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  • 1
    ISSN: 1530-0358
    Keywords: Colostomy ; Colitis ; Permeability ; Colon ; Ussing chambers ; Rat ; Villus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract PURPOSE: Barrier properties of an isolated colon loop and the remnant colon in continuity with the gastrointestinal tract after colostomy were studied in the rat. METHODS: The in vivo absorption after colonic loop administration of the marker fluorescein sodium was measured as the urinary recovery. The in vitro permeability was measured in Ussing diffusion chambers as the transmucosal passage of [14C]mannitol and of human serum albumin in the isolated and the nonexcluded colonic segments and was compared with the corresponding colonic regions from sham-operated rats at 1 to 14 days after operation. RESULTS: Body weight gain of the rats decreased and diarrhea appeared from day 2 after colostomy. Histologic examination showed mucosal atrophy with decreased villus height in the isolated colonic loop and an increased villus height in the nonexcluded colon segment. Absorption of fluorescein sodium in the isolated loop was increased at 8 and 14 days. Moreover, permeability in the isolated loop was increased for both mannitol and human serum albumin from four days after colostomy compared with the corresponding colonic segments after the sham operation, whereas a decrease in the passage of mannitol was noted in the nonexcluded colon. CONCLUSIONS: Experimentally performed colostomy diversion in the rat induced alterations of the barrier function in both the isolated colonic loop and the nonexcluded colon in continuity with the fecal stream.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1530-0358
    Keywords: Delayed-type hypersensitivity ; Laparoscopy ; Phytohemagglutinin ; Keyhole limpet hemocyanin ; Laparoscopic-assisted colon resection ; Rat ; Murine
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract PURPOSE: We evaluated cell-mediated immune function after laparoscopic-assisted and open bowel resection in rats by measuring delayed-type hypersensitivity responses to keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) and phytohemagglutinin (PHA). METHODS: Male Sprague-Dawley rats (n=120) were sensitized to 1 mg of KLH ten days before investigations. Rats were challenged preoperatively, immediately postoperatively, and on postoperative day (POD) 2 with an intradermal injection of 0.3 mg of KLH and 0.2 mg of PHA (at different sites). Averages of two measures of perpendicular diameters (taken 24 and 48 hours postchallenge) were used to calculate the area of induration using the formula for the area of an ellipse, A=(D1/2×D2/2)×π. Anesthesia control animals underwent no procedure (n=40). Open resection group underwent ligation and resection of the cecum (length=2 cm) through a 7 cm midline incision (n=40). In the laparoscopic-assisted resection group, under CO2 pneumoperitoneum (4–6 mmHg), the cecum was identified, dissected free, and exteriorized through a 4 mm port. The cecum was then ligated and resected extracorporeally (n=40). RESULTS: Preoperative responses to both KLH and PHA were the same in all three groups. Furthermore, within each group, postoperative responses were similar. When groups were compared, the anesthesia group responses were significantly greater than the open resection group responses at all time points (P 〈0.05 for all comparisons). Laparoscopic-assisted resection group responses differed from control at only two of eight postoperative measures. Laparoscopic resection group responses were significantly greater than open resection group responses to challenge with both KLH and PHA on POD1 (P 〈0.02, for both comparisons) and POD 4 (P 〈0.05, for both comparisons). CONCLUSIONS: Postoperative cell-mediated immune function is better preserved after laparoscopic-assisted bowel resection than after open resection as assessed by skin antigen testing.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1534-4681
    Keywords: Regional drug delivery ; Rat ; Immunology ; Testis ; Cancer chemotherapy ; Infertility
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Background: Testicular circulatory isolation (TCI), a regional drug exclusion approach designed to prevent chemotherapy-induced male infertility, can reduce testicular drug exposure and preserve fertility. The immunological sequelae of this surgical procedure were investigated. Methods: Forty Sprague-Dawley rats received unilateral TCI for 45 min and were killed at intervals of up to 43 days later. Testicular histology was evaluated qualitatively using hematoxylin and eosin stain, a direct immunofluorescent technique for detection of antigen-antibody complexes, and an indirect immunofluorescent technique to detect circulating antitestis antibodies. Results: No immune-mediated injury was evident up to 43 days after TCI. Conclusion: The current work, taken together with previously published data, indicate that TCI produces no immunological damage in the rat testis. Because TCI is well tolerated in humans, this work also supports the institution of human clinical trials of this technique in men about to receive fertility-threatening chemotherapy.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1438-8359
    Keywords: Cervical sympathectomy ; Stellate ganglion block ; Adrenocorticotropic hormone ; Thyroid-stimulating hormone ; Growth hormone ; Prolactin ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract To examine the effects of bilateral cervical sympathectomy on the secretion of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), growth hormone (GH), and prolactin (PRL), 18 male rats were divided into three groups: control (Cont), sham operation (Sham), and bilateral cervical sympathectomy (Symp). All rats were kept under a normal circadian rhythm for 2 weeks. Subsequently, blood was collected and plasma ACTH as well as serum TSH, GH, and PRL levels were measured. The difference in ACTH levels between the Cont and Sham groups was not significant, but ACTH levels in the Symp group were significantly higher than those in the other groups. The difference in TSH levels between the Cont and Sham groups was also not significant, but TSH levels in the Symp group were significantly lower than those in the Cont group. There were no statistically significant differences in GH and PRL levels among these groups. The present results suggest that cervical sympathectomy in the rat increases ACTH secretion and decreases TSH secretion in the pituitary. These effects seem to be due to a mildly increased secretion of melatonin in the pineal body that probably in turn increases corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) secretion and decreases thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) secretion in the hypothalamus. Extrapolation of these findings to humans suggests that longterm and repeated stellate ganglion block would affect the pituitary secretions of ACTH and TSH.
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Amino acids 10 (1996), S. 49-57 
    ISSN: 1438-2199
    Keywords: Amino acids ; Taurine ; γ-Aminobutyric acid ; Synaptosome ; Olfactory bulb ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Superfusion of synaptosomes prepared from rat olfactory bulb revealed constant basal release of endogenous taurine (Tau), aspartate (Asp), glutamate (Glu) andγ-aminobutyrate (GABA): their release rates were 110.4 ± 13.0, 30.3 ± 6.7, 93.7 ± 13.1, and 53.3 ± 8.8 pmol/min/mg protein, respectively. The depolarizing-stimulation with 30mM KCl evoked 1.17-, 2.18-, 2.55- and 1.53-fold increases, respectively. Tau release was calcium-independent. However, the perfusion of synaptosomes with Tau (10µM) inhibited the evoked increase in GABA release by 63% without changing basal release, although it did not affect release of Asp and Glu. Phaclofen (10µM, a GABAB receptor antagonist), but not bicuculline (10µM, a GABAA receptor antagonist), counteracted the Tau-induced reduction in GABA release. These data suggest that Tau may be abundantly released from nerve endings of rat olfactory bulb and that it may regulate GABA release through the activation of presynaptic GABAB autoreceptors.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: α1-adrenoceptors ; Idazoxan ; Indanidine ; Noradrenaline ; Aorta ; Small mesenteric artery ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We have studied the effects of idazoxan in rat aorta and small mesenteric artery. In the aorta, idazoxan behaved as a partial agonist (pKA=6.30). Prazosin produced rightward shift (pA2=9.88) and steepening of the idazoxan curve. In contrast, idazoxan had no effect of basal tension in the mesenteric artery, but shifted the noradrenaline curve to the right in a parallel manner (pA2=6.12). The selective al-adrenoceptor agonist, indanidine, also behaved as a partial agonist in the aorta and produced no significant contractions of the small mesenteric artery. Since idazoxan and indanidine have been reported to raise blood pressure in the pithed rat via an action at vascular α1-adrenoceptors, these results call into question the reliability of the small mesenteric artery assay as a predictor for α1-adrenoceptor-mediated pressor activity in vivo.
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Chronic haloperidol ; Dopamine D2 receptors ; NMDA receptors ; AMPA receptors ; Caudate-putamen ; Quantitative autoradiography ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The aim of the present study was to investigate the influence of chronic treatment with haloperidol on the striatal N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), α-amino-3-hydro-xy-5-methyl-4-isoxasole-propionic acid (AMPA) and dopamine D2 receptors using a quantitative autoradiography in rats. Haloperidol was given to animals in a dose of ca. 1 mg/kg/day in drinking water for 6 weeks or 3 months and was afterwards withdrawn for 5 days. Haloperidol increased by 20–50% the binding of [3H]spiperone in different regions of the caudate-putamen. Haloperidol decreased by ca. 30% the binding of [3H]AMPA in the ventrolateral region of intermediate part of the caudate-putamen, but did not influence the binding of [3H]MK-801. The present results suggest that, apart from supersensitivity to dopamine, chronic treatment with haloperidol also induces subsensitivity of striatal AMPA receptors.
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words Diabetic neuropathy ; Somatosensorial evoked potentials ; Aminoguanidine ; L-carnitine ; Rat ; Alloxan
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  The effects of aminoguanidine (AG) and L-carnitine (LC) on somatosensorial evoked potential (SEP) latency and neural levels of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS), products of lipid peroxidation, were compared in alloxan-diabetic rats. AG and LC were given to diabetic rats starting from the 3rd week after the induction of diabetes and lasting for 4 weeks. SEP latency was measured by stimulating via caudal nerve and recording via cortex, once weekly during the treatments. Diabetes caused deficits in SEP (P〈0.05 vs non-diabetic control rats, respectively). AG and LC restored SEP latencies slightly but not significantly, with the exception of the prominent effect of AG at the first week and both treatments at the 4th week of the treatments (P〈0.05 vs untreated diabetic rats, respectively). Diabetes caused elevation in neural TBARS levels (P〈0.05 vs non-diabetic group), which was prevented by both AG and LC (P〈0.05 vs untreated diabetic rats, respectively). Weight and the glucose levels were not influenced by the treatments. Our results suggest that AG improves SEP latencies better than LC. Our results also suggest that the beneficial effects of both AG and LC on diabetic neuropathy are not associated with the regulation of glycemia, but these effects may be related in part with prevention of lipid peroxidation.
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  • 9
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: N-methyl-D-aspartate ; Glutamate ; Kainate ; Dissociated cerebellar cells ; Rat ; Mitochondrial membrane potential
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effect of three different glutamate receptor ligands on mitochondrial membrane potential has been studied in rat pup dissociated cerebellar cells by measuring rhodamine 123 fluorescence. L-glutamate, NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) and kainate (from 10−8 to 10−3 M) decreased in a concentration-dependent manner the mitochondrial membrane potential with EC50 values of 6.7±1.7, 3.8±0.5, and 37.4±14 μM, respectively. Dizocilpine ((+)MK 801) was able to inhibit the NMDA- and L-glutamate-induced decrease in rhodamine 123 fluorescence, while kainate-induced fluorescence-decreases were unaffected. However, 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) totally prevented the effect of kainate on mitochondrial membrane potential, but failed to block the L-glutamate effect. It is concluded that, in our cell preparation, L-glutamate exerts its action mainly through NMDA-subtype receptors, and that Ca2+ and Na+ entry through ionotropic glutamate receptors could be responsible for an impairment of mitochondrial membrane potential.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Diabetic neuropathy ; Somatosensorial evoked potentials ; Aminoguanidine ; L-carnitine ; Rat ; Alloxan
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effects of aminoguanidine (AG) and L-carnitine (LC) on somatosensorial evoked potential (SEP) latency and neural levels of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS), products of lipid peroxidation, were compared in alloxan-diabetic rats. AG and LC were given to diabetic rats starting from the 3rd week after the induction of diabetes and lasting for 4 weeks. SEP latency was measured by stimulating via caudal nerve and recording via cortex, once weekly during the treatments. Diabetes caused deficits in SEP (P 〈 0.05 vs non-diabetic control rats, respectively). AG and LC restored SEP latencies slightly but not significantly, with the exception of the prominent effect of AG at the first week and both treatments at the 4th week of the treatments (P 〈 0.05 vs untreated diabetic rats, respectively). Diabetes caused elevation in neural TBARS levels (P 〈 0.05 vs non-diabetic group), which was prevented by both AG and LC (P 〈 0.05 vs untreated diabetic rats, respectively). Weight and the glucose levels were not influenced by the treatments. Our results suggest that AG improves SEP latencies better than LC. Our results also suggest that the beneficial effects of both AG and LC on diabetic neuropathy are not associated with the regulation of glycemia, but these effects may be related in part with prevention of lipid peroxidation.
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  • 11
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words N-methyl-D-aspartate ; Glutamate ; Kainate ; Dissociated cerebellar cells ; Rat ; Mitochondrial ; membrane potential
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effect of three different glutamate receptor ligands on mitochondrial membrane potential has been studied in rat pup dissociated cerebellar cells by measuring rhodamine 123 fluorescence. L-glutamate, NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) and kainate (from 10–8 to 10–3 M) decreased in a concentration-dependent manner the mitochondrial membrane potential with EC50 values of 6.7±1.7, 3.8±0.5, and 37.4±14 μM, respectively. Dizocilpine ((+)MK 801) was able to inhibit the NMDA- and L-glutamate-induced decrease in rhodamine 123 fluorescence, while kainate-induced fluorescence-decreases were unaffected. However, 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) totally prevented the effect of kainate on mitochondrial membrane potential, but failed to block the L-glutamate effect. It is concluded that, in our cell preparation, L-glutamate exerts its action mainly through NMDA-subtype receptors, and that Ca2+ and Na+ entry through ionotropic glutamate receptors could be responsible for an impairment of mitochondrial membrane potential.
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  • 12
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 354 (1996), S. 670-676 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Bradykinin ; Kininases ; Carrageenan ; Angiotensin converting enzyme ; Aminopeptidase P ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The influence of some peptidase inhibitors on oedema and plasma extravasation induced by bradykinin and carrageenan in rat paw was evaluated. Bradykinin-induced oedema in normal rats was increased by o-phenanthroline (3.10−2 M), by captopril (10−6 M to 10−4 M), by lisinopril (10−6 M to 10−4 M), or by lisinopril (10−5 M) in combination with apstatin (8.10−5 M or 1.4 10−4 M). It was not modified by phosphoramidon (10−6 M to 10−5 M) and by diprotin A (10−3 M). It was increased by mergepta at high concentrations (2.10−4 M). Mergepta did not increase the potentiating effect of captopril. Carrageenan-oedema in normal rats was increased by captopril (10−5 M), lisinopril (10−5 M) and apstatin (1.4 10 M). It was not modified by mergepta (10−4 M), phosphoramidon (10−5 M) and diprotin A (10−3 M). Des-Argl-bradykinin and Des-Arg9-bradykinin have low oedema-promoting effects. Captopril (10−5 M) increased the effects of bradykinin but not those of carrageenan in kininogen-deficient Brown Norway rats. Angiotensin-converting enzyme and amino-peptidase P appear to be main kinin-inactivating enzymes in rat paws. Carboxypeptidase N, neutral endopeptidase 24.11 and dipeptidyl(amino)peptidase IV do not play a significant role in this inactivation.
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  • 13
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words Clozapine ; Haloperidol ; Chronic treatment ; Nucleus accumbens ; Caudate putamen ; Dopamine ; In vivo fast cyclic voltammetry ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Fast cyclic voltammetry at carbon-fibre microelectrodes was used to investigate the effects of chronic clozapine or haloperidol administration on electrically evoked dopamine efflux in the nucleus accumbens and caudate putamen of the anaesthetized rat. Stimulation trains were delivered to the median forebrain bundle (60 pulses, 350 μs duration) every 5 min, and the evoked dopamine efflux measured as a function of a) the applied stimulus intensity (range 0.2 mA–1.0 mA), and b) the applied stimulus frequency (range 10 Hz–250 Hz). Chronic administration of either clozapine (20 mg/kg × 21 days, p.o.) or haloperidol (1 mg/kg × 21 days, p.o.) significantly reduced electrically evoked dopamine efflux in the nucleus accumbens over the range of stimulus intensities and frequencies tested. The reduction in evoked dopamine efflux observed in the nucleus accumbens of clozapine- and haloperidol-treated rats showed no statistically significant difference. In contrast, only chronic haloperidol treatment significantly reduced evoked dopamine efflux in the caudate putamen. These findings demonstrate that chronic treatment with either the atypical neuroleptic, clozapine, or the typical neuroleptic, haloperidol, produce long-term changes in mesolimbic dopamine function; actions which may underlie their antipsychotic efficacy. They also provide further evidence that the sparing action of clozapine on nigrostriatal dopamine activity may underlie the lower incidence of extrapyramidal side effects associated with its long-term administration.
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  • 14
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words Basal ganglia ; Neuropeptides ; Monoamines ; Amino acids ; Microdialysis ; Chromogranin C ; Secretogranin ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In vivo microdialysis was used to study the effect of secretogranin II-derived peptides on dynorphin B (Dyn B), dopamine, γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glutamate and aspartate release in the substantia nigra and neostriatum of halothane-anaesthesized rats. In the substantia nigra, local infusion of secretoneurin (secretogranin II 154–186) (1–50 μM) increased, in a concentration-dependent manner, extracellular aspartate, glutamate, Dyn B, dopamine and GABA levels. The effect was particularly prominent on aspartate and glutamate levels which, following 50 μM of secretoneurin, were increased by 〉20 and 〉10 fold, respectively. However, the effect of secretoneurin on Dyn B release appeared to be more specific, since a significant increase (〉2 fold) was already observed following 1 μM of secretoneurin. In the neostriatum, Dyn B, glutamate, aspartate and GABA levels were also increased by local secretoneurin infusion, but the effect was less prominent than in the substantia nigra. In the substantia nigra, only Dyn B levels were significantly increased following infusion of 10 μM of the secretoneurin-C terminal (secretoneurin-15C), whereas Dyn B and GABA levels were increased by the same concentration of the secretogranin II C terminus (YM). Only glutamate and aspartate levels were increased by local infusion of 10 μM of secretogranin II 133–151 (LF), a peptide adjacent to secretoneurin in the primary amino acid sequence. In the neostriatum, Dyn B and GABA levels were increased by 10 μM of secretoneurin-15C. Dyn B levels were also increased by 10 μM of YM, and glutamate and aspartate levels were increased by 10 μM of both YM and LF. Thus, secretogranin II-derived peptides affect extracellular levels of several putative neurotransmitter systems monitored in the basal ganglia of the rat with in vivo microdialysis. The effect of Dyn B appears to be specific and related to a physiological role of secretoneurin, since (i) it occurs in an area where secretoneurin-immunocytochemistry has been observed, (ii) is exerted at comparatively low concentrations, and (iii) is mimicked by secretoneurin-15C. The increases in excitatory amino acid levels produced by high concentrations of secretoneurin and other secretogranin II-derived peptides reflect, perhaps, a potential neurotoxicity produced by abnormal accumulation of these peptides.
