2 resultados para System monitoring

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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Slope of terrain is an important orienting gradient affecting the goal-directed locomotion of animals. Its significance was assessed in experiment 1 by training rats to find in darkness a feeder on the top of a low cone (80-cm base, 0- to 4-cm high). A computerized infrared tracking system monitoring the rat's position in darkness showed that the path length on the cone surface was inversely proportional to cone height. A device allowing continuous generation of slope-guided locomotion was used in experiment 2. This device consists of a 1-m arena, the floor of which can be supported at a point corresponding to the position of one of three equidistant feeders located 17 cm from its center. The arena is inclined by the locomotion of the rat to a plane passing through the elevated (2- or 4-cm) feeder, the rat's center of gravity, and a point at the edge of the arena resting on the floor. The multitude of such planes generated by the rat's locomotion forms the surface of a virtual cone, the top of which is formed by the feeder. Additional path (difference between distance traveled and shortest distance of the animal from the goal at the onset of inclination) is inversely related to the incline of the arena and is a sensitive measure of performance in this type of vestibular navigation.

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Doxycycline (Dox)-sensitive co-regulation of two transcriptionally coupled transgenes was investigated in the mouse. For this, we generated four independent mouse lines carrying coding regions for green fluorescent protein (GFP) and β-galactosidase in a bicistronic, bidirectional module. In all four lines the expression module was silent but was activated when transcription factor tTA was provided by the α-CaMKII-tTA transgene. In vivo analysis of GFP fluorescence, β-galactosidase and immunochemical stainings revealed differences in GFP and β-galactosidase levels between the lines, but comparable patterns of expression. Strong signals were found in neurons of the olfactory system, neocortical, limbic lobe and basal ganglia structures. Weaker expression was limited to thalamic, pontine and medullary structures, the spinal cord, the eye and to some Purkinje cells in the cerebellum. Strong GFP signals were always accompanied by intense β-galactosidase activity, both of which could be co-regulated by Dox. We conclude that the tTA-sensitive bidirectional expression module is well suited to express genes of interest in a regulated manner and that GFP can be used to track transcriptional activity of the module in the living mouse.