The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
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Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and its receptor, tyrosine kinase receptor B (TrkB), play a critical role in activity-dependent synaptic plasticity and have been implicated as mediators of hippocampal-dependent learning and memory. The present study is the first to demonstrate a role for BDNF and TrkB in amygdala-dependent learning. Here, the use of Pavlovian fear conditioning as a learning model allows us to examine the concise role of BDNF in the amygdala after a single learning session and within a well understood neural circuit. ⋯ In vivo, TrkB. T1 lentivirus blocked fear acquisition without disrupting baseline startle or expression of fear. These data suggest that BDNF signaling through TrkB receptors in the amygdala is required for the acquisition of conditioned fear.
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Peripheral nerve injury is known to upregulate the rapidly repriming Na(v)1.3 sodium channel within first-order spinal sensory neurons. In this study, we hypothesized that (1) after peripheral nerve injury, second-order dorsal horn neurons abnormally express Na(v)1.3, which (2) contributes to the responsiveness of these dorsal horn neurons and to pain-related behaviors. To test these hypotheses, adult rats underwent chronic constriction injury (CCI) of the sciatic nerve. ⋯ In situ hybridization, quantitative reverse transcription-PCR, and immunocytochemical analysis revealed upregulation of Na(v)1.3 in dorsal horn nociceptive neurons but not in astrocytes or microglia, and unit recordings demonstrated hyperresponsiveness of dorsal horn sensory neurons. Intrathecal antisense oligodeoxynucleotides targeting Na(v)1.3 decreased the expression of Na(v)1.3 mRNA and protein, reduced the hyperresponsiveness of dorsal horn neurons, and attenuated pain-related behaviors after CCI, all of which returned after cessation of antisense delivery. These results demonstrate for the first time that sodium channel expression is altered within higher-order spinal sensory neurons after peripheral nerve injury and suggest a link between misexpression of the Na(v)1.3 sodium channel and central mechanisms that contribute to neuropathic pain after peripheral nerve injury.
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Cutaneous spinal sensory transmission appears to lack inhibitory control in the newborn spinal cord, but the properties of GABAergic and glycinergic synapses in the neonatal dorsal horn have not been characterized. Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings from rat superficial dorsal horn neurons in spinal cord slices at postnatal day 0 (P0) to P2, P6-P7, and P13-P14 revealed an age-dependent increase in the frequency of spontaneous IPSCs, which were abolished by the GABA(A) receptor (GABA(A)R) antagonist bicuculline between P0 and P7 but not at P14. GABA(A)R-mediated miniature IPSCs (mIPSCs), but not glycinergic mIPSCs, were present at birth, and GABA mIPSCs remained more frequent than glycine mIPSCs at all ages. ⋯ The GABA(B)R agonist baclofen elicited an outward current in all neurons with peak amplitudes observed by P6-P7 and abolished sciatic nerve-evoked monosynaptic glutamatergic EPSCs in all groups. The results show considerable postnatal development of inhibitory processing in the dorsal horn with GABAergic mechanisms initially dominant over glycinergic events. GABA(A)R-mediated depolarizations during the first postnatal week are likely to be important for the maturation of spinal networks but do not provide a major excitatory drive to the newborn dorsal horn.
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Release of endogenous dynorphin opioids within the spinal cord after partial sciatic nerve ligation (pSNL) is known to contribute to the neuropathic pain processes. Using a phosphoselective antibody [kappa opioid receptor (KOR-P)] able to detect the serine 369 phosphorylated form of the KOR, we determined possible sites of dynorphin action within the spinal cord after pSNL. KOR-P immunoreactivity (IR) was markedly increased in the L4-L5 spinal dorsal horn of wild-type C57BL/6 mice (7-21 d) after lesion, but not in mice pretreated with the KOR antagonist nor-binaltorphimine (norBNI). ⋯ In contrast, neither prodynorphin nor GRK3 knock-out mice showed U50,488 tolerance after pSNL. These findings suggest that pSNL induced a sustained release of endogenous prodynorphin-derived opioid peptides that activated an anti-nociceptive KOR system in mouse spinal cord. Thus, endogenous dynorphin had both pronociceptive and antinociceptive actions after nerve injury and induced GRK3-mediated opioid tolerance.
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It is well established that the climbing fiber (CF) input to a cerebellar Purkinje cell (PC) can exert a controlling influence on the background simple spike (SS) activity of the cell, in that repetitive stimulation of CFs causes a decrease in SS activity, and removal or inactivation of CFs is followed by a rise in activity. In the present study, the effects of inactivation of CFs in the short term and longer term (hours) were investigated in anesthetized rats to determine how the CFs control the PC SS activity. Inactivation of the CF input to a PC was accomplished by either reversibly inactivating with lignocaine or by microlesioning the inferior olive. ⋯ However, with sustained CF inactivation (30 min to 5 hr), SS activity continues to rise progressively and develops an oscillating firing pattern, consisting of alternating bursts of high-frequency discharge at up to 100-150 Hz followed by 10-20 sec periods of electrical quiescence. No accompanying changes in the threshold for evoking SSs via the parallel fibers were seen to accompany the increases in tonic SS activity. We conclude that the increase in SS activity that follows CF inactivation could be caused by the removal of an inhibitory action that CFs exert on the intrinsic pacemaker present in PCs under normal conditions.