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  • 15
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 354 (1996), S. 736-745 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words NMDA ; Ethanol ; Glycine ; Ca2+ fluxes ; Neurotoxicity ; Cerebellar granule cells ; Cortical cells ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effects of ethanol and/or glycine on NMDA-induced enhancement of cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentrations ([Ca2+]i), 45Ca2+ influx, 4-b-[3H]phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate ([3H]PDBu) binding, and neuronal necrosis in cultured rat cortical and cerebellar granule neurons were examined. Using microfluorimetric techniques in combination with rapid perfusion of single brain neurons, we found that glycine (10 μM) was a necessary co-agonist for NMDA-induced depolarization in cerebellar granule cells. In contrast, depolarization with NMDA in cortical cells was observed even without the addition of exogenous glycine as well as in the absence or presence of 1 mM MgCl2. Ethanol (50 mM) inhibited the effects of NMDA in some, but not all, neurons indicative of the existence of ethanol-sensitive and ethanol-insensitive cortical and cerebellar granule neurons. In studies performed in monolayers of cortical and cerebellar granule cells, we observed that the presence of glycine (10 μM) was a necessary prerequisite to unmask inhibitory actions of ethanol on 45Ca2+ influx induced by NMDA. In another set of experiments, we noted that NMDA-induced stimulation of [3H]PDBu binding to monolayers of intact cerebellar granule cells was inhibited by ethanol (50 mM). Finally, we report that ethanol caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of NMDA-induced necrotic cell death, assessed by measuring the ability of cerebellar granule cells to transform 3-[4, 5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) into formazan. In none of the four assays used to demonstrate the inhibitory effects of ethanol on NMDA receptor activity, the ethanol-induced inhibition was reversed by glycine (up to 100 μM). Thus, in contrast to earlier reports, our data suggest that ethanol and glycine produce their effects by acting at different regulatory sites within the NMDA receptor system in brain neurons.
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  • 16
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Basal ganglia ; Neuropeptides ; Monoamines ; Amino acids ; Microdialysis ; Chromogranin C ; Secretogranin ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In vivo microdialysis was used to study the effect of secretogranin II-derived peptides on dynorphin B (Dyn B), dopamine, γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glutamate and aspartate release in the substantia nigra and neostriatum of halothane-anaesthesized rats. In the substantia nigra, local infusion of secretoneurin (secretogranin II 154–186) (1–50 μM) increased, in a concentration-dependent manner, extracellular aspartate, glutamate, Dyn B, dopamine and GABA levels. The effect was particularly prominent on aspartate and glutamate levels which, following 50 μM of secretoneurin, were increased by 〉20 and 〉10 fold, respectively. However, the effect of secretoneurin on Dyn B release appeared to be more specific, since a significant increase (〉2 fold) was already observed following 1 μM of secretoneurin. In the neostriatum, Dyn B, glutamate, aspartate and GABA levels were also increased by local secretoneurin infusion, but the effect was less prominent than in the substantia nigra. In the substantia nigra, only Dyn B levels were significantly increased following infusion of 10 μM of the secretoneurin-C terminal (secretoneurin-15C), whereas Dyn B and GABA levels were increased by the same concentration of the secretogranin II C terminus (YM). Only glutamate and aspartate levels were increased by local infusion of 10 μM of secretogranin II 133-151 (LF), a peptide adjacent to secretoneurin in the primary amino acid sequence. In the neostriatum, Dyn B and GABA levels were increased by 10 μM of secretoneurin-15C. Dyn B levels were also increased by 10 μM of YM, and glutamate and aspartate levels were increased by 10 μM of both YM and LF. Thus, secretogranin 11-derived peptides affect extracellular levels of several putative neurotransmitter systems monitored in the basal ganglia of the rat with in vivo microdialysis. The effect of Dyn B appears to be specific and related to a physiological role of secretoneurin, since (i) it occurs in an area where secretoneurin-immunocytochemistry has been observed, (ii) is exerted at comparatively low concentrations, and (iii) is mimicked by secretoneurin-15C. The increases in excitatory amino acid levels produced by high concentrations of secretoneurin and other secretogranin II-derived peptides reflect, perhaps, a potential neurotoxicity produced by abnormal accumulation of these peptides.
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  • 17
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Clozapine ; Haloperidol ; Chronic treatment ; Nucleus accumbens ; Caudate putamen ; Dopamine ; In vivo fast cyclic voltammetry ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Fast cyclic voltammetry at carbon-fibre microelectrodes was used to investigate the effects of chronic clozapine or haloperidol administration on electrically evoked dopamine efflux in the nucleus accumbens and caudate putamen of the anaesthetized rat. Stimulation trains were delivered to the median forebrain bundle (60 pulses, 350 μs duration) every 5 min, and the evoked dopamine efflux measured as a function of a) the applied stimulus intensity (range 0.2 mA-1.0 mA), and b) the applied stimulus frequency (range 10 Hz-250 Hz). Chronic administration of either clozapine (20 mg/kg × 21 days, p.o.) or haloperidol (1 mg/kg × 21 days, p.o.) significantly reduced electrically evoked dopamine efflux in the nucleus accumbens over the range of stimulus intensities and frequencies tested. The reduction in evoked dopamine efflux observed in the nucleus accumbens of clozapine- and haloperidol-treated rats showed no statistically significant difference. In contrast, only chronic haloperidol treatment significantly reduced evoked dopamine efflux in the caudate putamen. These findings demonstrate that chronic treatment with either the atypical neuroleptic, clozapine, or the typical neuroleptic, haloperidol, produce long-term changes in mesolimbic dopamine function; actions which may underlie their antipsychotic efficacy. They also provide further evidence that the sparing action of clozapine on nigrostriatal dopamine activity may underlie the lower incidence of extrapyramidal side effects associated with its long-term administration.
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  • 18
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 354 (1996), S. 736-745 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: NMDA ; Ethanol ; Glycine ; Ca2+ fluxes ; Neurotoxicity ; Cerebellar granue cells ; Cortical cells ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effects of ethanol and/or glycine on NMDA-induced enhancement of cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentrations ([Ca2+]i), 45Ca2+ influx, 4-b-[3H]phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate ([3H]PDBu) binding, and neuronal necrosis in cultured rat cortical and cerebellar granule neurons were examined. Using microfluorimetric techniques in combination with rapid perfusion of single brain neurons, we found that glycine (10 μM) was a necessary co-agonist for NMDA-induced depolarization in cerebellar granule cells. In contrast, depolarization with NMDA in cortical cells was observed even without the addition of exogenous glycine as well as in the absence or presence of 1 mM MgCl2. Ethanol (50 mM) inhibited the effects of NMDA in some, but not all, neurons indicative of the existence of ethanol-sensitive and ethanol-insensitive cortical and cerebellar granule neurons. In studies performed in monolayers of cortical and cerebellar granule cells, we observed that the presence of glycine (10 μM) was a necessary prerequisite to unmask inhibitory actions of ethanol on 45Ca2+ influx induced by NMDA. In another set of experiments, we noted that NMDA-induced stimulation of [3H]PDBu binding to monolayers of intact cerebellar granule cells was inhibited by ethanol (50 mM). Finally, we report that ethanol caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of NMDA-induced necrotic cell death, assessed by measuring the ability of cerebellar granule cells to transform 3-[4, 5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MIT) into formazan. In none of the four assays used to demonstrate the inhibitory effects of ethanol on NMDA receptor activity, the ethanol-induced inhibition was reversed by glycine (up to 100 μM). Thus, in contrast to earlier reports, our data suggest that ethanol and glycine produce their effects by acting at different regulatory sites within the NMDA receptor system in brain neurons.
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  • 19
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 353 (1996), S. 161-167 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words Ageing ; Dihydroxyphenylacetic acid ; Homovanillic acid ; Hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus ; In vivo microdialysis ; Noradrenaline ; Phenylephrine ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  The effect of age on basal and stimulated noradrenaline release in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the rat was examined by in vivo microdialysis. Microdialysis probes were inserted into the PVN of 3 and 18 month old anaesthetised Sprague Dawley rats and perfused with a modified Ringer solution. Following four basal 30-min collections, transmitter release was stimulated by perfusion with 100 mM potassium for one collection. After re-equilibration, blood pressure was raised 60 mmHg for 30 min by phenylephrine infusion (1–1.3 mg/kg) then a 2-h recovery period followed. Dialysate collections were injected directly onto a reverse phase HPLC-ECD (HPLC with electrochemical detection). Basal extracellular noradrenaline concentrations were found to be similar in adult and old animals. Basal dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) concentrations were significantly greater in old compared to adult rats (P〈0.05). Potassium depolarisation induced a significant increase in noradrenaline concentrations in both age groups (P〈0.001), however the noradrenaline response to potassium stimulation was significantly reduced in the aged rats (P〈0.05). Potassium-induced decreases in DOPAC and homovanillic acid (HVA) concentrations were seen in both age groups. Following phenylephrine infusion, a modest delayed reduction in noradrenaline levels, which failed to reach statistical significance, was seen. Phenylephrine-induced hypertension was associated with decreased DOPAC and HVA concentrations in adult (P〈0.05) and old (P〈0.05) rats, respectively. These results indicate that ageing is associated with changes in dopaminergic and noradrenergic activity in the PVN of the rat. A reduction in noradrenaline response to maximal stimulation induced by potassium depolarisation was observed with ageing. The alteration in the activity of the catecholaminergic pathways to the PVN induced by phenylephrine infusion appears to be age dependent.
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  • 20
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 353 (1996), S. 168-174 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Nucleus basalis magnocellularis ; Nicotine ; Physostigmine ; Cortical EEG ; FFT power spectra ; Unrestrained behaviour ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The basal magnocellular nucleus is assumed to play a crucial role in cholinergic activation of the cortical EEG. The aim of this study was to establish whether intraperitoneally applied nicotine may counteract the power asymmetry of the slow waves in the cortical EEG of both hemispheres after an unilateral lesion in the basal nucleus. In 17 rats the basal nucleus (substantia innominata/ventral pallidum) was unilaterally lesioned by ibotenic acid. The lesion produced unilateral power increases of all frequencies up to 20 Hz in the frontal EEG that increased with higher arousal level. Additionally, synchronized spike and wave discharges appeared in the frontal EEG. The results indicate that the basal nucleus suppresses especially the delta EEG waves in the frontal motor cortex during motor active behaviour. Nicotine (0.1 and 1 mg/kg) partially counteracts the power asymmetry of frontal slow waves (2–6 Hz) only during exploratory sniffing but not during grooming and waking immobility. Physostigmine (1 mg/kg) was also effective during exploratory sniffing. The results may indicate a role of nicotinic mechanisms in the information input component of exploratory behaviour.
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  • 21
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words Bradykinin ; Kininases ; Carrageenan ; Angiotensin converting enzyme ; Aminopeptidase P ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The influence of some peptidase inhibitors on oedema and plasma extravasation induced by bradykinin and carrageenan in rat paw was evaluated. Bradykinin-induced oedema in normal rats was increased by o-phenanthroline (3.10–2 M), by captopril (10–6 M to 10–4 M), by lisinopril (10–6 M to 10–4 M), or by lisinopril (10–5 M) in combination with apstatin (8.10–5 M or 1.4 10–4 M). It was not modified by phosphoramidon (10–6 M to 10–5 M) and by diprotin A (10–3 M). It was increased by mergepta at high concentrations (2.10–4 M). Mergepta did not increase the potentiating effect of captopril. Carrageenan-oedema in normal rats was increased by captopril (10–5 M), lisinopril (10–5 M) and apstatin (1.4 10–4 M). It was not modified by mergepta (10–4 M), phosphoramidon (10–5 M) and diprotin A (10–3 M). Des-Arg1-bradykinin and Des-Arg9-bradykinin have low oedema-promoting effects. Captopril (10–5 M) increased the effects of bradykinin but not those of carrageenan in kininogen-deficient Brown Norway rats. Angiotensin-converting enzyme and aminopeptidase P appear to be main kinin-inactivating enzymes in rat paws. Carboxypeptidase N, neutral endopeptidase 24.11 and dipeptidyl(amino)peptidase IV do not play a significant role in this inactivation.
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  • 22
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: ALEPH-2 Serotonin receptor binding ; Anxiolytics ; Serotonin syndrome ; Phenylisopropylamines ; Rat ; Hypothermia ; Psychedelics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Serotonergic behavioral responses, effects on motor activity and core temperature, and binding properties of the novel putative anxiolytic amphetamine derivative (±)1-(2,5-dimethoxy-4-ethylthiophenyl)-2-aminopropane (ALEPH-2), were examined in rodents in order to elucidate the mechanism underlying its anxiolytic-like effect. After peripheral administration in rats, ALEPH-2 induced some symptoms of the serotonergic syndrome, e.g. forepaw treading and flat body posture. Additionally, a decrease in motor activity was observed. No significant effects on the number of head shakes were observed after injection, although high inter-subject variability was noted. Higher doses of ALEPH-2, in the range exhibiting anxiolytic properties (4mg/kg), elicited significant hypothermia in mice. The affinity of the drug for 5-HT2A/2C receptors ([3H]ketanserin sites) was in the nanomolar range (Ki = 173 nM), whereas for 5-HT1A, benzodiazepine sites, and GABAA receptors, the affinity was micromolar or lower. Based on these results the mechanism of action and the anxiolytic-like properties of ALEPH-2 are discussed.
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  • 23
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 353 (1996), S. 161-167 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Ageing ; Dihydroxyphenylaceticacid ; Homovanillic acid ; Hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus ; in vivo microdialysis ; Noradrenaline ; Phenylephrine ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effect of age on basal and stimulated noradrenaline release in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the rat was examined by in vivo microdialysis. Microdialysis probes were inserted into the PVN of 3 and 18 month old anaesthetised Sprague Dawley rats and perfused with a modified Ringer solution. Following four basal 30-min collections, transmitter release was stimulated by perfusion with 100 mM potassium for one collection. After re-equilibration, blood pressure was raised 60 mmHg for 30 min by phenylephrine infusion (1–1.3 mg/kg) then a 2-h recovery period followed. Dialysate collections were injected directly onto a reverse phase HPLC-ECD (HPLC with electrochemical detection). Basal extracellular noradrenaline concentrations were found to be similar in adult and old animals. Basal dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) concentrations were significantly greater in old compared to adult rats (P 〈 0.05). Potassium depolarisation induced a significant increase in noradrenaline concentrations in both age groups (P 〈 0.001), however the noradrenaline response to potassium stimulation was significantly reduced in the aged rats (P 〈 0.05). Potassium-induced decreases in DOPAC and homovanillic acid (HVA) concentrations were seen in both age groups. Following phenylephrine infusion, a modest delayed reduction in noradrenaline levels, which failed to reach statistical significance, was seen. Phenylephrine-induced hypertension was associated with decreased DOPAC and HVA concentrations in adult (P 〈 0.05) and old (P 〈 0.05) rats, respectively. These results indicate that ageing is associated with changes in dopaminergic and noradrenergic activity in the PVN of the rat. A reduction in noradrenaline response to maximal stimulation induced by potassium depolarisation was observed with ageing. The alteration in the activity of the catecholaminergic pathways to the PVN induced by phenylephrine infusion appears to be age dependent.
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  • 24
    ISSN: 1432-0843
    Keywords: Key words S-1 ; Biochemical modulation ; Rat ; Metabolism ; Intestinal toxicity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  S-1, a new oral antitumor agent, is composed of 1-(2-tetrahydrofuryl)-5-fluorouracil (Tegafur, FT), 5-chloro-2,4-dihydroxypyridine (CDHP) and potassium oxonate (Oxo) in a molar ratio of 1 : 0.4 : 1. FT which is a masked compound of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) acts as an effector, while both CDHP and Oxo which do not have antitumor activity themselves act as modulators. In this study, the antitumor activity and intestinal toxicity of S-1 were investigated using experimental tumor models in rats, and compared with those of other oral fluoropyrimidines, namely 5-FU, FT, FCD (1 M FT/0.4 M CDHP) and UFT (combination of FT and uracil). In rats bearing subcutaneous Yoshida sarcoma, S-1 inhibited tumor growth at the lowest dose (ED50 value: S-1 5, UFT 22, FT 82, FCD 5, and 5-FU 19 mg/kg per day), and induced the least host body weight suppression, leading to the highest therapeutic index (TI) (S-1 4.5, UFT 1.4, FT 1.8, FCD 2.0, and 5-FU 1.4). S-1 also showed a higher therapeutic effect than UFT against AH-130 and Sato lung carcinoma. After administration of S-1 and UFT at equitoxic doses, S-1 showed a higher and more prolonged concentration of 5-FU than UFT both in plasma (AUC0-∞: S-1 28 nmol h/ml, UFT 15 nmol⋅h/ml) and in tumor tissue (AUC0-∞: S-1 95 nmol h/g tissue, UFT 52 nmol h/g tissue), leading to a higher 5-FU level incorporated into the RNA fraction (F-RNA level) in tumor tissue (AUC0-24: S-1 7.0 nmol h/mg RNA, UFT 4.3 nmol h/mg RNA) and 5–8% higher thymidylate synthase (TS) inhibition in tumor tissue at every time-point through 24 h. Compared with other oral fluoropyrimidines after administration of the maximal tolerable dose (MTD), S-1 caused the lowest rates of intestinal toxicities, such as diarrhea and occult blood in feces. S-1 also showed a higher antitumor effect on Yoshida sarcoma implanted intracolonically than UFT at an equitoxic dose (tumor weight: S-1 64±30 mg, UFT 133±52 mg; P〈0.05). These results suggest that CDHP, which is a potent inhibitor of 5-FU degradation, increases the antitumor activity of FT, and that Oxo, which is an inhibitor of 5-FU phosphorylation, locally protects the gastrointestinal tract from 5-FU-induced toxicity without decreasing the antitumor activity.
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  • 25
    ISSN: 1432-0843
    Keywords: Key words 7-Hydroxymethotrexate ; Toxicity ; Lethal dose ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  To elucidate mechanisms for methotrexate (MTX)-induced renal and hepatic toxicity, we investigated the acute effects of bolus plus continuous infusion of up to 0.4 g/kg 7-hydroxymethotrexate (7-OH-MTX) in the rat. We demonstrate for the first time in any species the occurrence of acute lethal toxicity within a few hours after 7-OH-MTX administration. Serum concentrations of 7-OH-MTX measured at the time of death were 1.4 mM (mean), about one-half of those achieved in some patients after infusion of high-dose MTX (HD-MTX) in the clinic. The data suggest an approximate LD50 (the dose lethal to 50% of the study population) of 0.3 g/kg and a steep dose/lethality curve for 7-OH-MTX. Moreover, acute renal and hepatic toxicity occurred as evidenced by severe morphological findings and increased serum levels of creatinine and liver transaminases. In all rats subjected to continuous infusion of 7-OH-MTX, yellow microscopic precipitations were apparent in the kidney tubules. Crystallization was also seen in bile ducts of the liver in some of the rats. These results further support that the formation of 7-OH-MTX is disadvantageous and that reported attempts to prevent its formation during MTX treatment are warranted.
