Journal of neurophysiology
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We studied the effects of activation of the metabotropic glutamate receptors on intrinsic currents of magnocellular n urons of the supraoptic nucleus (SON) with whole cell patch-clamp and conventional intracellular recordings in coronal slices (400 micron) of the rat hypothalamus. Trans-(+/-)-1-amino-1,3-cyclopentane dicarboxylic acid (trans-ACPD, 10-100 microM), a broad-spectrum metabotropic glutamate receptor agonist, evoked an inward current (18.7 +/- 3.45 pA) or a slow depolarization (7.35 +/- 4.73 mV) and a 10-30% decrease in whole cell conductance in approximately 50% of the magnocellular neurons recorded at resting membrane potential. The decrease in conductance and the inward current were caused largely by the attenuation of a resting potassium conductance because they were reduced by the replacement of intracellular potassium with an equimolar concentration of cesium or by the addition of potassium channel blockers to the extracellular medium. ⋯ A group II receptor agonist, 2S,1'S,2'S-2carboxycyclopropylglycine and a group III receptor agonist, (+)-2-amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid, had no effect on the resting or voltage-gated K+ currents, indicating that the reduction of K+ currents was mediated by group I receptors. About 80% of the SON cells that were labeled immunohistochemically for vasopressin responded to metabotropic glutamate receptor activation, whereas only 33% of labeled oxytocin cells responded, suggesting that metabotropic receptors are expressed preferentially in vasopressinergic neurons. These data indicate that activation of the group I metabotropic glutamate receptors leads to an increase in the postsynaptic excitability of magnocellular neurons by blocking resting K+ currents as well as by reducing voltage-gated and Ca2+-activated K+ currents.
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The classic model of saccade generation assumes that the burst generator is driven by a motor-error signal, the difference between the actual eye position and the final "desired" eye position in the orbit. Here we evaluate objectively, using system identification techniques, the dynamic relationship between motor-error signals and primate inhibitory burst neuron (IBN) discharges (upstream analysis). The IBNs presented here are the same neurons whose downstream relationships were characterized during head-fixed saccades and head-free gaze shifts in our companion papers. ⋯ In the head-free monkey the ability of upstream models to predict IBN firing during head-free gaze shifts when gaze, eye, or head motor-error signals were model inputs was poor and similar to the upstream analysis of the head-fixed condition. We conclude that during saccades (head-fixed) or gaze shifts (head-free) the activity of both SLIBNs and LLIBNs is more closely linked to downstream events (i.e., the dynamics of ongoing movements) than to the coincident upstream motor-error signal. Furthermore, SLIBNs and LLIBNs do not differ in their characteristics; the latter are not, as is usually hypothesized, closer to a motor-error signal than the former.
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Several laboratories recently identified a 17 amino-acid peptide, termed "nociceptin" or "orphanin FQ (OFQ)", as the endogenous ligand for the LC132 (or "opioid receptor-like1") receptor. Taken together with the fact that the cellular effects of OFQ are to a large extent opioid-like, the close relationship between the LC132 receptor and known opioid receptors raised expectations that the behavioral effects of this peptide would resemble those of opioids. However studies of the role of OFQ in nociception have not provided a unified view. ⋯ Those of systemically administered morphine, which can produce its antinociceptive effects by acting at a number of CNS sites, were not blocked by RVM OFQ. Inasmuch as activation of -cells can account for the antinociceptive action of opioids within the RVM, these results demonstrate that, at least within the medulla, OFQ can exert a functional "antiopioid" effect by suppressing firing of this cell class. However to the extent that antinociceptive and pronociceptive outflows from various brain regions involved in both transmission and modulation of nociception are active under different conditions, focal application of OFQ in different regions could potentially produce either hypalgesia or hyperalgesia.
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In the rabbit uvula-nodulus, vestibular and optokinetic information is mapped onto parasagittal zones by climbing fibers. These zones are related functionally to different pairs of vertical semicircular canals, otolithic inputs and horizontal optokinetic inputs. Vestibular stimulation restricted to one of these zones modulates climbing fiber responses (CFRs). ⋯ The depth of modulation of SSs was greatest when recorded from Purkinje cells located at the center of semicircular canal-related strip. We observed that 1) all folia of the uvula-nodulus receive vestibular climbing fiber inputs; 2) these climbing fiber inputs convey information from the vertical semicircular canals and otoliths but not the horizontal semicircular canals; 3) CFRs evoked in a particular sagittal zone do not influence SSs in adjacent zones; 4) modulation of a CFRs in a particular Purkinje cell can occur without modulation of SSs in the same Purkinje cell, although modulation of SSs was not observed in the absence of CFR modulation; and 5) modulation of SSs sometimes preceded that of CFRs in the same cell, implying that interneuronal pathways may contribute to SS modulation. Climbing fiber-driven Golgi cells, the inhibitory axon terminals of which end on granule cell dendrites in the classic glomerular synapse, may provide this interneuronal mechanism.
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Long-lasting facilitations of spinal nociceptive reflexes resulting from temporal summation of nociceptive inputs have been described on many occasions in spinal, nonanesthetized rats. Because noxious inputs also trigger powerful descending inhibitory controls, we investigated this phenomenon in intact, halothane-anesthetized rats and compared our results with those obtained in other preparations. The effects of temporal summation of nociceptive inputs were found to be very much dependent on the type of preparation. ⋯ A similar long-lasting facilitation was seen in nonanesthetized, spinal rats. It is concluded that, in intact rats, an inhibitory mechanism counteracts the long-lasting increase of excitability of the flexor reflex seen in spinal animals after high-intensity, repetitive stimulation of C-fibers. It is suggested that supraspinally mediated inhibitions also participate in long term changes in spinal cord excitability after noxious stimulation.