Journal of neurophysiology
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1. The effects of culturing hypothalamic neurons in glutamate receptor antagonists were studied with fura-2 Ca2+ digital imaging of groups of synaptically coupled neurons. Removal of D-2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate (AP5) and 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) from cultures chronically blocked for periods of 14-188 days caused a dramatic increase in neuronal Ca2+ to abnormally high levels 5- to- 10 fold greater than the normal intracellular levels of 50-100 nM. ⋯ Relative to control cultures of the same period in vitro, chronically blocked neurons showed an enhanced Ca2+ influx when stimulated with the glutamate receptor agonists kainate (+70%), NMDA (+62%), or glutamate (+34%) in the presence of tetrodoxin. When the data from control and chronically blocked cultures stimulated with glutamate receptor agonists were pooled, without exception all the smallest responses were found in the control neurons. Compared with controls, chronically blocked neurons showed an exaggerated response to glutamate in the presence of nimodipine, indicating that Ca2+ hyperexcitability was not due to changes in voltage activated L-type Ca2+ channels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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1. To better understand the limits and extents of plasticity in sensory systems of adult mammals, we unilaterally sectioned the dorsal funiculus at thoracic levels in nine adult rats to deactivate ascending afferents from the hindpaw and lower body. After postsurgical recovery periods of 3 h to 3 mo, the region of primary somatosensory cortex (S1) representing the limbs and trunk was extensively mapped with microelectrodes. 2. ⋯ In those cases without activation of hindlimb cortex, B-HRP was detected in the spinal cord only caudal to the lesion, and it was not transported to the nucleus gracilis. Limited transport past the lesion to nucleus gracilis was detected in cases with incomplete lesions. 4. The results indicate that forelimb inputs do not substitute for missing hindlimb inputs in primary somatosensory cortex in rats and that the potential for somatotopic reorganization is more limited than previously thought.
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1. The effects of sympathetic stimulation and close arterial injection of norepinephrine were tested on cutaneous myelinated-fiber (A delta) mechanical nociceptors [high-threshold mechanoreceptors-(MyHTMs)] from normal and from partially transsected nerves. 2. Neither sympathetic stimulation nor close arterial injection of norepinephrine (200 ng) excited MyHTMs (18) recorded from the uninjured great auricular nerve of adult rabbits. 3. ⋯ Four MyHTMs recorded from the injured nerves were excited by sympathetic stimulation and/or norepinephrine injection but only one gave more than two impulses within 60 s to either form of stimulation. 5. The meagerness of the sympathetic and adrenergic excitation of MyHTMs after nerve injury contrasts with that observed under similar conditions for C-fiber polymodal nociceptors. Therefore, induction of adrenergic responsiveness in nociceptors after partial denervation in cutaneous MyHTMs appears to be less important for mechanisms related to pathogenic pain than alterations in certain C-fiber nociceptors.