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  • 26
    ISSN: 1432-0843
    Keywords: Key words Microdialysis ; Methotrexate ; Tissue ; Recovery ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  We used a microdialysis technique to determine tissue methotrexate (MTX) levels during steady state in a rodent model. Two different approaches were employed to measure the actual extracellular MTX concentrations in muscle, liver, and kidney tissues of anesthetized Wistar rats. With the reduced-perfusion-rate technique, the flow in the microdialysis perfusate was gradually decreased toward zero to permit calculation of zero-flow intercepts. Using the net change technique, microdialysis probes were perfused with different MTX concentrations to allow an assessment of equilibrium drug levels. For these two methods to be used, drug concentrations in the matrix to be analyzed must remain unchanged during the experimental procedure. In the animal model, steady state was attained after 1.5 h and maintained throughout the rest of the experiments by the administration of MTX as continuous infusions through a venous catheter. In vitro and in vivo, both the reduced-perfusion-rate and net change techniques gave reproducible data that permitted the estimation of extracellular drug concentrations in the dialyzed tissue compartments. The data suggest that the level of unbound MTX in the circulation is fairly similar to the extracellular concentrations in the muscle and liver. In the kidney, MTX levels were measured to be 3–8 times higher than those of unbound, circulating MTX, and a considerable discrepancy between the two methods used for estimations was apparent. These results demonstrate that both the net change and reduced-flow microdialysis techniques can produce reproducible and precise data. The results may constitute a basis for determining recoveries and, thus, true extracellular drug levels during in vivo microdialysis of MTX. This may be of importance in delineation of the relationship between tissue MTX levels and outcome in a variety of normally inaccessible compartments during cancer pharmacotherapy.
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  • 27
    ISSN: 1432-0843
    Keywords: Key words 6-Mercaptopurine ; Pharmacokinetics ; Methotrexate ; Lymphoblastic leukemia ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Clinical and experimental pharmacokinetic interaction between 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP) and methotrexate (MTX) was investigated in patients as well as in rats and in HL-60 human leukemic cells. Ten children affected by acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in remission received daily doses of 6-MP given at 25 mg/m2 and i.v. infusion of high-dose MTX at 2 or 5 g/m2 once every other week. When 6-MP was given alone, the mean peak plasma concentration (Cmax) and area under the curve (AUC) of 6-MP were 72.5 ng/ml and 225.3 h ng ml-1. Concurrent treatment with MTX at 2 or 5 g/m2 resulted in a mean increase of 108% and 121% in the Cmax and of 69% and 93% in the AUC, respectively. In rats treated with an oral dose of 6-MP at 75 mg/m2, MTX given i.p. at 5 g/m2 produced mean increases of 110% and 230% in the Cmax and AUC of 6-MP, respectively. In HL-60 human leukemic cells incubated with 6-MP at 250 ng/ml, the cumulative intracellular concentration of 6-thioguanine and 6-MP nucleotides was not significantly modified by treatment with 20 μg/ml of MTX. The present findings indicate that high-dose MTX enhances the bioavailability of 6-MP as evidenced by the observed increases in the plasma Cmax and AUC of 6-MP in humans and animals.
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  • 28
    ISSN: 1433-2965
    Keywords: Bisphosphonates ; Bone resorption ; Calcium balance ; Calcium metabolism ; Ibandronate ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The new bisphosphonate ibandronate was given at various doses and regimens to normal growing rats, and its effect on calcium metabolism investigated by means of45Ca kinetics. The bisphosphonate began to inhibit bone resorption at a dose of 0.1 µg P/kg, given daily. At higher doses intestinal calcium absorption, calciuria and calcium balance were also increased, calcemia being decreased. There was no difference in effect when the same amount of compound was given either daily for 10 days or all at once. Furthermore, the effect of a high dose of 100 µg P/kg was present 1 month after a single administration, whereas a dose 10 times lower was no longer effective. These results suggest that ibandronate may be effective in humans for decreasing bone resorption and increasing calcium balance in osteoporosis, when given either daily or discontinuously.
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  • 29
    ISSN: 1433-2981
    Keywords: Rat ; Blood-brain barrier ; Development ; Immunohistochemistry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A mouse monoclonal antibody which specifically reacts with putative blood-brain barrier (BBB) competent endothelial cells of rat cerebral capillaries was used to identify barrier competent cells in the central nervous system (CNS). The development of the cerebral capillaries and the BBB was examined and quantified, from day 6 to day 40 postpartum, using immunocytochemical and unbiased stereological techniques. There was a progressive increase in capillary formation postnatally, with collateral branching observed with progressive age. BBB development was confined to individual endothelial cells located at the periphery of the cortex until day 10 postpartum. Antibody binding progressively increased postnatally, contributing 30% of the total capillary surface area by day 20. There was a rapid elevation of reactivity from day 20 to day 40, with a mean of 83% by day 40. The BBB constitutes minimal amounts of brain vascular capillaries before day 10 of life in the rat. There is a slower increase in BBB than in total capillaries between days 10 and 20. There is a reversal of this trend between days 20 and 40.
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  • 30
    ISSN: 1433-2981
    Keywords: Control survey ; Haematology ; Inter laboratory variation ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A survey was conducted to determine the accuracy and quality control of automated haematology analysers used in non-clinical toxicity studies. Pooled blood samples from male Sprague-Dawley rats were distributed to 98 laboratory facilities throughout Japan, the samples being delivered under refrigeration to each facility within 18 h of sample preparation. At each facility, the samples were analysed within 4 h of receipt. Commercially available normal human blood samples from a single lot were also analysed at the same time. Most haematological results were within the mean ±3SD (standard deviation), but some facilities gave either high or low values consistently for both human and rat samples. No facility gave high or low values to certain parameters sporadically, which suggests no problem with the accuracy of the equipment. However, it was suspected that there would be some problem in comparing analytical values determined in a unique way by specific equipment design. The use of certain equipment resulted, in rat haematocrit values in particular, being either too high or too low. In these cases, it was deemed necessary to make some adjustments or calibration changes. There were also platelet values with a ‘plus drift’ which was apparently due to contamination with, or failure to identify small red blood cells (RBC). There was no deviation in values which could be attributed solely to the mechanical operation of any of the analytical equipment. Non-standard, initial setting up of the equipment (originally intended for human use, but now used for a variety of animal species) has been recognised as the main cause for a wider range of the analytical values seen. The results of this survey suggest that it may be necessary to review equipment calibration at each facility, and to re-establish the historical background data.
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  • 31
    ISSN: 1433-2981
    Keywords: Clinical chemistry ; Haematology ; Rat ; Sampling technique(s)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Blood samples from male and female rats were collected from four different sampling sites by the same technicians and analysed by the same procedures. The sampling sites were the abdominal aorta, orbital venous plexus, dorsal anastomotic orbital vein and sublingual vein. Values obtained in blood samples collected from peripheral sites were compared to those from the abdominal aorta, a sampling site which is normally unaffected by the sampling technique. There were significant differences in haematological parameters, particularly in leucocyte counts which were higher in samples collected from the peripheral sites than in those withdrawn from the central one. No significant changes were observed in coagulation parameters. A significant increase in clinical chemistry parameters related to soft tissue damage, namely creatinine kinase, lactate dehydrogenase, hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase and aspartate aminotransferase, was seen in samples collected from both orbital sites. From this study it can be concluded that haematological and biochemical values obtained from rats in toxicological studies using different sampling sites are reliable both in males and females, provided that they are compared to values obtained from the same site in untreated controls. Sampling from the orbital plexus proved to be the least invasive method.
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  • 32
    ISSN: 1434-0879
    Keywords: Enolase ; Isozymes ; Rat ; Renal neoplasms
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Concentrations of enolase isozymes in normal kidney and renal cell tumors in rats were determined using a highly sensitive enzyme immunoassay, and the isozymes were immunohistochemically localized in tissue sections. Levels of α-enolase in renal cell turnors were significantly lower than in normal kidney, whereas those of γ-enolase were significantly elevated (mean ±SD:211±129 ng/mg protein, n=15, as compared to 27.1±2.9 ng/mg protein, n=7). The proportion of γ-enolase in the total enolases in the tumor tissues (1.6±0.5%) was significantly higher than in normal kidney (0.15±0.005). Immunohistochemistry revealed epithelial cells of all nephron segments to be positive for the α-isozyme, whereas γ-enolase staining was strongly positive only in the loops of Henle, being faint in the distal tubules and absent in the proximal tubules. Both α- and γ-enolases demonstrated positive immunostaining in all of the seven renal cell tumors studied. These findings indicate that an isozyme switch from α- to γ-enolase occurs during rat kidney carcinogenesis, taking into account the derivation from proximal tubules, consistent with the findings for renal cell carcinomas in man.
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  • 33
    ISSN: 1573-0603
    Keywords: Brain ; Histology ; Organotypic culture ; Patch clamp recording ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The goal of the current research was to define an in vitro system that can replace in vivo experimentation but reflects as far as possible aspects of the intact situation of the developing nervous system of mammals. Tissue slices of postnatal rat hippocampi were continuously moved between the medium and gas phase. Under these conditions the complex cytoarchitecture was preserved for many weeks. Lactate dehydrogenase assay, cell size analysis and neuron- and glial cell specific immunocytochemical markers were employed to illuminate explant development in vitro. By scanning electron microscopy the explant surface was analysed in order to determine the conditions suitable for patch clamp recording. Electrophysiological analysis revealed a pronounced spontaneous activity showing the neurons to be functionally active. These data indicate that organotypic roller cultures reflect to a large extent the in vivo situation of the mammalian nervous system. The culture system provides a promising model system for developmental physiology, neurotoxicology and pharmacology.
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  • 34
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Key words Growth-associated protein 43 ; Immunohistochemistry ; Rat ; Spinal cord ; Trauma
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Growth-associated protein 43 (GAP43) is one compound used to indicate growth of axonal endings during development and regeneration, particularly of peripheral neurons. Using immunohistochemistry, we have studied the expression of GAP43 in the spinal cord of rats subjected to mild, moderate or severe compression injury and used neurofilament immunostaining to demonstrate axonal injuries. Samples removed from the compressed T8–9, the cranial T7 and the caudal T10 segments were studied at 4 h, 24 h, 4 days and 9 days after injury. Control rats showed a moderate immunostaining of neurons in dorsal root ganglia, weak staining of ventral motor neurons and, with the exception of the corticospinal tracts, a weak staining in some axons of the longitudinal tracts of the cord. Injury in the compressed region led to increased GAP43 immunoreactivity in axons of normal and expanded size. This occurred particularly 1–4 days after injury and normalized 9 days thereafter. More marked immunostaining was present in the cranial and caudal segments. The corticospinal tracts never showed such staining. The increase of GAP43 immunostaining is presumably caused by disturbed axonal transport from neurons with the capacity to synthesize and transport the GAP43 antigen. Transported material may thus be available for regeneration of axons, but this source of material may vary between different classes of axons within the cord.
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  • 35
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Acta neuropathologica 91 (1996), S. 616-623 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Key words Insulinoma ; Peripheral neuropathy ; Morphometry ; Pathology ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Peripheral nerve structure was systematically examined in rats with insulinoma induced by streptozotocin (STZ). Normal Wistar rats, aged 3 months (n = 10), were treated with intravenous injections of STZ (20 mg/ kg) and housed in plastic cages with free access to water and chow until 24 months of age. Three rats with insulinoma survived and were examined pathologically. Age-matched normal Wistar rats (n = 6) were used for comparison. The insulinoma-bearing rats showed a marked increase in body weight and decrease in blood glucose. In a teased nerve fiber study of the sciatic nerve, the percentage of abnormal fibers undergoing axonal degeneration and de- and remyelination in age-matched normal control rats was 3.9 ± 2.5% (means ± SD), whereas in the three insulinoma-bearing rats 49%, 50%, and 24%, respectively, of the fibers showed such changes. Regenerating fibers were also numerous in each insulinoma-bearing rat (36%, 42% and 27%, respectively). Morphometric analysis revealed smaller mean myelinated fiber and axonal areas in all the nerves examined (sciatic, tibial and sural) in insulinoma-bearing rats as compared to those in age-matched normal rats. Fiber area frequency histograms showed a decrease in large myelinated fibers and an increase in small regenerated fibers in insulinoma-bearing rats. Ultrastructurally, endoneurial microvessels exhibited a narrowed vascular lumen with swollen endothelial cells and vacuolar degeneration of pericytes, suggesting an involvement of vascular changes in the neuropathic development. The present study demonstrated marked structural changes in both motor and sensory peripheral nerves of rats bearing experimentally induced insulinoma. We consider that axonal degeneration, regeneration and demyelination constitute the main pathology in the peripheral nerves of insulinoma-bearing rats, although no particular difference in severity of the lesions between sensory and motor and between proximal and distal nerves was apparent.
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  • 36
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Acta neuropathologica 91 (1996), S. 155-160 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Key words Ubiquitin ; Immunohistochemistry ; Rat ; Spinal cord ; Trauma
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The ubiquitin-mediated proteolytic pathway is an important mode of protein degradation in various tissues. Since breakdown of proteins may occur in axons after injury we evaluated the presence of ubiquitin-like immunoreactive material in rat spinal cord following compression injury of mild, moderate and severe degrees at T8–9 level, resulting in no neurological deficit, reversible paraparesis and paraplegia of the hind limbs, respectively. Rats with mild to severe compression injury surviving 1–4 days showed numerous, intensely immunoreactive expanded axons at the site of compression. The labelled axons were randomly distributed in the longitudinal tracts but they were never found in the corticospinal tracts. No labelling was detected by 9 days after injury. In addition, the presence of labelled axons was investigated in the T7 and the T10 segments from rats with moderate compression. No labelling was seen in T7, but in T10 segments many immunoreactive axons were present. Control rats did not show immunoreactive axons in the spinal cord. Neurons of dorsal root ganglia, trigeminal ganglia and of the grey matter of the spinal cord were immunoreactive. Cerebral cortical neurons did not show ubiquitin expression. Thus, compression of the rat spinal cord causes a transient accumulation of ubiquitin-like immunoreactive material in axonal swellings. Even though the dynamics of ubiquitin conjugates are not fully understood, the observed axonal accumulation presumably reflects arrested anterograde axonal transport of protein chiefly derived from neurons of dorsal root ganglia and the local neurons of the spinal cord. The presence of ubiquitin in damaged axons is one prerequisite for degradation of abnormal proteins by the ubiquitin-mediated proteolytic pathway, which may be activated in reactive axonal swellings.
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  • 37
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Aromatase ; Estrogen receptor ; Immunohistochemistry ; Brain ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We elucidated the anatomical relationship between estrogen receptors and aromatase, the enzyme converting androgens to estrogens, in the fetal and neonatal rat brain by means of double immunohistochemical labeling, using antibodies against rat estrogen receptors and human placental aromatase cytochrome P450. Numerous aromatase-immunoreactive neurons were found in the medial preoptic area, the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, the medial amygdaloid nucleus and the ventromedial nucleus. Estrogen receptors were also abundant in these areas. Most of the aromatase-immunoreactive neurons showed immunoreactivity for estrogen receptors in the medial subdivision of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis and in the posterodorsal division of the medial amygdaloid nucleus. There were also many double-labeled cells in the ventromedial nucleus. However, in the medial preoptic area the localization of aromatase-immunoreactive neurons was distinct from that of neurons containing estrogen receptors. These results suggested that estrogens, which are converted from androgens in aromatase-containing neurons, are involved in the sexual differentiation of the brain through estrogen receptors within aromatase-immunoreactive neurons in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, the medial amygdaloid nucleus and the ventromedial nucleus, but through estrogen receptors in aromatase-immunonegative neurons in the medial preoptic area.
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  • 38
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    Anatomy and embryology 194 (1996), S. 595-605 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Neuropeptides ; Hybridization histochemistry ; Chemical anatomy ; Ontogeny ; Rat ; Brain
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) expression was studied during rat brain development using in situ hybridization histochemistry with a 48mer, S35-ATP-labeled probe. First expression of VIP was found in the lateral thalamus at E17, in a region later recognized as the reticular nucleus. At E19, VIP mRNA was also found in the hypothalamus, especially the suprachiasmatic nucleus. The only other prenatal localizations were the cortex and the brainstem. VIP expression continously matured during the first three postnatal weeks, and adultlike patterns were found at P22, when cerebral cortex, ventrolateral and reticular thalamic nuclei, suprachiasmatic nucleus were the regions with most prominent VIP expression. These results demonstrate the relatively late appearance of VIP gene expression in the rat forebrain as compared with peptides like SRIF and CCK, suggesting it does not have a major role in early brain maturation.
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  • 39
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    Anatomy and embryology 195 (1996), S. 65-70 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Key words α-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole proprionic acid receptor ; Glutamate receptor development ; Immunohistochemistry ; Synaptogenesis ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  We studied the immunohistochemial localization of the glutamate receptors (GluR-1, -2, and -3,) in the developing rat cerebral cortex and hippocampus using antibodies to GluR1 and to an epitope common to GluR2 and GluR3 (GluR2/3) subunits. In the cerebral cortex, GluR1 immunoreactivity appeared in the neurons from postnatal day (PND) 0, increased with maturation, was highest at PND 10, decreased until PND 30, and thereafter remained at the same level as on PND 0. GluR2/3 immunoreactivity appeared earlier in scattered neurons on embryonal day (ED) 18, increased with maturation and reached a peak between PND 10 and PND 15, after which the immunoreactivity gradually decreased and reached a plateau at PND 30. For both GluR1 and GluR2/3, some of the pyramidal neurons showed intense staining. In the pyramidal layers of the hippocampus, GluR1 and GluR2/3 immunoreactivity was found in all the pyramidal neurons of the CA1–4 area from ED 20. In the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, GluR1 and GluR2/3 immunoreactivity was found in the neurons of the granule cells after PND 0. Immunoreactivity in the neurons of the subiculum was found after PND 5 and that of the polymorphic cell layers was found after PND 15–20. Our results indicate that the development of glutamate receptor subunits in the rat cerebral cortex and hippocampus is expressed in different spatial patterns and distinct temporal patterns throughout development and is scheduled during the early postnatal period, when synaptic plasticity or synaptic connection occurs in these regions.
