Neuroscience
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We examined the effects of repeated stress and D1 receptor activation in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) on acute-cocaine-induced locomotor activity in rats. Male rats were given 7 days of either handling (Controls) or a variety of stressors. After 8-17 days' withdrawal, rats received an intra-mPFC microinjection of the full D1 agonist, SKF 81297: 0, 0.03, 0.1 or 0.3 microg/side followed by an i.p. saline or cocaine injection (15 mg/kg, i.p.). ⋯ In high responders given SFK 81297 into the ventral mPFC, cocaine-induced activity was suppressed in Controls, while stress pretreatment rendered animals resistant to SKF 81297 effects. These results indicate that D1 receptor activation effects in the mPFC are bidirectional depending on whether rats have a high or low locomotor response to cocaine. Further, daily stress alters the sensitivity of the mPFC to SKF 81297, which is dependent on whether the dorsal or ventral mPFC is targeted.
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Using intracellular recording, we studied how several muscarinic antagonists affected the evoked endplate potentials in singly and dually innervated endplates of the levator auris longus muscle from 3 to 6-day-old rats. In dually innervated fibers, a second endplate potential (EPP) may appear after the first one when we increase the stimulation intensity. The lowest and highest EPP amplitudes are designated "small-EPP" and "large-EPP," respectively. ⋯ We observed a graded change from a multichannel involvement (P/Q- N- and L-type voltage-dependent calcium channels) of all muscarinic responses (M1-, M2- and M4-mediated) in the small-EPP to the single channel (P/Q-type) involvement of the M1 and M2 responses in the singly innervated endplates. This indicates the existence of a progressive calcium channels shutoff in parallel with the specialization of the adult type P/Q channel. In conclusion, muscarinic autoreceptors can directly modulate large-EPP generating ending potentiation, and small-EPP generating ending depression through their association with the calcium channels during development.
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Spinal intrathecal administration of nicotine inhibits bradykinin-induced plasma extravasation, a component of the inflammatory response, in the knee joint of the rat in a dose-related fashion. Nociceptors contain nicotinic receptors and activation of a nociceptor at its peripheral terminal, by capsaicin, also produces inhibition of inflammation. ⋯ Conversely, intrathecal administration of an alpha-adrenoceptor antagonist, phentolamine or an opioid receptor antagonist, naloxone, to block descending antinociceptive controls, which provide inhibitory input to primary afferent nociceptors, enhanced the action of both nicotine and capsaicin. These findings support the hypothesis that the central terminal of the primary afferent nociceptor is a CNS target at which nicotine acts to inhibit inflammation.
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This experiment tested the effect of cortical spreading depression on the sympathetic and thermogenic effects induced by orexin A. The firing rates of the sympathetic nerves to interscapular brown adipose tissue (IBAT), along with IBAT and colonic temperatures and heart rate were monitored in urethane-anesthetized male Sprague-Dawley rats before and 5 h after an injection of orexin A (1.5 nmol) into the lateral cerebral ventricle. The same variables were monitored in rats with cortical spreading depression, induced by an application of cotton pellets soaked with 2 M KCl to the frontal cortex. ⋯ The increases in firing rate, IBAT and colonic temperatures are blocked by cortical spreading depression, while the increase in heart rate is not affected by cortical spreading depression. These findings suggest that the cerebral cortex is involved in the control of the orexin A-induced hyperthermia. Furthermore, we suggested the name "hyperthermine A," as additional denomination of "orexin A."
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Tg2576 transgenic mice (mice overexpressing the "Swedish" mutation in the human amyloid precursor protein 695) demonstrated a decreased capacity for cell proliferation in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus compared with non-transgenic littermates at 3 months, 6 months and 9 months of age. Isolation stress induced by individually housing each mouse from the time of weaning further decreased hippocampal cell proliferation in Tg2576 mice as well as in non-transgenic littermates at 6 months of age. Decreases in hippocampal cell proliferation in isolated Tg2576 mice were associated with impairments in contextual but not cued memory. ⋯ These results suggest that Tg2576 mice, a mouse model of Alzheimer disease, have an impaired ability to generate new cells in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus and that the magnitude of this impairment can be modulated by behavioral interventions and drugs known to have effects on hippocampal neurogenesis in normal rodents. Unexpectedly, isolation stress also appeared to accelerate the underlying process of beta-amyloid plaque deposition in Tg2576 mice. These results suggest that stress may have an impact on the underlying disease process associated with Alzheimer's disease.