2 resultados para disruption information
em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI
Resumo:
The basal forebrain complex, which includes the nucleus basalis magnocellularis (NBM), provides widespread cholinergic and γ-aminobutyric acid-containing projections throughout the brain, including the insular and pyriform cortices. A number of studies have implicated the cholinergic neurons in the mediation of learning and memory processes. However, the role of basal forebrain activity in information retrieval mechanisms is less known. The aim of the present study is to evaluate the effects of reversible inactivation of the NBM by tetrodotoxin (TTX, a voltage-sensitive sodium channel blocker) during the acquisition and retrieval of conditioned taste aversion (CTA) and to measure acetylcholine (ACh) release during TTX inactivation in the insular cortex, by means of the microdialysis technique in free-moving rats. Bilateral infusion of TTX in the NBM was performed 30 min before the presentation of gustative stimuli, in either the CTA acquisition trial or retrieval trial. At the same time, levels of extracellular ACh release were measured in the insular cortex. The behavioral results showed significant impairment in CTA acquisition when the TTX was infused in the NBM, whereas retrieval was not affected when the treatment was given during the test trial. Biochemical results showed that TTX infusion into the NBM produced a marked decrease in cortical ACh release as compared with the controls during consumption of saccharin in the acquisition trial. Depleted ACh levels were found during the test trial in all groups except in the group that received TTX during acquisition. These results suggest a cholinergic-dependent process during acquisition, but not during memory retrieval, and that NBM-mediated cholinergic cortical release may play an important role in early stages of learning, but not during recall of aversive memories.
Resumo:
Albeit anthracyclines are widely used in the treatment of solid tumors and leukemias, their mechanism of action has not been elucidated. The present study gives relevant information about the role of nonlamellar membrane structures in signaling pathways, which could explain how anthracyclines can exert their cytocidal action without entering the cell [Tritton, T. R. & Yee, G. (1982) Science 217, 248-250]. The anthracycline daunomycin reduced the formation of the nonlamellar hexagonal (HII) phase (i.e., the hexagonal phase propensity), stabilizing the bilayer structure of the plasma membrane by a direct interaction with membrane phospholipids. As a consequence, various cellular events involved in signal transduction, such as membrane fusion and membrane association of peripheral proteins [e.g., guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins (G proteins and protein kinase C-alpha beta)], where nonlamellar structures (negative intrinsic monolayer curvature strain) are required, were altered by the presence of daunomycin. Functionally, daunomycin also impaired the expression of the high-affinity state of a G protein-coupled receptor (ternary complex for the alpha 2-adrenergic receptor) due to G-protein dissociation from the plasma membrane. In vivo, daunomycin also decreased the levels of membrane-associated G proteins and protein kinase C-alpha beta in the heart. The occurrence of such nonlamellar structures favors the association of these peripheral proteins with the plasma membrane and prevents daunomycin-induced dissociation. These results reveal an important role of the lipid component of the cell membrane in signal transduction and its alteration by anthracyclines.