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  • 40
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Neuropeptides ; Limbic cortex ; Allocortex ; Mesocortex ; Parcellation ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The expression of somatostatin mRNA within the allocortex of the rat was examined by in situ hybridization with an alkaline phosphatase labeled probe. We sought to determine whether parcellation of the allocortex could be based upon the number and laminar location of the hybridized cells and to contrast the allocortical features with those of the isocortical areas. The cingulate region was characterized by intense, moderate, and faint cells, small to medium in size throughout the laminae. The retrosplenial region demonstrated a somewhat stratified appearance with an abundance of cells expressing somatostatin mRNA in the upper portion of the composite layer II–IV and also in the upper portion of layer VI. The insular region displayed more heterogeneity. The distribution of the cells hybridized for somatostatin mRNA formed distinctive configurations within the insular region (dorsal and ventral agranular insular areas) with no obvious generality. The perirhinal area resembled the ventral agranular insular area, and the cell distribution of the entorhinal and prepiriform areas displayed a common characteristic in that the primary axis of the perikarya of somatostatin mRNA expressing cells within the lower layers were oriented at almost every possible angle. The conclusion of the investigation is that in situ hybridization for somatostatin mRNA provides a means by which the areal boundaries within the allocortex may be drawn.
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  • 41
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Apoptosis ; Programmed cell death ; Olfactory system ; Embryogenesis ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract It has been previously shown that the embryonic olfactory nerve contains, in addition to glial ensheathing cells, a large population of differentiated neurons that migrate from the developing olfactory epithelium, in close association with the olfactory axon fascicles. The purpose of our study was to verify the hypothesis according to which a process of physiological cell death might be involved in the progressive disappearance of these migrating neurons that has been reported during late embryonic stages in several immunocytochemical studies. To do so, we have investigated the development of the olfactory nerve layer in rat embryos by using light and electron microscopy, with special reference to the presence of cell death processes within this structure. We have also applied the histochemical TUNEL method allowing in situ visualization of cells degenerating by apoptosis. In order to determine if neurons were present among dying cells, a procedure of double-labeling was performed by combining the DNA-specific bisbenzimide with two neuronal markers, the protein B-50/GAP-43 and the lectin Ulex europaeus I. Results brought out the precise temporal and spatial patterns of programmed cell death accompanying the morphogenesis of the olfactory nerve layer. A cell death process was observed within the olfactory nerve layer from its onset at embryonic day 13 (E13). While only few pycnotic cells were observed in E13 and E14 embryos, their number increased from E15 to reach a maximum at E16 and then diminished. Few dying cells were also observed along the olfactory axon fascicles when they penetrated the olfactory nerve layer. Degenerating cells appeared strongly TUNEL-labeled and exhibited morphological features of cell death by apoptosis. Double-labeling experiments revealed that some of the apoptotic cells were neurons. These observations indicate that apoptosis may account for the progressive decrease in the number of migrating neurons present within the embryonic olfactory nerve layer. Otherwise, a zone of massive cell death by apoptosis was observed at E14 within the nasal mesenchyme located ventrally and caudally to the olfactory nerve layer. Double-labeling experiments showed that apoptotic cells present within this zone were not neurons. Our findings strongly suggest that apoptotic cell death of migrating neurons may allow the elimination of non-functional cells whereas that of mesenchymal cells may facilitate outgrowth of the newly formed olfactory axon fascicles by pathway formation.
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  • 42
    ISSN: 1432-0851
    Keywords: Key words Medullary thyroid carcinoma ; Rat ; Immunotherapy ; Interleukin-2
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  The existence of inherited aggressive forms of medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC), and their resistance to all classical therapies, make it a prime candidate for adoptive immunotherapy. As a prelude to a vaccine for the protection of family members at risk of developing the disease, we investigated the immunological antitumour response provoked by the 6/23 rMTC cell line, compared to that of the same cells engineered to secrete interleukin-2 (rMTC-IL2), in an animal model of familial human MTC, the inbred strain of Wag/Rij rats. The rMTC cells developed a tumour that invaded the whole neck 15 days after orthotopic injection (into the thyroid), while the rMTC-IL2 cells were progressively rejected. Co-injection of rMTC-IL2 with the parental cells induced the rejection of the rMTC transplants. When injected, both tumoral cell types showed a similar positive immunoreaction with anti-MHC class I (major histocompatibility complex class I) antibodies. They both recruited natural killer cells and eosinophils at the site of injection. In addition, CD8+ T lymphocytes infiltrated the rMTC-IL2 cells, and eosinophil recruitment was amplified. Neutrophils, macrophages and CD4+ T lymphocytes were scarce. Our results suggest that the CD8+ T lymphocytes are implicated in the antitumour reaction elicited by the Il-2-transfected cells. As these effectors are known to induce a specific immunological response, including memory, such a protocol should be tested as a vaccine on the young population genetically at risk of developing a MTC.
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  • 43
    ISSN: 1432-0851
    Keywords: Key words NK cell ; NKR-P1 ; Rat ; Colon tumor ; Tumor regression
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  NKR-P1 has been identified as a triggering structure selectively expressed on rat natural killer (NK) cells and adherent lymphokine-activated killer (A-LAK) cells. In vivo treatment with anti-NKR-P1 monoclonal antibody (mAb 3.2.3) was shown to induce complete inhibition of NK cytotoxicity and elimination of LAK cell precursors in Lewis and Fisher rat strains. We investigated the effects of mAb 3.2.3 in a colon tumor model in BDIX rats. Inoculation of animals with mAb 3.2.3 even at very high doses induced a strong but incomplete inhibition of NK cytotoxicity in nylon-wool-non-adherent spleen and peripheral blood cells. Generation of adherent A-LAK cells from their spleen precursors was also strongly but not fully inhibited. We also investigated the effect of treatment with mAb 3.2.3 on the tumorigenicity of the NK-sensitive REGb cell line. When subcutaneously inoculated in syngeneic animals, REGb cells induce tumors that first grow for 2 weeks, then spontaneously regress and disappear. In contrast with previous results using anti-asialoGM1, no significant difference in tumor growth was observed between rats treated with mAb 3.2.3 and control animals, even with a long-term treatment. In vitro, mAb 3.2.3 exhibited the same incomplete efficiency. Nylon-wool-non-adherent spleen cells treated with mAb 3.2.3 plus complement were completely free of 3.2.3bright cells, but retained a substantial NK activity and generated LAK cells after culture with IL-2. After an overnight incubation in standard medium of 3.2.3-depleted spleen cells, 3.2.3bright cells were partially recovered and the NK cytotoxic activity, as well as the generation of LAK cells, was significantly enhanced. These results suggest that a strong expression of NKR-P1 is not required for BDIX mononuclear cells to exhibit NK function and generate LAK cells under IL-2 activation.
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  • 44
    ISSN: 1432-1238
    Keywords: Key words Acute pancreatitis ; Therapy ; Dextran ; Hypertonic ; Colloid ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Objective: Ultrahigh-molecular dextran (500000 Da) has been shown to prevent pancreatic necrosis when given 30 min after induction of pancreatitis. This study should clarify the following: (a) are dextrans still effective after prolongation of the therapy-free interval? (b) what is the impact of the molecular weight of the dextrans? and (c) is their effect influenced by the dextran concentration or by the addition of hypertonic saline? Animals and interventions: Acute pancreatitis was induced in 70 male dextran-tolerant Wistar rats using intraductal bile-salt infusion and intravenous hyperstimulation. After 3 h, animals were assigned to one of seven groups (n=10 per group) receiving either Ringer solution or different dextrans (10%) including 70000 Da (DEX-70), 160000 Da (DEX-160), 300000 Da (DEX-300) or 500000 Da (DEX-500). Additional groups included DEX-70 (6%) and DEX-70 (10%) in combination with hypertonic NaCl (7.5%) (HHS-70). Ringer solution was given at 24 ml/kg and all dextrans at 8 ml/kg. Measurements and results: Trypsinogen activation peptides (TAP) were quantified in ascites and acinar necrosis after death or sacrifice at 9 h. As an index of less pathological trypsinogen activation, the mean TAP levels in ascites were significantly lower in DEX-70 and DEX-160 compared to Ringer controls (p〈0.05, t-test). Furthermore, the amount of acinar necrosis was significantly lower in all dextran groups except the HHS-70 in comparison with Ringer controls (p〈0.01, t-test). Finally, mortality was significantly reduced from 60% in Ringer controls to 10 and 0%, respectively, in the groups treated with DEX-70 and DEX-160 (p〈0.03, Fisher‘s Exact test). There was a similar trend in all other groups except the HHS-70. Conclusions: Despite a therapy-free interval of 3 h, dextrans reduce trypsinogen activation, prevent acinar necrosis, and improve survival in necrotizing rodent pancreatitis. The molecular weight and concentration of dextran are of secondary importance for these beneficial effects.
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  • 45
    ISSN: 1432-1238
    Keywords: Acute pancreatitis ; Therapy ; Dextran ; Hypertonic ; Colloid ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Objective Ultrahigh-molecular dextran (500 000 DA) has been shown to prevent pancreatic necrosis when given 30 min after induction of pancreatitis. This study should clarify the following: (a) are dextrans still effective after prolongation of the therapy-free interval? (b) what is the impact of the molecular weight of the dextrans? and (c) is their effect influenced by the dextran concentration or by the addition of hypertonic saline? Animals and interventions Acute pancreatitis was induced in 70 male dextran-tolerant Wistar rats using intraductal bile-salt infusion and intravenous hyperstimulation. After 3 h, animals were assigned to one of seven groups (n=10 per group) receiving either Ringer solution or different dextrans (10%) including 70 000 Da (DEX-70), 160 000 Da (DEX-160), 300 000 Da (DEX-300) or 500 000 Da (DEX-500). Additional groups included DEX-70 (6%) and DEX-70 (10%) in combination with hypertonic NaCl (7.5%) (HHS-70). Ringer solution was given at 24 ml/kg and all dextrans at 8 ml/kg. Measurements and results Trypsinogen activation peptides (TAP) were quantified in ascites and acinar necrosis after death or sacrifice at 9 h. As an index of less pathological trypsinogen activation, the mean TAP levels in ascites were significatly lower in DEX-70 and DEX-160 compared to Ringer controls (p〈0.05,t-test). Furthermore, the amount of acinar necrosis was significantly lower in all dextran groups except the HHS-70 in comparison with Ringer controls (p〈0.01,t-test). Finally, mortality was significantly reduced from 60% in Ringer controls to 10 and 0%, respectively, in the groups treated with DEX-70 and DEX-160 (p〈0.03, Fisher's Exact test). There was a similar trend in all other groups except the HHS-70. Conclusions Despite a therapy-free interval of 3 h, dextrans reduce trypsinogen activation, prevent acinar necrosis, and improve survival in necrotizing rodent pancreatitis. The molecular weight and concentration of dextran are of secondary importance for these beneficial effects.
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  • 46
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    Experimental brain research 108 (1996), S. 119-128 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Intracortical microstimulation ; Electromyographic activity ; Potentiation ; Ketamine ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The objectives of this study were to determine whether changes in electromyographic (EMG) responses observed during prolonged intracortical microstimulation (ICMS) were due to local plasticity of the motor system or to global changes in the preparation. Local effects would be expressed as changes only along the activated motor pathway, whereas global effects would be expressed as changes also appearing at distant cortical efferent microzones. The results of ICMS in the ketamine-anesthetized rat showed that the size of consecutive EMG responses increased gradually to a relatively stable magnitude over a period of four to six trains of stimuli. This early enhancement of EMG responses was maintained while continuously providing trains of stimuli at 1 Hz. However, it disappeared after a 5-min period of muscle inactivity. This response enhancement in the presence of ketamine (an NMDA, N-methyl-d-aspartate, receptor blocker) suggests that a neuronal mechanism involving non-NMDA-mediated homosynaptic short-term potentiation (STP) was responsible for the early enhancement of EMG responses. To compare ICMS effects at several time intervals it was necessary to average several evoked EMG responses because there was normal biological variability between single EMG responses. To determine the optimal number of EMG responses that would provide a reliable average EMG response, averages of 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 EMG responses evoked from a single cortical site were collected at 5-min intervals. The results revealed that averages of 10 responses would provide reliable average EMG responses for all subsequent analyses. There were wide fluctuations in the average EMG responses when periodic injections of ketamine were used to maintain a low reflexive state in the animal. Switching to continuous infusion of ketamine abolished these fluctuations but there remained a small drift in the magnitudes of consecutive EMG responses. To test whether this drift reflected local plastic changes in the motor system induced by stimulation or some global changes, EMG responses evoked from another ICMS site were used as control. The rationale was that global effects would affect all motor output sites equally. The sizes of control EMG responses followed a similar time course to those evoked from the test site. Furthermore, standardizing the test EMG responses with respect to the control responses eliminated the drift in response magnitudes. Thus the drift was due to slow global changes in neuronal excitability possibly produced by the anesthesia. In conclusion, late changes occurring after hours of ICMS were not due to plasticity of the motor system but rather to global changes in the preparation, possibly resulting from the inability to set an ideal anesthetic infusion rate that could maintain a constant level of neuronal excitability over long periods of time. However, there was early enhancement of the EMG responses evoked by ICMS due to neuronal plasticity possibly mediated by a non-NMDA mechanism of homosynaptic STP such as post-tetanic potentiation (PTP). This early enhancement would favor recruitment of the previously activated motor pathway and lead to greater consistency in movement execution.
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  • 47
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    Experimental brain research 108 (1996), S. 382-388 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Nitric oxide ; Iontophoresis ; 3 morpholino sydnonimin hydrochloride ; S-nitroso glutathione ; Periaqueductal grey matter ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Experiments were carried out in urethane-anaesthetized rats to examine the effect of nitric oxide (NO) on neuronal activity within the dorsolateral sector of the midbrain periaqueductal grey matter (PAG), an area which is rich in NO synthesizing neurones. NADPH dependent diaphorase histochemistry revealed small NO synthase containing perikarya, 15.4±3.1 μm (mean±SEM) in diameter, in a longitudinal column in the dorsolateral sector of the PAG. The labelled cell bodies were surrounded by a dense meshwork of stained fibres and processes in which unlabelled neurones were embedded. In order to establish whether NO was generated when NO donors were ejected iontophoretically from micropipettes, a chemiluminescence method was used to estimate the output of NO in vitro after iontophoresis of two chemically different classes of NO donor: the sydnonimine 3 morpholino sydnonimin hydrochloride (SIN 1) and the nitrosothiol S nitroso glutathione (SNOG). Iontophoresis of both NO donors into 200 μl aliquots of 165 mM NaCl using ejection currents between 6000 and 18000 nA·min produced a current related increase in the concentration of NO. Iontophoresis of SIN 1 in vivo produced a reproducible, current related inhibition of firing in 40 of 59 neurones in the dorsolateral PAG. In 8 of 10 neurones the effect of SIN 1 was significantly reduced after iontophoresis of methylene blue (10–30 nA for 2.7–5 min). The inhibition took up to 7 min to develop and lasted for up to 13 min. Inhibitory responses to GABA were not affected by methylene blue. Iontophoresis of SNOG also inhibited ongoing activity of 18 of 24 neurones tested in the PAG. The experiments demonstrate firstly that NO donors can be used in vivo to deliver NO in the vicinity of neurones by iontophoresis from micropipettes. Secondly, NO appears to inhibit neuronal activity within the PAG.
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  • 48
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Basal forebrain ; Sleep ; Glutamate antagonist ; Cholinergic system ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The aim of this paper was to study the effects of microinjections of carbachol, a mixed cholinergic agonist, into the nucleus basalis of Meynert (NBM) of rats on the wake-sleep cycle. Carbachol (2.74 nmol) was able to increase wakefulness (W) and decrease desynchronized sleep (DS). To verify the hypothesis that the effects of carbachol are at least partially mediated by the glutamatergic system, the NMDA antagonist 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid and the non-NMDA antagonist d-γ-glutamylaminomethanesulfonic acid were injected into the NBM before carbachol. Pretreatment with these glutamate receptor antagonists counteracted the effect of carbachol on DS. The effect of carbachol on W was not modified by the pretreatment with the glutamate receptor antagonists. This is the first study showing that carbachol injected into the NBM increases W and decreases spontaneous DS in the rat. Moreover, our results tend to indicate that the decrease in DS following the injection of carbachol into the NBM is related to the release of endogenous glutamate.
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  • 49
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Respiration ; Cross-correlation ; Upper cervical inspiratory neurons ; Phrenic and intercostal motoneurons ; Decerebration ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We examined the synaptic connections from upper cervical inspiratory neurons to phrenic and intercostal motoneurons in decerebrate rats using cross-correlation. Upper cervical inspiratory neurons (n=79) were recorded from the C1 and C2 segments of the spinal cord in 38 vagotomized, paralyzed, ventilated, and decerebrate rats. The neurons were identified by their inspiratory firing pattern and antidromic activation from the ipsilateral spinal cord at C7. Whole-nerve recordings were made using bipolar electrodes from the central cut ends of the C5 phrenic nerve and the external and internal intercostal nerves at various thoracic levels. Cross-correlation histograms were computed between these recordings to detect short time-scale synchronizations indicative of synaptic connections. The 55 cross-correlation histograms computed between the upper cervical inspiratory neurons and the ipsilateral phrenic nerve showed seven (13%) narrow peaks (mean half-amplitude width±SD, 1.09±0.15 ms) at short latencies (mean latency±SD, 1.29±0.26 ms) suggestive of monosynaptic excitation, and four (7%) broader peaks (mean half-amplitude width±SD, 1.50±0.17 ms) at short latencies (mean latency±SD, 1.40±0.24 ms) suggestive of oligosynaptic excitation. Another 14 (25%) cross-correlation histograms displayed a central broad peak (mean half-amplitude width±SD, 1.59±0.23 ms) suggestive of common activation. The eight cross-correlation histograms computed between the upper cervical inspiratory neurons and the contralateral phrenic nerve were featureless. The 77 cross-correlation histograms computed between the upper cervical inspiratory neurons and the internal and external intercostal nerves at various thoracic levels (T2–8) showed no peaks suggestive of synaptic connections. We conclude that some upper cervical inspiratory neurons make monosynaptic and paucisynaptic connections to phrenic motoneurons but not to intercostal motoneurons.
