptides also play an important role in the motor-nervous system and one of these, AF3 (AVPGVLRFamide), also contracts muscle. The events which trigger contraction
to ACh and AF3 would appear to be different, with ACh activating a nicotinic acetylcholine receptor whilst the response
to AF3 is most likely to involve a G-protein coupled receptor negatively coupled to adenylate cyclase. In order to further
elucidate differences in the cellular signalling pathways through which ACh and AF3 elicit muscle contraction, we
investigated the actions of protein kinase C inhibitors, tamoxifen and chelerythrine, on the dorsal somatic muscle strip
of A. suum. Contractions in response to 1 μM AF3 were potentiated by 17% in the presence of 10 μM tamoxifen (P<0·05;
n=8); however, contractions in response to 10 μM ACh were markedly inhibited (tamoxifen IC50 44±18 μM; n=6).
Tamoxifen also blocked muscle cell depolarizations to 5 μM ACh (IC50 4±1 μM; n=6) and 1 μM levamisole (IC50
14±6 μM; n=4). This was unlikely to be a non-specific effect on the membrane as hyperpolarizations to 10 μM GABA
were unaffected (93% of control with 10 μM tamoxifen; n=6; P>0·05). However, another inhibitor of mammalian
protein kinase C, chelerythrine, did not affect the response either to ACh or AF3 (n=6).