47 resultados para TRANSIENT FOREBRAIN ISCHEMIA
Resumo:
Voltage- and ligand-activated channels in embryonic neurons containing luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) were studied by patch-pipette, whole-cell current and voltage clamp techniques. LHRH neurons were maintained in explant cultures derived from olfactory pit regions of embryonic mice. Cells were marked intracellularly with Lucifer yellow following recording. Sixty-two cells were unequivocally identified as LHRH neurons by Lucifer yellow and LHRH immunocytochemistry. The cultured LHRH neurons had resting potentials around -50 mV, exhibited spontaneous discharges generated by intrinsic and/or synaptic activities and contained a time-dependent inward rectifier (Iir). Voltage clamp analysis of ionic currents in the LHRH neuron soma revealed a tetrodotoxin-sensitive Na+ current (INa) and two major types of K+ currents, a transient current (IA), a delayed rectifier current (IK) and low- and high-voltage-activated Ca2+ currents. Spontaneous depolarizing synaptic potentials and depolarizations induced by direct application of gamma-aminobutyrate were both inhibited by picrotoxin or bicuculline, demonstrating the presence of functional gamma-aminobutyrate type A synapses on these neurons. Responses to glutamate were found in LHRH neurons in older cultures. Thus, embryonic LHRH neurons not yet positioned in their postnatal environment in the forebrain contained a highly differentiated repertoire of voltage- and ligand-gated channels.
Resumo:
Earlier work showed that playbacks of conspecific song induce expression of the immediate early gene ZENK in the caudo-medial neostriatum (NCM) of awake male zebra finches and that this response disappears with repeated presentations of the same stimulus. In the present study, we investigated whether repetitions of a song stimulus also elicited a decrement in the electrophysiological responses in the NCM neurons of these birds. Multiunit auditory responses in NCM were initially vigorous, but their amplitude decreased (habituated) rapidly to repeated stimulation, declining to about 40% of the initial response during the first 50 iterations. A similar time course of change was seen at the single unit level. This habituation occurred specifically for each song presented but did not occur when pure tones were used as a stimulus. Habituation to conspecific, but not heterospecific, song was retained for 20 h or longer. Injections of inhibitors of protein or RNA synthesis at the recording site did not affect the initial habituation to a novel stimulus, but these drugs blocked the long-term habituation when injected at 0.5-3 h and at 5.5-7 h after the first exposure to the stimulus. Thus, at least two waves of gene induction appear to be necessary for long-lasting habituation to a particular song.