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  • 50
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    Experimental brain research 112 (1996), S. 392-402 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Intracellular free calcium ; Traumatic injury ; Spinal cord ; Intercellular communication ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Intracellular calcium ions are, in addition to free radicals, an important mediator of tissue destruction following traumatic injury to the spinal cord. In vivo measurements of calcium in the interstitial space and in the tissue suggest the occurrence of a posttraumatic shift of calcium from the extracellular to the intracellular compartment at the injury site. No information is, however, available on the posttraumatic changes of calcium in the intracellular compartment, where the ion exerts its crucial messenger function. We developed an in vitro model of local traumatic spinal injury, using a spinal cord slice preparation, allowing us to investigate injury-related changes of intracellular free calcium. The injury consisted of the impact of a small needle, and intracellular free calcium was measured with fura-2. Application of the injury at different places within the gray matter caused a transient and reproducible increase in the fura-2 fluorescence ratio. This injury-induced ratio increase was largely, but not completely, suppressed under zero extracellular calcium conditions. It was also largely depressed in the presence of high extracellular potassium and in the absence of extracellular sodium. It was modestly depressed by the calcium channel blocker nifedipin, by the calcium release channel blocker dantrolene, and by the gap junction blockers halothane and octanol. The calcium channel blocker flunarizine, the N-methyl d-aspartate (NMDA)-receptor-channel blocker MK-801 and the endoplasmic reticulum calcium-ATPase blocker thapsigargin had no effect. The experiments suggest that injury is associated with an increase in intracellular free calcium that is mediated by calcium influx, in part via L-type calcium channels. They furthermore give evidence that sodium influx and gap junctions are involved in these injury-associated changes of intracellular free calcium.
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  • 51
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Immediate plasticity ; Denervation ; Neuronal responses ; Somatosensory cortex ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Recordings were made from neurons in primary somatosensory (SmI) forepaw cortex of rats to study the time course of changes in responses beginning immediately following denervation (ligation) of a single digit. Before denervation, neuronal receptive fields (RFs) defined by tactile stimulation varied in size from small regions of one digit to larger areas covering several digits and palmar pads. With electrical stimulation, most neurons responded best to one (on-focus) digit and less to other (off-focus) digits; on-focus stimulation yielded more spikes per stimulus and shorter spike latencies (L min) than did off-focus stimulation. After ligation of the on-focus digit, most neurons showed increased responsiveness to stimulating one or several off-focus digits and palmar regions of the forepaw: (1) tactile stimulation showed that the RFs of all but one neuron expanded to include previously “ineffective” skin regions, such as digits or palmar pads adjoining the original RF; (2) electrical stimulation usually evoked stronger responses from neighboring off-focus digits and sometimes elicited novel responses from previously ineffective digits — seven of ten neurons showed increases in spikes per stimulus, which tended to approach stable values within 60–90 min after denervation; three of ten neurons showed decreases in L min with time, but most revealed no significant changes. These results suggest that dynamic response properties, as well as RFs, of SmI cortical neurons can be modified rapidly by blocking afferent input from dominant on-focus skin regions. RFs expand and novel responses appear, with concomitant increases in response magnitude and, in some cases, decreases in response latency over time. These findings seem to reflect a rapid increase in synaptic efficacy of weak or previously ineffective inputs from cutaneous afferent nerve fibers.
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  • 52
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    Experimental brain research 111 (1996), S. 215-232 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebral cortex ; Orbital ; Anatomy ; Connections ; Corticocortical ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The cortical and thalamic afferent connections of rat orbital cortex were investigated using fluorescent retrograde axonal tracers. Each of the four orbital areas has a distinct pattern of connections. Corticocortical connections involving the ventral and ventrolateral orbital areas are more extensive than those of the medial and lateral orbital areas. The medial orbital area has cortical connections with the cingulate, medial agranular (Fr2) and posterior parietal (PPC) cortices. The ventral orbital area has connections with the cingulate area, area Fr2, secondary somatic sensory area Par2, PPC, and visual areas Oc2M and Oc2L. The ventrolateral orbital area (VLO) receives cortical input from insular cortex, area Fr2, somatic sensory areas Par1 and Par2, PPC and Oc2L. The lateral orbital area has cortical connections limited to the agranular and granular insular areas, and Par2. Thalamic afferents to the four orbital fields are also topographically organized, and are focused in the submedial and mediodorsal nuclei. The ventrolateral orbital area receives input from the entirety of the submedial nucleus, whereas the other orbital areas receive input from its periphery only. Each orbital area is connected with a particular segment of the mediodorsal nucleus. The medial orbital area receives its principal thalamic afferents from the parataenial nucleus, the dorsocentral portion of the mediodorsal nucleus, and the ventromedial portion of the submedial nucleus. The ventral orbital area receives input from the lateral segment of the mediodorsal nucleus, the rostromedial portion of the submedial nucleus and the central lateral nucleus. Thalamic afferents to the ventrolateral orbital area arise from the entirety of the submedial nucleus and from the lateral segment of the mediodorsal nucleus. The lateral orbital area receives thalamic afferents from the central segment of the mediodorsal nucleus, the ventral portion of the submedial nucleus and the ventromedial nucleus. The paraventricular, ventromedial, rhomboid and reuniens nuclei also provide additional input to the four orbital areas. The connections of the ventrolateral orbital area are interpreted in the context of its role in directed attention and allocentric spatial localization. The present findings provide anatomical support for the view that areas Fr2, PPC and VLO comprise a cortical network mediating such functions.
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  • 53
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    Experimental brain research 111 (1996), S. 385-392 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Estradiol ; Progesterone ; Network ; Gating ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract This study demonstrates that gating of responses of the rostral dorsal accessory olive (rDAO) to somatosensory stimulation varies across the estrous hormone cycle of the rat. The rDAO has been suggested as an “error” or event signal generator for the cerebellar cortex. Selective sensory gating of input to this structure may underlie this error signalling function. In the present study, as many as 23 single neurons were recorded simultaneously from either the forepaw or the snout areas of the rDAO. Responses of these neurons to electrical stimulation of peripheral afferents were determined during active movement or non-movement conditions. These results were then compared across the estrous cycle or after administration of the estrous hormones 17 β-estradiol (E2) and/or progesterone (P) to rats on diestrus or following E2 priming. Elevations in circulating estrous hormones produced greater excitatory responses of rDAO neurons to stimulation during non-movement, and, conversely, enhanced inhibition of rDAO activity during active movement of the stimulated peripheral area compared with control diestrous conditions, suggesting that selective gating processes to the rDAO are enhanced by estrous hormones. The results of this study suggest that the night of behavioral estrus is associated with enhanced selective sensory gating processes associated with improved detection and processing of error signals.
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  • 54
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    Experimental brain research 111 (1996), S. 424-428 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Neuropeptides ; RP 67580 ; Neurogenic inflammation ; Migraine pain ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The role of the neuropeptide substance P (SP) in the control of dural arterial blood flow was examined in barbiturate-anaesthetised rats. The parietal skull was trephinised and the blood flow in branches of the medial meningeal artery was monitored with a laser Doppler flowmeter. Electrical stimulation of the dura mater encephali at a parasagittal site with pulses of 0.5 ms (10–20 V, 5–10 Hz, 30 s) caused a transient increase in dural blood flow which was reproducible in size with repetitive stimulation. Neither the basal flow nor the stimulus-evoked flow was significantly changed by topical administration of SP, the SP analog septide, or the NK1 antagonist RP 67580. It is concluded that SP released from dural nerve fibres upon local stimulation does not play an important role in the regulation of dural arterial flow.
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  • 55
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    Experimental brain research 112 (1996), S. 24-34 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Odor sensitivity and selectivity ; Discrimination unit ; Olfactory bulb ; Unit activity ; Olfactometry ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Extracellular single-unit responses to odorants with various properties were recorded from mitral/tufted cells over large areas of the olfactory bulb of anesthetized rats. Each cell was exposed to one stimulus set consisting of five different odorants each at five concentrations. The resulting concentration-response profiles were compared. All mitral/tufted cells examined responded to two or more odorants, and the largest proportion of the cells were sensitive to all five odorants. Cells unresponsive to all five odorants regardless of concentration were not observed. Mitral/tufted cells sensitive to all three of the odorants that are known to evoke maximal electro-olfactograms in different regions of the olfactory epithelium were distributed widely throughout the olfactory bulb. There were no significant differences in latencies of odor responses either across recording sites or across odorants. A comparison of the concentration-response profiles suggested that all of the mitral/tufted cells were equally capable of responding to any odorant with their own distinctive pattern, but that the cells tended to show an identical pattern rather than variable pattern of response to different odorants. Five mitral/tufted cells isolated within 800 μm of one electrode track showed different concentration-response profiles. Of 18 simultaneously recorded spike pairs with different amplitudes and discharge patterns recorded incidentally through one electrode at different sites, 10 had different and 8 had identical response patterns to odorants. These results suggest that: (1) mitral/tufted cells are sensitive to a broad spectrum of odorants, but respond with their own patterns to odorants; (2) odor discrimination is not uniform in neighboring cells, and a discrimination unit is comprised of a single cell.
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  • 56
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Neurodegeneration ; Retrograde neuronal cell death ; Perivascular cells ; Fluorogold ; Phagocytosis ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Thalamic neuronal degeneration after neocortical lesions involve both anterograde and retrograde components. This study deals with the thalamic microglial response after neocortical aspiration lesions, using fluorogold fluorescent prelabeling, to identify retrogradely degenerating thalamocortical neurons, combined with histochemical or immunohistochemical staining of microglial cells. Adult male Wistar rats were injected with the retrograde fluorescent tracer fluorogold, in the right sensorimotor cortex (forepaw area) in order to retrogradely label thalamic neurons projecting to this area. After 1 week, the fluorogold injection site was removed by aspiration, axotomizing at the same time the thalamic projection neurons now retrogradely labeled with fluorogold. After 3, 7, 14, and 28 days the animals were killed and processed for nucleoside diphosphatase histochemistry or complement type 3 receptor immunohistochemistry and class I and II major histocompatibility complex immunohistochemistry using OX42, OX18, and OX6 antibodies. The histological analysis showed a prominent and progressive nucleoside diphosphatase-,OX42-, and OX6-positive microglial cell response in the ventrolateral, posterior, and ventrobasal thalamic nuclei with ongoing retrograde and anterograde neuronal degeneration. Initially the reactive microglia had a bushy morphology and were succeeded by ameboid microglia and microglial cluster cells as the reaction progressed. However, in the reticular thalamic nucleus, which suffered exclusively anterograde neuronal degeneration, a different picture was seen with only bushy microglia. The neurons undergoing retrograde degeneration in the ventrolateral, posterior, and ventrobasal thalamic nuclei were retrogradely labeled by the fluorogold tracer. Individual nucleoside diphosphatase-, OX42-, or OX6-positive microglial cells extended long cytoplasmic processes surrounding fluorogold-labeled neurons and had in some cases apparently phagocytized these. Several microglial cells were thus double-labeled with nucleoside diphosphatase or OX42 and fluorogold. In addition, small nucleoside diphosphatase-positive, fluorogold-labeled perivascular cells were observed in the neocortex near the fluorogold-injected and ablated neocortical areas and in the ipsilateral thalamus. This study demonstrates: (1) that the microglial response to thalamic degeneration after neocortical lesion is graded with a limited reaction to the well-known massive anterograde axonal degeneration and a more extended reaction to the axotomy-induced retrograde cell death; and (2) that also perivascular cells and possibly macrophages may contribute to this reaction, as seen by uptake of fluorogold from axotomized neurons in the degenerating thalamic nuclei.
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  • 57
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Preoptic-anterior hypothalamic area ; cAMP ; Hypoxia ; Low ambient temperature ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The accumulation of adenosine 3′:5′-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) was measured in the preopticanterior hypothalamic area, the cerebral cortex, and the hippocampus of rats exposed to different ambient temperatures: (1) 23±0.5°C, for 53 h±20 min (control);(2)-10°1 °C, for 53 h±20 min (exposure to low ambient temperature);(3) -10°C for 48 h and 23°C for the following 5 h±20 min (recovery). The capacity to accumulate cAMP was tested by subjecting animals to acute hypoxia, a stimulus which is known to induce a large increase in brain cAMP concentration. In the control condition, hypoxic stimulation increases cAMP concentration in all the brain regions studied. In contrast, during the exposure to low ambient temperature, whilst both the cerebral cortex and the hippocampus show the same levels of accumulation found in the control condition, cAMP accumulation is reduced in the preoptic-anterior hypothalamic area. However, during the first few hours of the recovery period, the preoptic-anterior hypothalamic area is able to reattain the capacity for cAMP accumulation observed in the control condition.
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  • 58
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    Experimental brain research 109 (1996), S. 185-196 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Superior colliculus ; Nociception ; Pain ; Tecto-reticular ; Predorsal bundle ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Accumulating evidence suggests that the rodent superior colliculus (SC) plays as important a role in avoidance and defensive behaviours as it does in orientation and approach. These two complementary behaviours are associated with two anatomically segregated tectofugal output pathways, such that orientation and approach are mediated by the crossed descending projection, whereas avoidance and defence are subserved via the uncrossed projection. Because nociceptive neurones in the SC have been presumed to participate in withdrawal or defensive behaviours, it has been proposed that they have direct access only to the uncrossed efferent pathway. However, in certain behavioural situations, the most adaptive response to injury, or to a painful object in prolonged contact with the skin, is to orient towards the source of discomfort so that the skin can be licked and/or the offending object removed. Presumably then, nociceptive as well as low-threshold neurones would have access to the crossed descending pathway in order to initiate such behaviours. Determining whether or not this is the case was the objective of the present study. Both nociceptive-specific (82%) and wide-dynamic-range (18%) SC neurones were identified using long-duration (up to 6 s), frankly noxious mechanical and thermal stimuli in urethane-anaesthetised Long-Evans hooded rats. The majority (85.7%) of the nociceptive neurones encountered were located within the intermediate layers, which corresponds with the location of the cells-of-origin of the crossed descending projection. Nearly half (44.9%) were activated antidromically from electrical stimulation of the crossed descending pathway at a site in the brainstem below its decussation. The mean conduction velocity of these nociceptive output neurones was 9.02 m/s, which corresponds well to previous estimates of conduction velocity in the crossed tecto-reticulo-spinal tract. These data demonstrate that a significant proportion of nociceptive neurones in the rat SC have axons that project to the contralateral brainstem via the crossed descending projection. Nociceptive neurones could, therefore, effect orientation responses to noxious stimuli via similar output pathways that low-threshold neurones utilize to initiate orientation to innocuous stimuli.
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  • 59
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Field potential ; Timing ; Lidocaine ; Somatosensory cerebral cortex ; Crus IIa ; Mossy fiber ; Cerebellum ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The spatial coincidence of somatosensory cerebral cortex (SI) and trigeminal projections to the cerebellar hemisphere has been previously demonstrated. In this paper we describe the temporal relationship between tactilely-evoked responses in SI and in the granule cell layer of the cerebellar hemisphere, in anesthetized rats. We simultaneously recorded field potentials in areas of common receptive fields of SI and of the cerebellar folium crus IIa after peripheral tactile stimulation of the corresponding facial area. Response of the cerebellar granule cell layer to a brief tactile stimulation consisted of two components at different latencies. We found a strong correlation between the latency of the SI response and that of the second (long-latency) cerebellar component following facial stimulation. No such relationship was found between the latency of the SI response and that of the first (short-latency) cerebellar component, originating from a direct trigeminocerebellar pathway. In addition, lidocaine pressure injection in SI, cortical ablation, and decerebration all significantly affected the second cerebellar peak but not the first. Further, when tactile stimuli were presented 75 ms apart, the response in SI failed, as did the second cerebellar peak, while the shortlatency cerebellar response still occurred. We found a wide spatial distribution of the upper lip response beyond the upper lip area in crus IIa for the long-latency component of the cerebellar response. Our results demonstrate that SI is the primary contributor to the cerebellar long-latency response to peripheral tactile stimulation. These results are discussed in the context of Purkinje cell responses to tactile input.
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  • 60
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Glutamate ; Glutamine synthetase ; Hippocampus ; Kainate ; Receptor ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Immunocytochemistry was used to study the distribution of the kainate receptors GluR1, GluR2/3 and GluR4 and of the N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor NMDAR1 as well as the astrocyte markers glutamine synthetase (GS) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) in the hippocampus of normal and kainate-lesioned rats. Hippocampal pyramidal neurons and dentate granule neurons were labelled heavily for GluR1 and GluR2/3, but only lightly for GluR4. Dense GluR4 immunopositivity was, however, observed in oligodendrocyte-like glial cells. Hippocampal pyramidal neurons and dentate granule neurons were moderately labelled for NMDAR1. Intravenous kainate injections resulted in a decrease in GluR1 and GluR2/3 immunoreactivity on the apical dendrites of pyramidal neurons as early as 7 h postinjection. At 18 h, there was a marked reduction in GluR1 and GluR2/3 receptors in the terminal tuft of dendrites of most hippocampal pyramidal neurons in the affected area, although some cells showed labelling in other portions of the apical dendrites and in basal dendrites. Immunostaining for GluR4 and NMDAR1 was also reduced at this time. At postinjection day 3, only the cell bodies and the basal dendrites of a few scattered pyramidal cells were labelled. Taken together, these results indicate a progressive loss of glutamate receptors, which affects the apical dendritic tree before the basal dendritic tree. The decrease in receptor immunoreactivity could be due to a downregulation of the receptors, since it occurred as early as 7 h postlesion, before cell death was evident in Nissl-stained sections. At long intervals after kainate injection, all pyramidal cells at the centre of the lesion showed a lack of glutamate receptor staining, and no partially labelled pyramidal cells were observed. The periphery of the lesion, however, contained many partially labelled pyramidal neurons among the unlabelled cells and had features of early lesions. The present study also showed an early decrease in GS immunoreactivity in the affected CA fields of the hippocampus (18 h to 3 days postinjection), followed by a medium-term increase (5–68 days) and a late decrease in GS immunoreactivity (81 days). The decrease in GS immunoreactivity at 81 days is not due to an absence of astrocytes, since GFAP staining showed many densely labelled astrocytes in the affected CA field.
