The skin is the main interface between the external environment and internal body structures of an organism and as such represents a strategic point of defense. Typically, the skin is a passive structure that acts as a protective barrier, and lacks a means of direct communication between constituent cells. However, the skin of many amphibian tadpoles functions as a sensory system in its own right. For a brief period from midembryonic until early larval development, cells of the tadpole skin exhibit properties of nervous tissue when presented with a noxious stimulus anywhere on their surface (reviewed in Roberts, 1998). This excitability takes the form of an action potential or 'skin impulse,' which resembles a cardiac action potential in duration and waveform, and propagates from the point of initiation throughout the skin via electrical connections between neighbouring cells. A range of anurans, including the South African clawed frog Xenopus laevis (Daudin), the common frog Rana temporaria, the common toad Bufo bufo, and salamanders such as Amystoma, have been shown to display such excitability (Roberts, 1998). One known function of the skin impulse is to trigger escape behaviour and thereby allow the tadpole to evade predation.In Xenopus, the skin impulse pathway is one of two sensory systems in the skin that operate in parallel (Roberts and Smyth, 1974), the second one involving a more conventional innervation by mechanosensory Rohon-Beard (R-B) cells, a subset of extra-ganglionic sensory neurones (Hughes, 1957). In early embryos, at stage 27 [about 24·h post-fertilization (Nieuwkoop and Faber, 1956)], the skin is already excitable, including in areas yet to be innervated by R-B cells. Both the skin impulse and the R-B cells can activate neural circuitry of the spinal cord to initiate trunk flexion in young embryos and rhythmic swimming movements in older embryos and larvae, but through different routes. R-B cells directly activate spinal neurons (Clarke et al., 1984;Sillar and Roberts, 1988), while the skin impulse appears to gain access to the central nervous system (CNS) via a branch of the trigeminal nerve, bypassing primary sensory R-B neurons in the skin (Roberts, 1996). Thus the electrically excitable epithelium functions as a bona fide sensory system, which initially precedes and then operates in parallel with more conventional mechanosensory innervation, before its excitable properties disappear during later larval life.Most cutaneous sensory systems are subject to modification under different circumstances (Sillar, 1989). The presence of a range of neuromodulatory substances in the skin of Xenopus raises the possibility that the skin impulse and its propagation through the epithelium may be subject to regulation, as is the case for other, more conventional sensory systems. One such modulator, which is produced by the skin of many vertebrates, including humans (Weller, 1997), is the free radical, nitric oxide (NO). NADPH-diaphorase labeling, a marker for the presence of the NO synthetic enzyme NOS, ...