63 resultados para Ovocitos de Xenopus


Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Australian lungfish Neoceratodus forsteri may be the closest living relative to the first tetrapods and yet little is known about their retinal ganglion cells. This study reveals that lungfish possess a heterogeneous population of ganglion cells distributed in a horizontal streak across the retinal meridian, which is formed early in development and maintained through to adult stages. The number and complement of both ganglion cells and a population of putative amacrine cells within the ganglion cell layer are examined using retrograde labelling from the optic nerve and transmission electron-microscopic analysis of axons within the optic nerve. At least four types of retinal ganglion cells are present and lie predominantly within a thin ganglion cell layer, although two subpopulations are identified, one within the inner plexiform and the other within the inner nuclear layer. A subpopulation of retinal ganglion cells comprising up to 7% or the total population are significantly larger (> 400 mu m(2)) and are characterized as giant or alpha-like cells. Up to 44% of cells within the retinal ganglion cell layer represent a population of presumed amacrine cells. The optic nerve is heavily fasciculated and the proportion of myelinated axons increases with body length from 17% in subadults to 74% in adults. Spatial resolving power, based on ganglion cell spacing, is low (1.6-1.9 cycles deg(-1), n = 2) and does not significantly increase with growth. This represents the first detailed study of retinal ganglion cells in sarcopterygian fish, and reveals that, despite variation amongst animal groups, trends in ganglion cell density distribution and characteristics of cell types were defined early in vertebrate evolution.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The tetroclotoxin-resistant voltage-gated sodium channel (VGSC) Na(v)1.8 is expressed predominantly by damage-sensing primary afferent nerves and is important for the development and maintenance of persistent pain states. Here we demonstrate that mu O-conotoxin MrVIB from Conus marmoreus displays substantial selectivity for Na(v)1.8 and inhibits pain behavior in models of persistent pain. In rat sensory neurons, submicromolar concentrations of MrVIB blocked tetroclotoxin-resistant current characteristic of Na(v)1.8 but not Na(v)1.9 or tetroclotoxin-sensitive VGSC currents. MrVIB blocked human Nav1.8 expressed in Xenopus oocytes with selectivity at least 10-fold greater than other VGSCs. In neuropathic and chronic inflammatory pain models, allodynia and hyperalgesia were both reduced by intrathecal infusion of MrVIB (0.03-3 nmol), whereas motor side effects occurred only at 30-fold higher doses. In contrast, the nonselective VGSC blocker lignocaine displayed no selectivity for allodynia and hyperalgesia versus motor side effects. The actions of MrVIB reveal that VGSC antagonists displaying selectivity toward Na(v)1.8 can alleviate chronic pain behavior with a greater therapeutic index than nonselective antagonists.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Excitotoxicity may have role in neuronal death in many disorders including Alzheimer disease. Sensitivity of a cell to excitotoxicity may depend on its subtype of NMDA receptors. A drug that selectively reduced such overstimulation could limit susceptibility to damage. We examined the pharmacology of NMDA receptor subtypes in response to the agonists glutamate and glycine, the modulator spermine, and the antagonists conantokin-G and its Ala(7) analogue in Xenopus oo¨ cytes. Cells were injected with capped RNA coding for NMDA NR1 and NR2 subunits. Membrane currents induced by rapid application of agonists were recorded under two-electrode voltageclamp. Conantokins were bath-applied to give cumulative concentration responses. Spermine gave slightly different shifts in glutamate affinity when different NR1 splice variants were combined with NR2A subunits. In the presence of spermine, both an increase and a decrease in affinity for glutamate were seen with differing subunit combinations that could not be explained by the absence or presence of the N-terminal 23-amino-acid insert.