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  • 61
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    Experimental brain research 111 (1996), S. 178-186 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cross-correlation ; Ventral-group ; bulbospinal inspiratory neurons ; Upper-cervical ; inspiratory neurons ; Intercostal motoneurons ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We examined the synaptic connections from ventral-group bulbospinal inspiratory neurons to upper cervical inspiratory neurons and phrenic and intercostal motoneurons in decerebrate rats using cross-correlation. Inspiratory neurons were recorded in the medulla (n=28) at the level of the obex and from the upper-cervical segments (C1 and C2) of the spinal cord (n=29) in 18 vagotomized, paralyzed, ventilated, and decerebrated rats. The neurons were identified by their inspiratory firing pattern and antidromic activation from the spinal cord at C7. Whole-nerve recordings were made using bipolar electrodes from the central cut ends of the C5 phrenic nerve and the external and internal intercostal nerves at various thoracic levels. Cross-correlation histograms were computed between these recordings to detect short time scale synchronizations indicative of synaptic connections. Cross-correlation histograms (n=20), computed between the activities of ventral-group bulbospinal inspiratory neurons and the phrenic nerve, all showed peaks (mean half-amplitude width±SD, 1.1±0.3 ms) at short latencies (mean latency±SD, 2.0±0.6 ms) suggestive of monosynaptic excitation. Cross-correlation histograms (n=33), computed between the activities of ventral-group bulbospinal inspiratory neurons and upper-cervical inspiratory neurons, displayed four (12%) peaks (mean halfamplitude width±SD, 0.9±0.1 ms) at short latencies(mean latency±SD, 1.8±0.6 ms) suggestive of monosynaptic excitation, and six (18%) peaks (mean half-amplitude width±SD, 1.4±0.4 ms) at latencies near zero suggestive of excitation fro m a common source. Cross-correlation histograms (n=34), computed between the activities of ventral-group bulbospinal inspiratory neurons and the internal and external intercostal nerves at various thoracic levels (T2-8), showed six (18%) peaks (mean half-amplitude width±SD, 2.5±0.5 ms) at short latency (mean latency±SD, 4.5±1.1 ms) suggestive of oligosynaptic connections. Cross-correlation histograms (n=42) computed between activities of intercostal nerves at various levels of the thoracic spinal cord showed central peaks suggestive of excitation from a common source. Although the size of the peaks decreased with segmental separation, the displacement of the peaks from time zero did not increase with segmental separation (mean displacement±SD, 0.6±0.6 ms) as would be expected if the common excitation resulted from a descending monosynaptic excitation by a source such as the ventral-groupbulbospinal inspiratory neurons. We conclude that all ventral-group bulbospinal inspiratory neurons make monosynaptic connections to phrenic motoneurons, a few make monosynaptic connections to upper-cervical inspiratory neurons, but connections to intercostal motoneurons are made via interneurons.
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  • 62
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    Experimental brain research 112 (1996), S. 58-62 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: H-reflex ; Operant conditioning ; Plasticity ; Spinal cord ; Soleus muscle ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In response to an operant conditioning task, rats can gradually increase or decrease soleus H-reflex amplitude without change in background electromyographic activity or M response amplitude. Both increase (under the HRup mode) and decrease (under the HRdown mode) develop over weeks. The present study investigated reversal of conditioned H-reflex change. Following collection of control data, rats were exposed to one mode (HRup or HRdown) for 50 days, and then exposed to the opposite mode for up to 72 days. Rats responded to each mode exposure with gradual, mode-appropriate change in H-reflex amplitude. This finding is consistent with other evidence that H-reflex conditioning depends on spinal cord plasticity. The effects of exposure to the HRup (or HRdown) mode were not affected by whether exposure followed previous exposure to the HRdown (or HRup) mode. In accord with recent studies suggesting that HRup and HRdown conditioning have different spinal mechanisms, these results suggest that reversal of H-reflex change is due primarily to the superimposition of additional plasticity rather than to decay of the plasticity responsible for the initial change.
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  • 63
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Trigeminal nuclear complex ; Plasticity ; Mechanoreceptor afferents ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Previous light and electron microscopic studies in rat and cat have shown that transection of peripheral sensory nerve branches leads to alterations in the central branches of primary sensory neurons, so-called transganglionic changes. In this study the changes in choleragenoid (B)-horseradish peroxidase B-HRP-labeled primary sensory terminals and axons in the trigeminal nuclear complex 3–90 days following transection of vibrissae nerves in the rat have been studied. Since regeneration of the transected vibrissa nerve was not prevented, these experiments allowed the examination of degenerative changes in the earlier stage after nerve injury as well as those present during nerve regeneration and target reinnervation. Two different experimental approaches were used, depending on the postlesion survival time. For short-term experiments the deep vibrissa nerve was injected with a solution of B-HRP. Forty-eight hours later the nerve was transected at its entry in the follicle, and after survival times ranging from 3 to 15 days sections from the subnucleus caudalis and spinal trigeminal nucleus, were prepared for electron microscopic examination. For long-term experiments involving a 16- to 90-day posttransection survival time, the deep vibrissa nerve was cut first. Then B-HRP was injected into the reinnervated follicle 2 days before killing the rats. Atypical HRP-labeled terminals were seen from 4 to 90 days survival time. The changes observed included atypical swollen vesicles or lack of vesicles in parts of the terminals apposed to the synaptic cleft. Other terminals displayed dense clusters of vesicles, flocculent cytoplasm, and/or neurofilamentous hyperplasia. No evidence of complete disintegration or phagocytosis by glial cells was observed. From 4 to 12 days survival time the changes were most commonly seen in the larger terminals, from 19–90 days in smaller terminals. From 10 days survival time and onward, changes in axons were observed. The most commonly seen alterations were axons with expanded myelin sheaths. Normal-labeled terminals were seen at all survival times examined. Compared with earlier studies of transganglionic changes in the vibrissa system occurring after infraorbital nerve or vibrissa row nerve injury, the changes seen in this study are less pronounced. These observations indicate (1) that the initial changes in the central processes of peripherally injured vibrissae nerves are less extensive than those occurring after infraorbital nerve transection, possibly because of the distally located lesion, and (2) that transganglionic changes occur also after the injured nerve has regenerated.
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  • 64
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    Experimental brain research 112 (1996), S. 420-430 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Plasticity ; Auditory cortex ; Neuronal assemblies ; Microstimulation ; Cortical maps ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Many manipulations are able to change or perturb various aspects of single neuron properties and interneuronal relationships. Changes of cerebral cortex organization have been observed in different cortical areas and at different time scales in relation to peripheral stimulation, peripheral damage, associative learning, and electrical stimulation. Here we describe studies on separable multineuron recordings in the rat's auditory cortex under two different anesthetics. Acoustic stimuli were used as a normal, physiological input, and weak electrical intracortical microstimulation (ICMS) as a perturbation that forces a rapid cortical reorganization. ICMS induced fast changes in the cortical map and in the receptive field properties of cells at the electrically stimulated and adjacent electrodes. In effect there was an enlargement of the cortical domain tuned to the acoustic frequency that had been represented at the stimulating electrode. ICMS also incremented afterdischarge responses; these consisted of an initial response to the auditory stimulus followed by less intense repetitive activity that was stimulus-time locked and had a period of 8–12 Hz, similar to that of the spontaneous synchronous activity. Cortical activity under ketamine differed from that under pentobarbital sodium, although in both situations we observed that cortical neurons were highly synchronous.
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  • 65
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Neurotrophins ; BDNF ; In situ hybridization ; Immunohistochemistry ; Status epilepticus ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The messenger RNAs (mRNAs) for the neurotrophins, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), and nerve growth factor (NGF), are upregulated during epileptic seizure activity, as visualized by in situ hybridization techniques. Neurotrophins might be protective against excitotoxic cell stress, and the upregulation during seizures might provide such cell protection. In this study, a high dose of pilocarpine (300 mg/kg) was used to induce long-lasting, limbic motor status epilepticus and a selective pattern of brain damage. The regulation of BDNF, trkB, and NGF mRNA was studied by in situ hybridization at 1, 3, 6, and 24 h after induction of limbic motor status epilepticus. BDNF immunoreactivity was examined with an anti-peptide antibody and the neuropathological process studied in parallel. BDNF mRNA increased in hippocampus, neocortex, piriform cortex, striatum, and thalamus with a maximum at 3–6 h. Hybridization levels increased earlier in the resistant granule and CA1 cells as compared to the vulnerable CA3 neurons. BDNF immunoreactivity was elevated in dentate gyrus at 3–6 h. trKB mRNA increased in the entire hippocampus. NGF mRNA in hippocampus appeared in dentate gyrus at 3–6 h and declined in hilar neurons at 6–24 h. Cell damage was found in the CA3 area, entire basal cortex, and layers II/III of neocortex. Endogenous neurotrophins are upregulated during status epilepticus caused by pilocarpine, which is related to the coupling between neuronal excitation and trophic factor expression. This upregulation of neurotrophic factors may serve endogenous protective effects; however, the excessive levels of neuronal hyperexcitation resulting from pilocarpine seizures lead to cell damage which cannot be prevented by endogenous neurotrophins.
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  • 66
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    Experimental brain research 110 (1996), S. 55-61 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Nucleus of the solitary tract ; Antidromic mapping ; Prefrontal cortex ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) has been described as a “visceromotor” cortical area, since autonomic effects such as depressor responses may be elicited from this area. The central circuitry which mediates these depressor responses may include a projection from the MPFC to the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS). Neurones were recorded extracellularly in the MPFC and were tested for antidromic (AD) activation from the NTS. These were all tested for (1) constant spike latency, (2) ability to follow high-frequency stimulation to more than 200 Hz, and (3) where possible, collision of stimulation-evoked spike with spontaneous spike or spikes evoked by iontophoretic application of glutamate. Of the 34 cells studied, all had constant AD latency (30±1 ms, range 16–46 ms); they followed high-frequency stimulation up to 354±19 Hz, and only seven cells were spontaneously active (range 1–19 spikes/s). The threshold stimulation intensity for AD activation was 102±9 μA (n=34, range 8–200 μA). Depth-threshold curves (n=7) showed minimum-threshold AD activation currents that corresponded to the dorsal and ventral sub-divisions of the NTS. Small shifts in AD latency were found in the depth-threshold curves, suggesting axonal branching. Analysis of recording sites showed that NTS-projecting MPFC neurones were predominantly found in the infralimbic and ventral prelimbic regions of the MPFC. These findings indicate that there is a population of neurones in the MPFC that projects to, and probably terminates within, the NTS. It is possible that this projection may, in part, mediate the cardiovascular response to MPFC stimulation.
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  • 67
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: CCK-8S ; Feeding ; Obesity ; Rat ; Sex ; Unspecific early postnatal overfeeding
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The response to cholecystokinin (CCK) as a satiety peptide in obesity or anorexia has been tested mainly in extreme models of food intake control. In the present study, the effect of CCK-8S on food intake was investigated in a nongenetic and less-stressful model of obesity due to unspecific early postnatal overfeeding in male and female rats. Reducing the normal litter size of ten to three newborn rats on day 3 of life led to an enhanced food intake resulting in an increased body weight until adulthood. Freely fed male and female, normal and obese rats were given 10 μg/kg CCK-8S i.p. on day 41 and 40 μg/kg CCK-8S on day 91 of life and food intake was measured for 24 h. Compared with treatment with saline (i.p.) 1 day before the test, the lower dose of 10 μg/kg CCK-8S reduced food intake for 2 h in normal, but not in obese rats. Conversely, the higher dose of 40 μg/kg CCK-8S reduced food intake in both normal and obese rats for 2 h, but this effect was more evident in the obese rats. Moreover, the satiating effect of CCK-8S was more pronounced and longer lasting in male than in female rats. In summary, the data suggest that the response to CCK-8S differs in normal and obese rats and depends on sex.
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  • 68
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words ALEPH-2 ; Serotonin receptor binding ; Anxiolytics ; Serotonin syndrome ; Phenylisopropylamines ; Rat ; Hypothermia ; Psychedelics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Serotonergic behavioral responses, effects on motor activity and core temperature, and binding properties of the novel putative anxiolytic amphetamine derivative (±)1-(2,5-dimethoxy-4-ethylthiophenyl)-2-aminopropane (ALEPH-2), were examined in rodents in order to elucidate the mechanism underlying its anxiolytic-like effect. After peripheral administration in rats, ALEPH-2 induced some symptoms of the serotonergic syndrome, e.g. forepaw treading and flat body posture. Additionally, a decrease in motor activity was observed. No significant effects on the number of head shakes were observed after injection, although high inter-subject variability was noted. Higher doses of ALEPH-2, in the range exhibiting anxiolytic properties (4mg/kg), elicited significant hypothermia in mice. The affinity of the drug for 5-HT2A/2C receptors ([3H]ketanserin sites) was in the nanomolar range (Ki=173 nM), whereas for 5-HT1A, benzodiazepine sites, and GABAA receptors, the affinity was micromolar or lower. Based on these results the mechanism of action and the anxiolytic-like properties of ALEPH-2 are discussed.
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  • 69
    ISSN: 1432-198X
    Keywords: Key words: Postnatal development ; Rat ; Glomeruli ; Glomerular basement membrane ; Outpocket ; Transmission electron microscopy ; Morphometry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract. Distribution of glomerular basement membrane (GBM) outpockets and dimensional growth of glomeruli were studied in the maturing stage of rat glomeruli after completion of nephrogenesis. We observed the postnatal rat glomeruli from 5 to 60 days of age by transmission electron microscopy and estimated the structural development of glomeruli by computerized morphometry. On day 5, the GBM was double in structure, possessing an epithelial and endothelial lamina densa. After day 10, the lamina densa of the GBM was single and sent branches toward the epithelial side making outpockets. There is no change in the distributional pattern of the outpockets, at least from day 10 to day 60, although they decreased considerably in number between days 20 and 40. They were found almost exclusively on the peripheral surface of the glomerulus. The rat glomeruli increased in volume constantly in this period, and the capillary volume increased more significantly than the mesangial volume. The GBM surface area increased in parallel with the glomerular tuft volume. The growing mode of capillaries was different before and after day 40; namely before day 40 elongation was predominant, whereas after day 40 widening was more pronounced. These results indicate that if the outpockets are the other site of GBM assembly after fusion of double basement membranes, the GBM must be redistributed from the peripheral to the paramesangial site to enable elongation and branch formation of capillaries during the growth of glomeruli.
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  • 70
    ISSN: 1432-198X
    Keywords: Key words: Acidosis ; Growth hormone ; Rat ; Uremia ; Insulin-like growth factor 1 ; Growth
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract. The effects of 2 weeks of a daily injection (2 IU/day) of recombinant human growth hormone (GH) were studied in young (60-g) growing rats in two experiments. Experiment 1 was performed in uremic animals (mean plasma creatinine 65 – 71 μmol/l) who were either acidotic (mean bicarbonate 11.5 mmol/l) or had acidosis corrected (mean bicarbonate 26 mmol/l) by addition of sodium bicarbonate to the diet. Experiment 2 used rats with normal renal function (plasma creatinine 25 μmol/l) who were either non-acidotic but restricted to the dietary intake of uremic rats or rendered acidotic by ammonium chloride. GH induced an increase in body weight and length in non-acidotic uremic (+33% and +41%) and in non-acidotic food-restricted (+13% and +42%) rats, associated with an increased rate of protein synthesis and little change in plasma insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF 1). In both acidotic rat groups, GH altered none of the parameters studied. Thus: (1) the presence of severe metabolic acidosis blunts the response to GH in uremic and non-uremic rats and (2) the increment of growth rate does not depend on a rise in plasma IGF 1.
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  • 71
    ISSN: 1432-198X
    Keywords: Rat ; Neonate ; Kidney ; Endothelin ; Receptors
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Endothelin-1 (Et1), like angiotensin II, is implicated in postnatal maturation and development. The present study was designed to identify Et1 receptors and subtype Et1 receptors present in rat kidney between 1 and 30 days of postnatal life. On day 1, high-affinity and high-density Et1 binding sites were identified in rat kidney. The dissociation constant and maximum binding for ET1 to membranes from whole kidney were 0.073±0.05 nM and 1,345.9±73 fmol/mg protein, respectively. On day 30, affinity and receptor density were markedly decreased. The dissociation constant and maximum binding were 0.147±0.021 nM (P〈0.01) and 633.2±56.4 fmol/mg protein (P〈0.001), respectively. Using BQ 123 (EtA-selective antagonist) and sarafotoxin S6c (EtB-selective agonist), the two Et1 receptor subtypes EtA and EtB were identified in 1- and 30-day-old rat kidney. BQ 123 selectively recognized EtA receptors with high affinity (2.9±0.44 on day 1 and 4.0±0.5 nM on day 30) and sarafotoxin S6c bound with higher affinity EtB receptors (0.871±0.14 on day 1 and 0.717±0.12 nM on day 30). Between birth and day 30, the EtA binding capacity was decreased (304±27 vs. 752±202 fmol/mg protein,P〈0.05), whereas EtB binding was not affected (514±87 vs. 656±171 fmol/mg protein, NS). The decrease in the total number of Et1 receptors during the 1st month of life may be due to the concomitant decrease in the number of EtA receptors. Increased Et1 receptor density in early postnatal life suggests an influence of Et1 on immature kidney circulation and/or kidney growth.
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  • 72
    ISSN: 1432-198X
    Keywords: Acidosis ; Growth hormone ; Rat ; Uremia ; Insulin-like growth factor 1 ; Growth
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effects of 2 weeks of a daily injection (2 IU/day) of recombinant human growth hormone (GH) were studied in young (60-g) growing rats in two experiments. Experiment 1 was performed in uremic animals (mean plasma creatinine 65–71 μmol/l) who were either acidotic (mean bicarbonate 11.5 mmol/l) or had acidosis corrected (mean bicarbonate 26 mmol/l) by addition of sodium bicarbonate to the diet. Experiment 2 used rats with normal renal function (plasma creatinine 25 μmol/l) who were either non-acidotic but restricted to the dietary intake of uremic rats or rendered acidotic by ammonium chloride. GH induced an increase in body weight and length in nonacidotic uremic (+33% and +41%) and in non-acidotic food-restricted (+13% and +42%) rats, associated with an increased rate of protein synthesis and little change in plasma insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF 1). In both acidotic rat groups, GH altered none of the parameters studied. Thus: (1) the presence of severe metabolic acidosis blunts the response to GH in uremic and non-uremic rats and (2) the increment of growth rate does not depend on a rise in plasma IGF 1.
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  • 73
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    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 354 (1996), S. 67-71 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Protection ; Neuropeptide Y (NPY) ; Somatostatin ; Hippocampus ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Transient moderate hypoxia has been previously shown to exert a potent protective role to subsequently applied convulsant drugs. We now investigated neuropeptide Y and somatostatin immunoreactivities seven days after moderate hypoxia (9% O2 in N2 for two times 8 h) in the hippocampus of the rat. A slight reduction of somatostatin immunoreactive cells was observed in the hilus of the dorsal and ventral hippocampus. At the same time, the total number of neuropeptide Y immunoreactive neurons was increased in this area due to a pronounced increase in staining of presumable basket cells. There was also increased staining of neuropeptide Y positive fibers in the outer molecular layer. Our data suggest activation of neuropeptide Y containing interneurons after a moderate or a mild transient hypoxia. Activation of these inhibitory neurons may contribute to the protective effect of this treatment.
