Neuroscience
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Immobilization stress rapidly modulates BDNF mRNA expression in the hypothalamus of adult male rats.
We demonstrated that short times (15 min) of immobilization stress application induced a very rapid increase in brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) mRNA expression in rat hypothalamus followed by a BDNF protein increase. The early change in total BDNF mRNA level seems to reflect increased expression of the BDNF transcript containing exon III, which was also rapidly (15 min) modified. The paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei, two hypothalamic nuclei closely related to the stress response and known to express BDNF mRNA, were analyzed by in situ hybridization following immobilization stress. ⋯ In contrast, in the two other regions examined, the lateral and ventral magnocellular regions of the paraventricular nucleus, as well as in the supraoptic nucleus, signals above control were increased later, at 60 min. After stress application, plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone and corticosterone levels were strongly and significantly increased at 15 min. These studies demonstrated that immobilization stress challenge very rapidly enhanced BDNF mRNA levels as well as the protein, suggesting that BDNF may play a role in plasticity processes related to the stress response.
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There is a large body of data on the firing properties of dopamine cells in anaesthetised rats or rat brain slices. However, the extent to which these data relate to more natural conditions is uncertain, as there is little quantitative information available on the firing properties of these cells in freely moving rats. We examined this by recording from the midbrain dopamine cell fields using chronically implanted microwire electrodes. (1) In most cases, slowly firing cells with broad action potentials were profoundly inhibited by the dopamine agonist apomorphine, consistent with previously accepted criteria. ⋯ The distribution of burst incidence was similar to that previously reported with chloral hydrate anaesthesia, but the average intraburst frequency was higher in the conscious animal at rest and was higher again in bursts triggered by salient stimuli. (3) There was no evidence for spike frequency adaptation within bursts on average, consistent with the hypothesis that afterhyperpolarisation currents may be disabled during behaviourally induced bursting. (4) Presumed dopamine cells responded to reward-related stimuli with increased bursting rates and significantly higher intraburst frequencies compared to bursts emitted outside task context, indicating that modulation of afferent activity might not only trigger bursting, but may also regulate burst intensity. (5) In addition to the irregular single spike and bursting modes we found that extremely regular (clock-like) firing, previously only described for dopamine cells in reduced preparations, can also be expressed in the freely moving animal. (6) Cross-correlation analysis of activity recorded from simultaneously recorded neurones revealed coordinated activity in a quarter of dopamine cell pairs consistent with at least "functional" connectivity. On the other hand, most dopamine cell pairs showed no correlation, leaving open the possibility of functional sub-groupings within the dopamine cell fields. Taken together, the data suggest that the basic firing modes described for dopamine cells in reduced or anaesthetised preparations do reflect natural patterns of activity for these neurones, but also that the details of this activity are dependent upon modulation of afferent inputs by behavioural stimuli.
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Modulation of endogenous adenosine levels by inhibition of adenosine metabolism produces a peripheral antinociceptive effect in a neuropathic pain model. The present study used microdialysis to investigate the neuronal mechanisms modulating extracellular adenosine levels in the rat hind paw following tight ligation of the L5 and L6 spinal nerves. Subcutaneous injection of 50 microl saline into the nerve-injured paw induced a rapid and short-lasting increase in extracellular adenosine levels in the subcutaneous tissues of the rat hind paw ipsilateral to the nerve injury. ⋯ These results suggest that following nerve injury, peripheral capsaicin-sensitive primary sensory afferent nerve terminals are hypersensitive, and are able to release adenosine following a stimulus that does not normally evoke release in sham-operated or intact rats. Sympathetic postganglionic afferents do not appear to be involved in such release. The lack of effect on such release by the inhibitors of adenosine metabolism suggests an altered peripheral adenosine system following spinal nerve ligation.
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Spatial learning and synaptic hippocampal plasticity in type 2 somatostatin receptor knock-out mice.
Somatostatin is implicated in a number of physiological functions in the CNS. These effects are elicited through the activation of at least five receptor subtypes. Among them, sst2 receptors appear the most widely expressed in the cortex and hippocampal region. ⋯ Extracellular recordings in the CA1 area showed an enhancement in glutamatergic (AMPA and NMDA) responses in sst2 KO mice which displayed an increase in the magnitude of the short-term potentiation and long-term depression. In contrast, long-term potentiation was not significantly altered. Taken together, these data demonstrate that somatostatin, acting via sst2 hippocampal receptors, may contribute to a global decrease in glutamate efficiency and consequently alter glutamate-dependent plasticity and spatial learning.
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There is evidence for interactions between leptin and cholecystokinin in controlling food intake. Since cholecystokinin acts on vagal afferent neurones, we asked whether the leptin receptor was also expressed by these neurones. Primers for different forms of the leptin receptor were used in reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) of rat and human nodose ganglia. ⋯ Immunocytochemical studies revealed leptin-receptor immunoreactivity in neuronal cell bodies. Many neurones co-expressed the leptin and cholecystokinin type A receptors, or leptin receptor and cocaine- and amphetamine-related transcript. We conclude that vagal afferent neurones that express the cholecystokinin type A receptor and cocaine- and amphetamine-related transcript, may also express the long form of the leptin receptor providing a neurochemical basis for observations of interactions between cholecystokinin and leptin.