Neuroscience
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Repeated microinjections of morphine into the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray produce antinociceptive tolerance. This tolerance may be a direct effect of morphine on cells within the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray or may require activation of downstream structures such as the rostral ventromedial medulla or spinal cord. Experiment 1 examined whether tolerance develops when opioid receptors in the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray are blocked prior to repeated systemic morphine administration. ⋯ These data demonstrate that the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray is both necessary and sufficient to produce tolerance to the antinociceptive effect of morphine. The ventrolateral periaqueductal gray is necessary in that tolerance does not develop if opiate action within the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray is blocked (experiment 1). The ventrolateral periaqueductal gray is sufficient in that tolerance occurs even when morphine's effects are restricted to the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray (experiment 2).
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Increasing evidence suggests that abnormal iron handling may be involved in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease. The present study investigates the role of iron and the iron-storage protein ferritin in inflammation-induced degeneration of dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta. Injection of lipopolysaccharide into the globus pallidus of young and middle-aged rats substantially decreased tyrosine hydroxylase immunostaining in substantia nigra pars compacta four weeks after injection. ⋯ Intrapallidal lipopolysaccharide injection also increased expression of alpha-synuclein and ubiquitin in tyrosine hydroxylase-positive neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta. These results suggest that pallidal inflammation significantly increases stress on dopamine-containing neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta. Alterations in nigral iron levels and protein handing may increase the vulnerability of nigral neurons to degenerative processes.
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Glial cells interact with neurons and play important roles in the development, differentiation, maintenance and repair of the nervous system. Human neuroblastoma cells (SH-SY5Y) became dramatically resistant to neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA), when co-cultured with mouse astrocytes. In order to further delineate the molecular mechanism involved in the neuroprotection in this selective cell-cell interaction, we assessed the activation of two signal pathways, namely, the MAP kinases (extracellular signal-regulated kinases, ERK1/2) and phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3-K)/Akt signal pathways in response to 6-OHDA insult and subsequent neuronal survival. ⋯ Selective inhibitor of PI3-K/Akt signal pathway blocked the acquired resistance to 6-OHDA in SH-SY5Y cells following interaction with astrocytes. Inhibition of ERK1/2 signal pathway did not affect the cell survival. Our data suggest that PI3-K/Akt signal pathway, but not ERK1/2, is involved the acquired resistance in SH-SY5Y cells following cell-cell interaction with astrocytes against the neurotoxic 6-OHDA insult.
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The command and control of limb movements by the cerebellar and reflex pathways are modeled by means of a circuit whose structure is deduced from functional constraints. One constraint is that fast limb movements must be accurate although they cannot be continuously controlled in closed loop by use of sensory signals. Thus, the pathways which process the motor orders must contain approximate inverse functions of the bio-mechanical functions of the limb and of the muscles. ⋯ Reflexes comparable to the myotatic and tendinous reflexes, and stabilizing reactions comparable to the cerebellar sensory-motor reactions, reduce efficiently the effects of perturbing torques. These results allow to link the behavioral concepts of the equilibrium-point "lambda model" [J Motor Behav 18 (1986) 17] with anatomical and physiological features: gains of reflexes and sensori-motor reactions set the slope of the "invariant characteristic," and efferent copies set the "threshold of the stretch reflex." Thus, mathematical and physical laws account for the raison d'etre of the inhibitory nature of Purkinje cells and for the conspicuous anatomical pattern of the cerebellar pathways. These properties of these pathways allow to perform approximate inverse calculations after learning of direct functions, and insure also the coordination of voluntary and reflex motor orders.
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Recently, it was reported that stimulation of the infralimbic cortex produces a feedforward inhibition of central amygdala neurons. The interest of this observation comes from the fact that the central nucleus is the main output station of the amygdala for conditioned fear responses and evidence that the infralimbic cortex plays a critical role in the extinction of conditioned fear. However, the identity of the neurons mediating this infralimbic-evoked inhibition of the central nucleus remains unknown. ⋯ In the basolateral amygdaloid complex, increases in the number of Fos-immunoreactive cells only reached significance in the contralateral lateral nucleus. These results suggest that glutamatergic inputs from the infralimbic cortex directly activate intercalated neurons. Thus, our findings raise the possibility that the infralimbic cortex inhibits conditioned fear via the excitation of intercalated cells and the consequent inhibition of central amygdala neurons.