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  • 74
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    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 354 (1996), S. 67-71 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words Hypoxia ; Protection ; Neuropeptide Y (NPY) ; Somatostatin ; Hippocampus ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Transient moderate hypoxia has been previously shown to exert a potent protective role to subsequently applied convulsant drugs. We now investigated neuropeptide Y and somatostatin immunoreactivities seven days after moderate hypoxia (9% O2 in N2 for two times 8 h) in the hippocampus of the rat. A slight reduction of somatostatin immunoreactive cells was observed in the hilus of the dorsal and ventral hippocampus. At the same time, the total number of neuropeptide Y immunoreactive neurons was increased in this area due to a pronounced increase in staining of presumable basket cells. There was also increased staining of neuropeptide Y positive fibers in the outer molecular layer. Our data suggest activation of neuropeptide Y containing interneurons after a moderate or a mild transient hypoxia. Activation of these inhibitory neurons may contribute to the protective effect of this treatment.
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  • 75
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words CCK-8S ; Feeding ; Obesity ; Rat ; Sex ; Unspecific early postnatal overfeeding
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  The response to cholecystokinin (CCK) as a satiety peptide in obesity or anorexia has been tested mainly in extreme models of food intake control. In the present study, the effect of CCK-8S on food intake was investigated in a nongenetic and less-stressful model of obesity due to unspecific early postnatal overfeeding in male and female rats. Reducing the normal litter size of ten to three newborn rats on day 3 of life led to an enhanced food intake resulting in an increased body weight until adulthood. Freely fed male and female, normal and obese rats were given 10 μg/kg CCK-8S i.p. on day 41 and 40 μg/kg CCK-8S on day 91 of life and food intake was measured for 24 h. Compared with treatment with saline (i.p.) 1 day before the test, the lower dose of 10 μg/kg CCK-8S reduced food intake for 2 h in normal, but not in obese rats. Conversely, the higher dose of 40 μg/kg CCK-8S reduced food intake in both normal and obese rats for 2 h, but this effect was more evident in the obese rats. Moreover, the satiating effect of CCK-8S was more pronounced and longer lasting in male than in female rats. In summary, the data suggest that the response to CCK-8S differs in normal and obese rats and depends on sex.
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  • 76
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words Chronic haloperidol ; Dopamine D2 receptors ; NMDA receptors ; AMPA receptors ; Caudate-putamen ; Quantitative autoradiography ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The aim of the present study was to investigate the influence of chronic treatment with haloperidol on the striatal N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxasole-propionic acid (AMPA) and dopamine D2 receptors using a quantitative autoradiography in rats. Haloperidol was given to animals in a dose of ca. 1 mg/kg/day in drinking water for 6 weeks or 3 months and was afterwards withdrawn for 5 days. Haloperidol increased by 20–50% the binding of [3H]spiperone in different regions of the caudate-putamen. Haloperidol decreased by ca. 30% the binding of [3H]AMPA in the ventrolateral region of intermediate part of the caudate-putamen, but did not influence the binding of [3H]MK-801. The present results suggest that, apart from supersensitivity to dopamine, chronic treatment with haloperidol also induces subsensitivity of striatal AMPA receptors.
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  • 77
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key wordsα1-adrenoceptors ; Idazoxan ; Indanidine ; Noradrenaline ; Aorta ; Small mesenteric artery ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We have studied the effects of idazoxan in rat aorta and small mesenteric artery. In the aorta, idazoxan behaved as a partial agonist (pKA=6.30). Prazosin produced rightward shift (pA2=9.88) and steepening of the idazoxan curve. In contrast, idazoxan had no effect of basal tension in the mesenteric artery, but shifted the noradrenaline curve to the right in a parallel manner (pA2=6.12). The selective α1-adrenoceptor agonist, indanidine, also behaved as a partial agonist in the aorta and produced no significant contractions of the small mesenteric artery. Since idazoxan and indanidine have been reported to raise blood pressure in the pithed rat via an action at vascular α1-adrenoceptors, these results call into question the reliability of the small mesenteric artery assay as a predictor for α1-adrenoceptor-mediated pressor activity in vivo.
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  • 78
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    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 353 (1996), S. 168-174 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Key words Nucleus basalis magnocellularis ; Nicotine ; Physostigmine ; Cortical EEG ; FFT power spectra ; Unrestrained behaviour ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  The basal magnocellular nucleus is assumed to play a crucial role in cholinergic activation of the cortical EEG. The aim of this study was to establish whether intraperitoneally applied nicotine may counteract the power asymmetry of the slow waves in the cortical EEG of both hemispheres after an unilateral lesion in the basal nucleus. In 17 rats the basal nucleus (substantia innominata/ventral pallidum) was unilaterally lesioned by ibotenic acid. The lesion produced unilateral power increases of all frequencies up to 20 Hz in the frontal EEG that increased with higher arousal level. Additionally, synchronized spike and wave discharges appeared in the frontal EEG. The results indicate that the basal nucleus suppresses especially the delta EEG waves in the frontal motor cortex during motor active behaviour. Nicotine (0.1 and 1 mg/kg) partially counteracts the power asymmetry of frontal slow waves (2–6 Hz) only during exploratory sniffing but not during grooming and waking immobility. Physostigmine (1 mg/kg) was also effective during exploratory sniffing. The results may indicate a role of nicotinic mechanisms in the information input component of exploratory behaviour.
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  • 79
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    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 354 (1996), S. 179-186 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Adenosine ; Dopamine N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) ; Basal ganglia ; Catalepsy ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Previous work revealed that adenosine antagonists as theophylline reversed neuroleptic-induced catalepsy and potentiated anticataleptic effects of dopamine agonists reflecting specific adenosine-dopamine receptor interactions in the central nervous system. We tested whether similar functional interactions exist between adenosine receptors and glutamate receptors of the N-methyl-D-asparte (NMDA) subtype. The present study demonstrates that the anticataleptic effects of the competitive NMDA receptor antagonist CGP37849 and the non-competitive NMDA receptor antagonist dizocilpine can be potentiated by coadministration of a threshold dose of the adenosine receptor antagonist theophylline (2.5 mg/kg, i.p.) in haloperidol (0.5 mg/kg, i.p.)-pretreated rats. This potentiation was elicited only with higher doses of CGP37849 (4 and 8 mg/kg, i.p.) or dizocilpine (0.16 mg/kg, i.p.) in haloperidol (0.5 mg/kg, i.p.), but not in reserpine (5 mg/kg, i.p.) plus α-methyl-ptyrosine (100 mg/kg, i.p.)-pretreated animals. Therefore, these synergistic interactions seem to be brought about by indirect monoamine-dependent mechanisms rather than direct functional interrelationships between NMDA and adenosine A2a receptors.
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  • 80
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Psychostimulant ; Pavlovian conditioning ; Habituation ; Drug state-dependent process ; Conditioned activity ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Psychostimulant-induced conditioned activity is characterized by the presence of a hyperactivity in drug-free rats exposed to an environment previously paired with the effects of a psychostimulant. According to the habituation hypothesis, conditioned activity arises not through a Pavlovian conditioning process but rather because rats under the effects of the psychostimulant would be unable to habituate normally to the environment paired with these effects. This hypothesis predicts that conditioned activity should not develop in a previously habituated environment. This prediction was tested using a within-subject design. In this design, conditioned activity is evidenced when a group of rats, following a vehicle injection, was more active in a previously amphetamine-paired environment than in a previously vehicle-paired environment. The drug-environment pairing involved administering rats withd-amphetamine (1.25 mg/kg; SC) immediately prior to their placement in one of two distinctive environments. On alternate days, the rats received the vehicle and were placed in the other environment. With this design, it was found that: a) conditioned activity developed in a previously habituated environment; b) its magnitude was independent of the number of amphetamine-environment pairings (two, four or eight pairings); c) this development of conditioned activity did not result from a forgetting of the habituated environment due to a state-dependent retention of the habituation. Taken together, these results do not support the habituation hypothesis of psychostimulant-induced conditioned activity.
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  • 81
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    Psychopharmacology 123 (1996), S. 374-378 
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Clozapine ; Olanzapine ; Rat ; Lapping behavior
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract As a way of further comparing the behavioral effects of clozapine and olanzapine, dose ranges of these drugs were studied in a task emphasizing fine motor detail of rats' tongue movements during lapping behavior. Rats lapped drops of tap water from a force-sensing disk. From this behavior four variables were derived: peakforce of tongue strikes, duration of tongue contact, number of separate tongue contacts in 2 min, and the rhythm of the lapping behavior as quantified by Fourier analysis. Both clozapine (0.5–4.0 mg/kg, IP, 45 min) and olanzapine (0.25–2.0 mg/kg, IP, 45 min) dose dependently reduced all four measures of behavior. With respect to lick rhythm, a behavioral marker which clearly distinguishes haloperidol from clozapine in this behavioral paradigm, olanzapine was about twice as potent as clozapine, with the two drugs having parallel dose-effect functions. Within-session decrements in behavior previously reported for haloperidol in the lick task were not produced by clozapine nor by olanzapine. Taken together, these data strengthen the idea that the behavioral effects of clozapine and olanzapine are strikingly similar, and thereby emphasize the potential of olanzapine as an atypical antipsychotic agent.
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  • 82
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    Psychopharmacology 125 (1996), S. 79-88 
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Serotonin ; 8-OH-DPAT ; Feeding ; Instrumental conditioning ; Incentive learning ; Arousal ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract These experiments assessed whether reported increases in food consumption and food-reinforced instrumental performance in undeprived rats by the 5-HT1A agonist 8-hydroxy-2(di-n-propylamino)tetralin (8-OH-DPAT) are due to an increment in the incentive value of foods. Against this hypothesis, we found that when undeprived rats were trained to lever press for the food pellets and then allowed to consume the pellets under 8-OH-DPAT, this reexposure decreased subsequent instrumental extinction performance regardless of test drug condition relative to reexposure under vehicle. Although both food consumption and reinforced lever press performance were incremented, 8-OH-DPAT was found generally to reduce instrumental extinction performance and lever pressing during a period when the reinforcer was delivered non-contingently. Rats injected with 8-OH-DPAT were, however, more sensitive to delay of reinforcement, and increased their lever press performance at a 3-s delay but decreased performance at 6-s and 12-s delays relative to animals injected with vehicle. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that 8-OH-DPAT modifies arousal processes in a manner similar to mild stress, thereby acting both to elevate rewarded instrumental performance and to increase sensitivity to the effects of non-reward.
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  • 83
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    Psychopharmacology 125 (1996), S. 202-208 
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Self-administration ; Stimulus control ; Incentive-motivation ; Additive summation ; Cocaine ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Presenting independently established discriminative stimuli in compound can substantially increase response rates under food and shock-avoidance schedules. To determine whether this effect extends to drug self-administration, rats were trained to press a lever to receive cocaine intravenously. A tone and a light were independently established as discriminative stimuli for cocaine self-administration, then presented in combination in a stimulus-compounding test. Compared to tone and light alone, the tone-plus-light compound stimulus increased responding approximately three-fold when cocaine was withheld during testing, and it increased drug intake approximately two-fold when cocaine was made available during testing. Compounding did not increase responding after training in a truly random control condition where tone and light were presented uncorrelated with the availability of cocaine. The results obtained with this animal model of drug abuse define conditions under which combinations of environmental stimuli might substantially increase human drug use.
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  • 84
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: 5-HT1B ; 5-HT1D ; Guinea pig ; Rat ; Locomotor activity ; Prepulse inhibition ; Startle ; Serotonin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The serotonin (5-HT) 1B receptor in rats and mice appears to be homologous to the 5-HT1D receptor found in other mammals, such as guinea pigs and humans. The present series of experiments explored the functional similarity between the rat 5-HT1B receptor and the guinea pig 5-HT1D receptor on two behavioral measures known to be influenced by 5-HT1B receptor manipulations in rats: prepulse inhibition of the startle response (PPI) and locomotor activity. Because the 5-HT1B agonist RU 24969 disrupts PPI and stimulates locomotor behavior in rats, it was predicted that the 5-HT1D agonist, SDZ 219–964, would demonstrate a similar behavioral profile in guinea pigs. In support of this hypothesis, SDZ 219–964 was found to disrupt PPI dose-dependently (1.0 and 2.0 mg/kg) without significantly affecting startle amplitude and to increase locomotor activity (0.5–2.0 mg/kg) in guinea pigs. In guinea pigs, RU 24969 failed to affect PPI, although it did increase locomotor activity, indicating that RU 24969 may have activity at the 5-HT1D receptor. As expected, RU 24969 in rats disrupted PPI (2.5 and 5.0 mg/kg) and significantly increased locomotor activity (1.25–5.0 mg/kg). In rats, however, SDZ 219–964 had generalized, stimulatory effects on startle reactivity, without independent effects on PPI or locomotor activity. The spatial patterns of locomotion exhibited by guinea pigs treated with SDZ 219–964 versus those of rats treated with RU 24969 demonstrate important qualitative differences in structure, indicating that the neural substrates subserving these effects may be different. It is concluded that a functional similarity exists between 5-HT1D and 5-HT1B receptors with regard to the modulation of sensorimotor inhibition and, to a lesser extent, locomotor activity.
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  • 85
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Cocaine ; Dose-response ; Intraperitoneal ; Intravenous ; Repeated administration ; Sensitization ; Locomotion ; Stereotypy ; Conditioned place preference ; Conditioning ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Dose-dependent differences in the rewarding and stimulant properties of cocaine administered intravenously (IV) and intraperitoneally (IP) were compared. Six 2-day conditioning trials were conducted over consecutive days. Rats received cocaine and were placed into a compartment on one day of the trial, and were directly placed into a different compartment without drug on the other day. Rats were exposed to the compartments for either 20 or 40 min. The effects of cocaine on stimulant behaviors, including locomotion and stereotypies, were compared following the first and last injection. After conditioning, three tests were given with 1 rest day intervening each: (1) conditioned place preference (CPP) was measured as an increase in the amount of time animals spent in the injection compartment relative to the noninjection compartment when given access to both, (2) conditioned activity (CA) was measured as an increase in stimulant behaviors in cocaine-treated animals relative to saline controls following an injection of saline in the injection compartment and (3) context-independent sensitization was measured as an increase in stimulant behaviors following an injection of cocaine in the noninjection compartment relative to the animals' behavior following the first injection. Cocaine did not reliably produce sensitization of locomotion under any of the conditions examined. Cocaine produced sensitization of headbobbing that was more robust following IP administration than it was following IV administration. In both cases, sensitization of headbobbing involved a context-independent component. Cocaine produced CPP and CA with both routes of administration. CPP was established more readily with 40-min relative to 20-min exposures following IV administration, whereas CA was more prevalent with 20-min relative to 40-min exposures. This study provides a thorough characterization of the behavioral effects of cocaine administered IV and a new efficient method for assessing the effects of cocaine on conditioned and unconditioned behaviors following repeated administration.
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  • 86
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    Psychopharmacology 123 (1996), S. 280-288 
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Ventral pallidum ; Self-stimulation ; Dopamine ; Dopamine antagonists ; 7-OH-DPAT ; Cocaine ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The present study examines the role of dopaminergic neurotransmission in modulating the reinforcing effect of ventral pallidum (VP) intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS). Fifty four adult rats were implanted with a monopolar moveable stimulating electrode in the VP. Rate-frequency functions were determined by logarithmically decreasing the number of pulses in a stimulation train from a value that sustained maximal responding to one that did not sustain responding. After the ICSS thresholds stabilized, the animals received treatments with several doses of cocaine and of various selective drugs acting at the level of DA receptor subtypes. Their effects on threshold and asymptotic rate were analyzed. Cocaine produced a significant decrease in ICSS threshold but had no significant effect on the asymptotic rate. A significant decrease in ICSS threshold was also seen with the D3 agonist 7-OH-DPAT. This was associated with a decrease rather than an increase in performance. D1 and D2DA receptor blockers (haloperidol, SCH-23390, raclopride and sulpiride) produced a dose dependent increase in ICSS threshold and a decrease in the maximal rate. The results suggest that DA plays a modulatory role in VP intracranial self-stimulation, and that D1, D2 and D3 receptors are involved in the mediation of this effect, although to different extents.
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  • 87
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Cannabinoids ; Pigeon ; SR141716A ; Drug discrimination ; Startle ; Fixed consecutive number ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract SR141716A (Sanofi Recherche), a pyrazole derivative with high affinity for rat and human CB1 cannabinoid receptors, has recently been reported to reverse biochemical, physiological and behavioral effects induced by cannabinoid agonists. The present experiments characterized the activity of SR141716A (SR) in behavioral procedures designed to assess its antagonistic and intrinsic effects on unconditioned behavior and on complex learned behaviors. Six adult male pigeons were trained to discriminate injections of 0.56 mg/kg Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC) from vehicle under a two-key, fixed-ratio schedule of food reinforcement. SR (IM) produced a nearly complete blockade of THC-appropriate responding occasioned by the training dose without inducing significant changes in session response rates, but also produced partial substitution for Δ9-THC when administered alone. In another group of pigeons trained under a multiple schedule of signaled and unsignaled fixed consecutive number (FCN) responding, SR had little effect on accuracy, but Δ9-THC produced dose-related decreases in accuracy under both schedule components. SR was also evaluated in acoustic startle procedures in rats. SR produced little effect either on startle amplitude or prepulse inhibition of acoustic startle. In contrast, the potent cannabinomimetic CP-55, 940 produced large decreases in startle responses elicited by 120 dB [A] broad-band noise. These decreases were completely reversed by SR (10 mg/kg, IP). In concurrent measures, SR blocked the hypothermic effect CP-55,940. These results suggest that SR is an effective antagonist of the psychoactive effects of cannabinoids.
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  • 88
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Maternal separation ; Conditioned incentive stimuli ; Conditioned locomotor activity ; Mesolimbic dopamine ; Amphetamine ; Sulpiride ; SCH 23390 ; Clonidine ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Adult hooded rats exposed to a repeated maternal separation procedure during the neonatal period showed a blunted expression of locomotor hyperactivity conditioned to the presentation of the daily food ration. We have demonstrated that the expression of food-conditioned anticipatory hyperactivity is sensitive to the response-enhancing effects of systemicd-amphetamine (0.5; 1.0 mg/kg) and to the response-attenuating effects of the selective dopamine D2 antagonist sulpiride (8; 20 mg/kg), the selective dopamine D1 antagonist SCH 23390 (0.01; 0.022 mg/kg) and the mixed α1/α2 adrenoceptor agonist clonidine (5; 15 μg/kg) in a dose dependent manner. Animals from the early separation groups showed a reduced enhancement of activity in response to 0.5 mg/kgd-amphetamine and a greater attenuation of activity in response to 8 mg/kg sulpiride and 5 μg/kg clonidine. Female separated rats also exhibited an attenuated locomotor response to the unconditioned stimulant effects of 0.5 mg/kg systemicd-amphetamine. The experiments confirm that early maternal separation attenuates the response to conditioned appetitive cues in adult rats and implicate altered dopaminergic and noradrenergic function in the changes. It is possible that early maternal separation in the rat may offer a useful preparation for investigation of the neural substrates mediating affective development and affective psychopathology.
