Neuroscience
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Comparative Study
Association of gephyrin and glycine receptors in the human brainstem and spinal cord: an immunohistochemical analysis.
Gephyrin is a postsynaptic clustering molecule that forms a protein scaffold to anchor inhibitory neurotransmitter receptors at the postsynaptic membrane of neurons. Gephyrin was first identified as a protein component of the glycine receptor complex and is also colocalized with several GABAA receptor subunits in rodent brain. We have studied the distribution of gephyrin and glycine receptor subunits in the human brainstem and spinal cord using immunohistochemistry at light and confocal laser scanning microscopy levels. ⋯ Colocalization of immunoreactivities for gephyrin and glycine receptor subunits was detected in the dorsal and ventral horns of the spinal cord, the hypoglossal nucleus and the medial vestibular nucleus of the medulla. The results clearly establish that gephyrin is ubiquitously distributed and is colocalized, with a large proportion of glycine receptor subunits in the human brainstem and spinal cord. We therefore suggest that gephyrin functions as a clustering molecule for major subtypes of glycine receptors in the human CNS.
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Comparative Study
In vivo and in vitro effects of peripheral galanin on nociceptive transmission in naive and neuropathic states.
Galanin is widely distributed in the nervous system and is consistently upregulated in both dorsal root ganglion and spinal neurones by peripheral nerve injury. This study investigates the peripheral effects of galanin on nociceptive neurones using in vitro and in vivo electrophysiological techniques in naive and neuropathic rats. Using an in vitro skin-nerve preparation recording from single nociceptive fibres, galanin (1 microM) significantly inhibited firing induced by noxious heat in 65% of fibres examined. ⋯ Injection of galanin (0.1-10 microg) into hindpaw receptive fields inhibited responses to innocuous mechanical, noxious mechanical and noxious heat stimuli in a proportion of neurones in each animal group and facilitated the remaining neurones. However, a higher proportion of neurones (80-90%) was inhibited by peripheral galanin administration in SNL rats compared with naive (45-55%) and sham (70-80%) rats. These results show that galanin can have both excitatory and inhibitory effects on peripheral sensory neurones, perhaps reflecting differential receptor activation, and that the proportion of these receptors may change following peripheral neuropathy.
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Comparative Study
Propagation pattern of entorhinal cortex subfields to the dentate gyrus in the guinea-pig: an electrophysiological study.
Anatomical studies demonstrated that neurons located in the superficial layers of the medial and lateral aspects of the rat entorhinal cortex (EC) project to temporal and septal portions of both the dentate gyrus (DG) and the CA1 region of the hippocampus, respectively. In the present study we investigated with electrophysiological techniques the propagation pattern of different EC subfields to the DG of the in vitro isolated brain of the guinea-pig. Laminar field potential profiles from different portions of the DG were recorded with multi-channel silicon probes following direct stimulation of the ipsilateral EC surface performed in different positions under direct visual control. ⋯ The EC-evoked monosynaptic DG potentials were followed by disynaptic responses coupled with sinks located in the inner molecular layer, proximal to the EC-induced sink, where intra-DG associative synapses were demonstrated by anatomical studies. The present detailed topographical study of the EC connections with the DG in the guinea-pig demonstrates with an electrophysiological approach a projection pattern similar, even if not identical, to that described with tracer techniques in the rat. This report is essential for future studies of the dynamic parahippocampal-hippocampal interactions in the guinea-pig, and in particular in the isolated guinea-pig brain preparation.
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To test the hypotheses that (i). electroencephalograms (EEGs) are largely made up of oscillations at many frequencies and (ii). that the peaks in the power spectra represent oscillations, we applied a new method, called the period specific average (PSA) to a wide sample of EEGs. Both hypotheses can be rejected. Although the principal peaks in the two spectra agree most of the time, quite often a peak in the power spectrum accompanies no periodicity peak and some periodicity peaks have no power spectral peak. ⋯ In the face of wide variability, we do not report any systematic differences in periodicity among EEGs from different parts of the brain or different brain states or species; it will take many more exemplars of each state, species or brain part to establish characteristic features. The PSA method may be the best so far proposed to demonstrate and quantify periodicity in wide-band time series with noise, but it has serious limitations. Discussion leads to the conclusion that it is time for a new paradigm or metaphor for brain waves.
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Comparative Study
A comparative magnetoencephalographic study of cortical activations evoked by noxious and innocuous somatosensory stimulations.
We recorded somatosensory-evoked magnetic fields and potentials produced by painful intra-epidermal stimulation (ES) and non-painful transcutaneous electrical stimulation (TS) applied to the left hand in 12 healthy volunteers to compare cortical responses to noxious and innocuous somatosensory stimulations. Our results revealed that cortical processing following noxious and innocuous stimulations was strikingly similar except that the former was delayed approximately 60 ms relative to the latter, which was well explained by a difference in peripheral conduction velocity mediating noxious (Adelta fiber) and innocuous (Abeta fiber) inputs. The first cortical activity evoked by both ES and TS was in the primary somatosensory cortex (SI) in the hemisphere contralateral to the stimulated side. ⋯ The time course of the vertex potential corresponded to that of the activity of the medial temporal area. Our results suggested that cortical processing was similar between noxious and innocuous stimulation in SI and SII, but different in insular cortex. Our data also implied that activities in the amygdala/hippocampal formation represented common effects of noxious and tactile stimulations.