Neuroscience
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Intracellular microelectrodes were used to examine the active and passive membrane properties of neurons in the myenteric plexus of the guinea-pig small intestine. Neurons of two types were examined: S neurons, which have prominent fast excitatory postsynaptic potentials and in which action potentials are not followed by long-lasting afterhyperpolarizations, and AH neurons, which have long-lasting afterhyperpolarizations following soma action potentials. In preparations in which the myenteric ganglia and longitudinal muscle, but no mucosa, were present, most S neurons (59/64) responded to intracellular depolarizing current with brief bursts of action potentials. ⋯ Spontaneous antidromic action potentials were recorded in 8/62 AH neurons within 600 microm circumferential to the intact mucosa. It is concluded that, when the mucosa is intact, a background firing of sensory neurons occurs which leads to a state change in many S neurons innervated by the active sensory neurons. We conclude that this state change is caused by the block of a voltage-sensitive outward rectification.
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The effects of pretreatment with a protein kinase C activator, phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate, on antinociception induced by i.c.v.-administered mu-opioid receptor agonist (D-Ala2, NMePhe4, Gly(ol)5) enkephalin (DAMGO) or morphine and epsilon-opioid receptor agonist beta-endorphin were studied in male ICR mice. The tail-flick responses were used for antinociceptive tests. I.c.v. pretreatment with phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (50 pmol) for 30 or 60 but not 10 min attenuated antinociception induced by i.c.v.-administered DAMGO. ⋯ The attenuation of i.c.v.-administered DAMGO- and morphine-induced antinociception by phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate was reversed by concomitant i.c.v. pretreatment with a selective protein kinase C inhibitor calphostin C. These results suggest that activation of protein kinase C by phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate leads to the desensitization of mu-, but not epsilon-opioid receptor-mediated antinociception. These findings also provide additional evidence for differential intracellular modulation on antinociceptive action of mu- and epsilon-opioid receptor agonists.
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A set of well-defined antisera against neuronal and glial proteins were used to characterize patterns of protein expression in rat hippocampus following transection of the fimbira-fornix and perforant pathways or after administration of the selective neurotoxicant trimethyltin (8 mg/kg, i.p.). SNAP-25 (synaptosomal protein, mol. wt 25,000) is a neuron-specific, developmentally regulated presynaptic protein, stannin is a protein enriched in cells sensitive to trimethyltin, and GAP-43 (growth-associated protein, mol. wt 43,000) is associated with axonal growth and regeneration. Glial fibrillary acidic protein is an astrocyte-specific intermediate filament protein and a marker for reactive gliosis. ⋯ Immunoblot analysis showed that only the adult SNAP-25b isoform was expressed after trimethyltin intoxication. These data suggest that SNAP-25 is a useful marker for presynaptic damage. Furthermore, reexpression of developmental isoforms of SNAP-25a may precede functional reinnervation when the postsynaptic target remains intact.
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The neuropeptide somatostatin is widely distributed in the CNS and is believed to play a role as a neurotransmitter or a neuromodulator. Somatostatin mediates its actions by the binding of the peptide to high affinity membrane receptors. The genes for five somatostatin receptor types have been cloned recently and Northern blotting and in situ hybridization studies have shown that the transcripts of all five types are expressed in the CNS. ⋯ Cells and processes were labelled in a number of areas, including the basolateral amygdala, the locus coeruleus, the endopiriform nucleus, the deep layers of the cerebral cortex, the subiculum, the claustrum, the habenula, the interpenduncular nucleus, the hippocampus and the central grey. In the spinal cord, the substantia gelatinosa showed strongly-labelled cell bodies and their processes. This study provides an improved understanding of the distribution of the sst2(a) receptor in rat brain.