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  • 89
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Environmental conditioning ; Nicotine ; Rat ; Sensitization ; Behavioral and neurochemical analysis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We have investigated the effects of environmental conditioning on the induction of nicotine sensitization of locomotion, stereotypy and nucleus accumbens dopamine release. Sprague-Dawley rats, some of which had been previously implanted with a microdialysis guide cannula over the nucleus accumbens, were sensitized with 5 days of repeated nicotine (0.6 mg/kg per day, SC) or saline injections (1 ml/kg per day). During nicotine treatment the drug administration was either paired with the microdialysis/activity monitor testing chamber (conditioned) (n=6) or with the animal's home cage (unconditioned) (n=6) and after 60 min the animal was returned to home cage and received a second injection of saline 15 min later. A third group received saline in the testing apparatus followed by nicotine in the home cage (pseudo-conditioned) (n=6). In the guide cannulated animals, 2 mm microdialysis probes were inserted after completing day 5 of treatment and all animals were tested for their response to nicotine (0.6 mg/kg, SC) on day 6. Both locomotor activity and nucleus accumbens dopamine release showed a larger response subsequent to nicotine challenge in the nicotine versus saline pretreated animals in the conditioned group, but not in the unconditioned group. In the pseudo-conditioned group there was an increase in the stereotypy responses to nicotine, however the locomotor and dopamine release responses were not significantly enhanced. The results from the conditioned group were confirmed in animals which were tested for behavioral activation and dopamine release simultaneously (n=5). These findings indicate that nicotine sensitization of locomotor activity and nucleus accumbens dopamine release (using a 5-day pretreatment protocol) is dependent on conditioning the animal to the testing environment during nicotine pretreatment.
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  • 90
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Thyrotrophin-releasing hormone ; RX77368 ; Alzheimer's disease ; AMPA ; Septal-hippocampal ; Working memory ; Delayed non-matching to position (DNMTP) ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The aim of the present study was to determine the effect of a thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (TRH) analogue, RX77368, on performance of a working memory test, using a delayed non-matching to position (DNMTP) procedure, in (RS)-α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA)-induced septal-hippocampal lesioned rats. Following a postsurgery recovery period, pretrained rats were tested once daily on DNMTP, 30 min post-administration of RX77368 (1.0 mg kg−1, IP) or saline. AMPA-induced lesions significantly reduced percent correct responses during the second week of testing. Comparison of percent correct responses between days 1 and 13 of testing showed that sham rats significantly improved DNMTP performance, whereas lesioned rats did not. RX77368 significantly reduced general locomotor activity in sham rats in activity boxes, but did not disrupt non-mnemonic measures, such as locomotion and motivation, in the DNMTP test. RX77368 increased percent correct responses in AMPA-lesioned rats on days 8–10 and 11–13. There was also a significant improvement in percent correct responses achieved between day 1 and 13 in RX77368-treated lesioned and sham rats. These results showed that: (i) septal-hippocampal lesioned rats did not improve over the testing period; and (ii) on test days when a significant impairment was present, RX77368 partially improved DNMTP performance.
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  • 91
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Benzodiazepines ; BZ-1 (ω 1) receptor ; Anxiety ; Elevated plus-maze ; Risk assessment ; Locomotor activity ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The behavioral effects of a wide range of BZ (ω) receptor ligands, including non-selective full (alprazolam, clorazepate, chlordiazepoxide and diazepam) and partial (bretazenil, imidazenil and Ro 19-8022) agonists, and selective BZ-1 (ω 1) (abecarnil, CL 218,872, CL 284,846 and zolpidem) receptor ligands, were compared in the rat elevated plus-maze test. Behaviors recorded comprised the traditional indices of anxiety as well as a number of ethologically derived measures. In addition, the specificity of drug effects was evaluated by measuring spontaneous locomotor activity in activity cages in separate groups of animals. Results showed that all compounds tested not only increased the proportion of time spent and proportion of entries into the open arms of the maze (considered as traditional indices of anxiety) but also affected headdippings and attempts at entry into open arms, which can be considered as indices of risk assessment responses. However, the magnitude of these effects was generally smaller with the BZ-1 (ω 1) selective agents. Moreover, additional differences were apparent on the total number of arm entries measure, which was significantly increased by most full and all partial agonists, but was unaffected by the selective BZ-1 (ω 1) compounds. If it is assumed that total arm entries are contaminated by anxiety, the latter finding indicates a weaker anxiety-reducing potential of selective BZ-1 (ω 1) ligands. Importantly, the increase in total arm entries induced by the non-selective agents was not associated with a similar effect on locomotion as revealed in the actimeter. Finally, anxiolysis produced by the BZ-1 (ω 1) ligands was invariably observed at doses which reduced locomotor activity, suggesting that the anxiolytic-like effects of these compounds are confounded by decreases in locomotor activity.
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  • 92
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Antidepressants ; Desipramine ; Fluvoxamine ; Timing ; Fixed-interval peak procedure ; Interval bisection task ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Acute treatment with antidepressant drugs is known to increase the mean interresponse time (IRT) in the IRT 〉72-s schedule of reinforcement. In order to examine the possibility that this effect may reflect an action of the antidepressants on timing processes, we tested the effects of two antidepressants, desipramine and fluvoxamine, on behaviour maintained under two other timing schedules in rats. In the fixed-interval peak procedure (fixed-interval 30-s), acute treatment with desipramine (8 mg kg−1) reduced response rate, whereas acute treatment with fluvoxamine (8 mg kg−1) increased it. Neither drug significantly altered the time to attainment of peak response rate or the Weber fraction. In the interval bisection task (standard durations 2 s and 8 s), the bisection point was not significantly altered by acute treatment with either drug. Chronic treatment with desipramine (8 mg kg−1 b.d.) had no effect on any of the indices of timing under either schedule. Chronic treatment with fluvoxamine (8 mg kg−1 b.d.) reduced the time to attainment of peak response rate but had no effect on the Weber fraction under the fixed-interval peak procedure, and did not alter the bisection point or Weber fraction under the interval bisection procedure. The failure of desipramine and fluvoxamine to increase the time to peak response rate or the bisection point at doses that significantly altered operant response rate suggests that the effect of these drugs on IRT schedule performance is unlikely to reflect an interaction with timing processes.
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  • 93
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Hippocampus ; Temperature ; Granule cell ; Exploration ; Fascia dentata ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Brain temperature changes accompany exploratory behavior and profoundly affect field potential amplitudes recorded in hippocampus. The waveform alterations in fascia dentata include a reduction in population spike area, which might be explained by fewer granule cells firing in response to a given stimulus or by an alteration in the size or shape of the individual action potentials. This study was designed to assess these alternate possibilities. In experiment 1, changes in the shape and firing rates of single cells recorded in the fascia dentata of awake rats were compared with changes in the population spike before and after a bout of activity. Single-unit amplitudes were significantly reduced following exploration, and there was a small (〈 3%) change in unit spike-width. These changes, however, were insufficient to account, in a linear fashion, for the entire decline in the population spike. In experiment 2, radiant heat was used to manipulate brain temperature in anesthetized rats. As in the first experiment, the magnitude of change in the extracellular units was much smaller than the change in population spike amplitude. The spontaneous firing rates of the cells were also modified by brain temperature changes. In experiment 3, the polysynaptic, contralateral commissural response (which covaries with changes in the ipsilateral population spike at a fixed temperature) was measured as a function of either exploratory behavior or radiant heat. The relationship between the ipsilateral population spike and corresponding polysynaptic commissural response was altered following exploration and passive warming in a manner consistent with a reduction in net granule cell output, reduced transmission efficacy through the polysynaptic circuit, or a combination of these. Taken together these data suggest that at least two factors contribute to temperature-dependent changes in the perforant path-evoked population spikes recorded in the fascia dentata: changes in the size of individual action potentials and alterations in discharge of action potentials in response to a given stimulus.
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  • 94
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Barrel field ; Barrels ; Forepaw ; Mapping ; Cytochrome oxidase ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The physiological representation of the forepaw in rat primary somatosensory cortex (SI) is topographically organized. This representation is associated with the unique arrangement of barrels in layer IV of the forepaw barrel subfield (FBS) in SI and provides an example of a relationship between cortical structure and function. It has been reported that removal of peripheral afferent input to the FBS prior to postnatal day 5 or 6 results in a disorganized FBS, while deafferentation at later times produces little or no alteration of the FBS. Therefore, restricted deafferentations of individual digits in adult rats should result in little, if any, disruption of the FBS, while at the same time eliminating afferent input to the FBS from a localized region of the periphery. This manipulation is likely to create a mismatch between structure and function and offer insight into what barrels actually represent in the adult deafferent. In the present study, we amputated digit three (D3) in eight adult rats, allowed a 1-month survival time, physiologically mapped the representation of D2, D4, and the stump, and compared this physiological map to the underlying barrels in the FBS. Our results showed that FBS barrels formerly associated with the representation of D3 were now associated with the representation of surrounding digits D2 and D4, as well as the remaining stump. By superimposing the morphological and physiological map upon one another, it was clear that the D2 and D4 representations expanded into the former D3 barrel territory and septae between the barrels. The reorganized physiological map was somatotopically organized, even though the general configuration of the morphological map remained unaltered, as visualized with cytochrome oxidase staining. These results suggest that in the deafferent, neurons within FBS barrels previously associated with the representation of punctate regions of skin become associated with neighboring regions of skin. A morphological substrate to account for this cortical reorganization is described.
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  • 95
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Synapsin I, II ; In situ hybridization ; Northern blot ; Gene expression ; Postnatal brain development ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Synapsin Ia, Ib, IIa, and IIb are neuronal phosphoproteins, which are supposed to play a role in the short-term regulation of neurotransmitter release. Besides a high degree of homology among the four synapsin subtypes, there are structural differences in the 3′end of their coding region. Here we present the first extensive study of the expression of their gene transcripts by using in situ hybridization and northern blot analysis. Our results show regionally and temporally distinct expression patterns of synapsin Ia, Ib, IIa, and IIb, which suggests different functional properties of the four synapsin subtypes. There was no specific messenger RNA (mRNA) expression of synapsin IIb in most brain regions apart from the cerebellum, suggesting a minor functional role of this synapsin subtype. Synapsin Ia, Ib, and IIa mRNA were expressed earlier in ontogenetically older brain regions such as the piriform cortex, the thalamus, and the hippocampus and later in ontogenetically younger areas such as the neocortex and the cerebellum. Owing to the distinct expression pattern of the synapsin subtypes, we suppose that the synapsins might be essential for the underlying molecular mechanism of pattern formation and plasticity in distinct brain regions during different states of rat brain development.
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  • 96
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Ornithine decarboxylase ; Polyamines ; Brain development ; Neurochemistry ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Pregnant rats were treated for five consecutive days during gestation with s.c. injections of the ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) inhibitor alpha-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO). Treatment beginning at gestational days 13 or 14 was effective in inhibiting ODC and altering polyamine levels, and resulted in relatively small decreases in body and forebrain weight, but not in significant differences in adult neurochemistry. Neonatal rats were treated with DFMO from postnatal day 0 (PD 0) to PD 24. In addition to some somatic effects (decreased body weight, delayed eyelid opening and delayed fur growth) the postnatal treatment resulted in a permanent decrease in brain weight, which was mainly due to a dramatic decrease in cerebellar size. During treatment, and 3 days after the end of it, the levels of putrescine and spermidine, but not those of spermine, were consistently lower in the cerebellum and forebrain of DFMO-treated rats than in controls. On the other hand, ODC appeared strongly inhibited only during the first phase of the treatment and showed recovery, and also rebound of the activity, during the second part of the treatment. A screening of neurochemical markers related to cholinergic, GABAergic and glutamatergic neurons, as well to astrocytes and oligodendrocytes was performed in several brain regions (cerebellum, olfactory bulbs, cortex, striaturn, hippocampus) of some of these rats once they became adults. Significant alterations for all the parameters tested, with the exception of the marker for the glutamatergic transmission, were measured in the undersized cerebellum of the neonatally DFMO-treated rats. A shorter neonatal treatment with DFMO (from PD 1 to 6) resulted, in the adult, in decreased cerebellar size and in neurochemical alterations, both very similar to those occurring after the prolonged treatment. In the other brain regions a few minor differences were noticed. The present results show that: (1) the brain polyamine system is differently regulated in foetuses with respect to newborns; (2) the effects of chronic ODC blockade are different on prenatally or postnatally proliferating neurons, due either to a lower sensitivity of gestation ally proliferating neurons or to a subsequent recovery; and (3) chronic postnatal ODC inhibition has a strong effect on proliferating neurons, but little effect on further maturation of postmitotic neurons.
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  • 97
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Entorhinal cortex ; Claustrum ; Presubiculum ; Epilepsy ; Neurodegeneration ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Neurons in layer III of the medial entorhinal area (MEA) in the rat are extremely vulnerable to local injections of amino-oxyacetic acid and to exprimentally induced limbic seizures. A comparable specific pathology has been noted in surgical specimens from patients with temporal lobe epilepsy. Efforts to understand this preferential neuronal vulnerability led us to study the neural input to this layer in the rat. Iontophoretic injection of the retrograde tracer fast blue, aimed at layer III of the MEA, resulted in retrogradely labeled neurons in the presubiculum in all the injected hemispheres. The nucleus reuniens thalami, the anteromedial thalamic nucleus, the ventral portion of the claustrum (endopiriform nucleus), the dorsomedial parts of the anteroventral thalamic nucleus, and the septum-diagonal band complex were labeled less frequently. In only one experiment, retrogradely labeled neurons were observed in the ventrolateral hypothalamus and in the brainstem nucleus raphe dorsalis. Since projections from claustrum to the entorhinal cortex has not been studied in the rat with modern sensitive anterograde tracing techniques, iontophoretic injections of the anterograde tracer Phaseolus vulgaris-leucoagglutinin were placed into the ventral portion of the claustrum. Anterogradely labeled fibers in the entorhinal area proved not to be confined to the MEA, since a prominent projection distributed to the lateral entorhinal area as well. In both areas, the densest terminal labeling was present in layers IV–VI, whereas layer III appeared to be only sparsely labeled. The present data indicate that of all potential afferents only those from the presubiculum distribute preferentially to layer III of the MEA. This, in turn, suggests a potentially important role of the presubiculum in the seizure-related degeneration of neurons in layer III of the MEA.
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  • 98
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 109 (1996), S. 197-208 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Superior colliculus ; Pain ; Tectoreticular ; Predorsal bundle ; Approach ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A wealth of evidence implicates the crossed descending projection from the superior colliculus (SC) in orientation and approach behaviours directed towards novel, non-noxious stimuli. In our preceding paper, we identified a population of nociceptive neurones in the rat SC that have axons that project to the contralateral brainstem via this output pathway. The purpose of the present study was, therefore, to evaluate the prediction that the crossed descending projection of the SC is also involved in the control of orientation and approach movements of the head and mouth made during the localisation of persistent noxious stimuli. An independent-groups design was used to test the effects of interrupting the contralateral descending projection from the SC on the behavioural reactions elicited by noxious mechanical stimuli presented to the tail and hindpaws. In different groups of animals, a microwire knife was used to cut the contralateral descending fibres at two different locations: (1) a sagittal cut at the level of the dorsal tegmental decussation; (2) a bilateral coronal cut of the predorsal bundle at the level of the medial pontine reticular formation. Retrograde anatomical tracing techniques were then used to evaluate the effectiveness of the cuts and to assess possible involvement of non-collicular fibre systems in both lesioned and control animals. Additional behavioural procedures were performed to test for general neurological status and responsiveness of animals to non-noxious stimuli. Anatomical tracing data indicated that the largest population of neurones with fibres severed by both cuts were the cells-of-origin of the contralateral descending projection in the intermediate white layer of the SC. Behavioural results showed that significantly more animals in both lesion groups failed to locate and bite a mechanical clip placed on the tail. Instead of switching to motor behaviours to localise and remove noxious stimuli, they persisted with defensive reactions, which included freezing, vocalisation or forward and backward escape. In contrast, when the clip was placed on the hindpaws, it was successfully localised by most lesioned and control animals; however, lesioned animals had reliably longer latencies and spent less time in close contact with the clip. Consistent with the established role of the contralateral descending projection in non-noxious orientation, lesioned animals also showed orienting deficits to a range of non-noxious sensory stimuli. These data suggest that, under certain behavioural circumstances, nociceptive information from the SC is integral to the elaboration of orienting and approach movements of the head and mouth elicited by persistent noxious stimuli.
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  • 99
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 109 (1996), S. 393-398 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Fictive locomotion ; Mesencephalic locomotor region ; l-Dopa ; 5-Hydroxy-dl-tryptophan ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In adult immobilised, decerebrate rats, administration of l-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine, stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor centre, or a combination of the two elicited fictive locomotor patterns in hindlimb muscle nerves. The patterns correspond closely to those observed in decerebrate animals that were free to move.
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  • 100
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Hippocampal theta rhythm ; Septum ; AP5 ; NMDA ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Theta (θ) rhythm may be mediated, at least in part, by a glutamate neurotransmitter. Thus, in the present study, it was hypothesized that the septum glutamatergic NMDA receptor subtype may be involved in the modulation of physostigmine-induced θ rhythm. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed, in the urethane-anesthetized rat, the effects of septum application of NMDA and d-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP5), selective and competitive NMDA agonist and antagonist, respectively, on the spectral characteristics of hippocampal θ rhythm elicited by intravenous injection of a anticholinesterase agent, physostigmine. A low dose (16 nmol) of AP5 did not significantly affect EEG recordings, whereas a high dose (50.75 nmol) resulted in significant decreases in phase (-61.8%) at θ frequency, peak θ power (-64.2%), and absolute power of the low-frequency θ band (-67%). These electroencephalographic alterations, which appeared at 50.75 nmol AP5, were amplified following application of massive doses of the drug (121.8 nmol, n=1, and 162 nmol, n=1). Amplification, however, was slight and the θ waves remained clearly detectable. On the other hand, the infusion of NMDA resulted in a significant increase in frequency (+25%) of this rhythm, but this effect was completely antagonized by prior local administration of 16 nmol AP5. Our data suggest that the septal NMDA receptors exert subtle modulatory influences on the septohippocampal cells involved in physostigmine-induced θ wave production, which has not been reported elsewhere: tonic with respect to both low-frequency θ band power and θ phase, and phasic with respect to θ frequency. Our data also indicate that the septum may be a sensitive action site for exogenously administered glutamatergic drugs.
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