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  • 1990-1994  (4)
  • Behavior  (2)
  • Life and Medical Sciences  (2)
  • GASTRIC ELECTRICAL ACTIVITY
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Psychopharmacology 113 (1993), S. 177-186 
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Rat ; Behavior ; Microstructure ; Scaling measures
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Previous studies demonstrated that drug effects on the movement sequences of rats in unconditioned motor activity paradigms can be quantified by scaling measures that describe the average relationship between a variable of interest and an experimental parameter. However, rats engage in a wide variety of geometrically distinct movements that can be influenced differentially by drugs. In this investigation, the extended scaling approach is presented to capture quantitatively the relative contributions of geometrically distinct movement sequences to the overall path structure. The calculation of the spectrum of local spatial scaling exponents,f(d), is based on ensemble methods used in statistical physics. Results of thef(d) analysis confirm that the amount of motor activity is not correlated with the geometrical structure of movement sequences. Changes in the average spatial scaling exponent,d, correspond to shifting the entiref(d) function, and indicate overall changes in path structure. With the extended scaling approach, straight movement sequences are assessed independently from highly circumscribed movements. Thus, thef(d) function identifies drug effects on particular ranges of movement sequences as defined by the geometrical structure of movements. More generally, thef(d) function quantifies the relationship between microscopically recorded variables, in this paradigm consecutive (x, y) locations, and the macroscopic behavioral patterns that constitute the animal's response topography.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Rat ; Behavior ; Microstructure ; Dopamine releasers ; Dopamine uptake inhibitors
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effects of four indirect dopamine agonists,d-amphetamine (0.25–4.0 mg/kg), cocaine (2.5–40.0 mg/kg), GBR 12909 (10.0–30.0 mg/kg), and nomifensine (5.0–20.0 mg/kg), on the behavioral organization of movements in an unconditioned motor paradigm were investigated in rats. The extended scaling hypothesis using the fluctuation spectrum of local spatial scaling exponents was used to quantify the geometrical characteristics of movements. The results reveal a qualitatively similar disruption of behavioral organization by lower doses of these drugs. Specifically, rats treated withd-amphetamine (〈2.0 mg/kg), cocaine (〈20.0 mg/kg), GBR 12909 (〈20.0 mg/kg), or nomifensine (〈10.0 mg/kg) exhibited a reduced range in the fluctuation spectrum, reflecting a predominance of meandering movements with local spatial scaling exponents between 1.3 and 1.7. This reduction was accompanied dynamically by a reduced predictability of movement sequences as measured by the dynamical entropy,h. By contrast, higher doses of these drugs produced distinctly different changes in behavioral organization. In particular, 4.0 mg/kgd-amphetamine and 40.0 mg/kg cocaine increased the fluctuation range, reflecting relative increases in both straight and circumscribed movements that are interpreted as a combination of spatially extended and local perseveration. In contrast, high doses of 30.0 mg/kg GBR 12909 and 20.0 mg/kg nomifensine induced only local perseveration. High doses ofd-amphetamine, cocaine, GBR 12909 and nomifensine reduced the dynamical entropy,h, indicating an increased predictability of the movement sequences. These results suggest that the generic behavioral change induced by low doses of dopamine agonists is characterized by a reduced variety of path patterns coupled with an increased variability in sequential movement sequences. The differential effects of higher doses of these drugs may be due to their influences on other neurotransmitter systems or differential affinities for different dopamine subsystems.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 48 (1992), S. 141-149 
    ISSN: 0730-2312
    Keywords: laminin ; structure-function ; adhesion ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Mouse PFHR9 laminin, B1B2-heterodimers, and free B1-chains were separated from one another by gel filtration on superose 6. The cell attachment promoting activity of these species was measured after immunoprecipitation with monoclonal anti-laminin antibodies coupled to Sepharose 6MB beads. These antibodies, Which did not react with the laminin E8 fragment, were directed against epitopes in the NH2-terminus of the laminin B1-chain and in the central region of laminin. After incubation with purified EHS laminin, the immunosorbents revealed efficient adhesion substrates for a rat rhabdomyosarcoma cell line which attached preferentially to the laminin E8 fragment. Although both were immunoprecipitated efficiently, B1B2-heterodimers and B1-chains, unlike PFHR9 laminin, did not support the attachment of RMS cells. On a molar basis B1B2-heterodimers were 24 times less efficient than PFHR9 laminin or EHS laminin in supporting cell attachment. These data suggest that heterotrimeric configuration is essential to the adhesive function of the laminin E8 fragment.
    Additional Material: 5 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1058-8388
    Keywords: Muscle differentiation ; Fetal mouse hindlimb ; Gene expression ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The modulation of contractile protein gene expression in mouse crural muscles (i.e., muscles located in the region between the knee and ankle) during the fetal period (defined as 15 days gestation to birth), resulting in diversity among and within these muscles, has been evaluated with in situ hybridization and correlated with morphogenetic events in the extensor digitorum longus and soleus muscles. During the fetal period extensive secondary myotube formation occurs in the crural muscles, and the myotubes become innervated (Ontell and Kozeka [1984a, b] Am. J. Anat. 171:133-148, 149-161; Ontell et al. [1988a, b] Am. J. Anat. 181:267-278, 181:278-288). At 15 days gestation, hybridization with 35S-labeled antisense cRNA probes demonstrates the accumulation of transcripts forα-cardiac andα-skeletal actin; MLC1A, MLC1F, and MLC3F; and MHCemb, MHCpn, and MHCβ/slow. At 16 days gestation, accumulation of MHCemb transcripts is reduced (as compared with earlier developmental stages); intensity of signal following hybridization with the probe forα-skeletal actin is, for the first time, equal to that for the cardiac isoform; and MLC1V mRNA accumulation is discernible. At this stage, variation in transcript accumulation for some mRNAs among and within crural muscles becomes evident. Two factors may play a role in the selective distribution of these transcripts: (1) the stage of muscle maturation; and (2) the future myofiber type. At 16 days gestation anterior crural muscles (which mature ˜ 2 days before posterior crural muscles; Ontell and Kozeka [1984a, b], ibid., Ontell et al. [1988a, b], ibid.) exhibit a greater accumulation of transcripts forα-skeletal actin and for MLC3F than is found in posterior crural muscles. In muscles that in the neonate are composed, in large part, of slow myofibers, MHCβ/slow and MLC1V mRNAs accumulate in greater amounts, whereas MHCpn transcripts are less abundant in the soleus muscle than in other crural muscles. By 19 days gestation regionalization of transcript accumulation is more pronounced. The soleus muscle, a predominantly slow twitch muscle in the newborn mouse (Wirtz et al. [1983] J. Anat. 137:109-126) exhibits strong signal after hybridization with probes specific for MHCβ/slow and MLC1V. While the level of transcript accumulation for the developmetal isoforms, MHCemb, MLC1A, andα-cardiac actin, is greatly reduced in most crural muscles at 19 days gestation, these transcripts persist in the soleus muscle at levels equal to or exceeding their amount in limb muscles of 13 day gestation mouse embryos. By 19 days gestation both MyoD and myogenin are “down-regulated” (as compared with their expression at earlier developmental stages) in all muscle masses. Alterations in contractile protein gene expression are correlated with changes in the myogenic regulatory factors present in fetal hindlimbs during development. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
    Additional Material: 5 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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