3 resultados para Slow wave activity

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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The hypothesis tested was that rapid rejection of Trichinella spiralis infective larvae from immunized rats following a challenge infection is associated with a local anaphylactic reaction, and this response should be reflected in altered small intestinal motility. The objective was to determine if altered gut smooth muscle function accompanies worm rejection based on the assumption that anaphylaxis in vivo could be detected by changes in intestinal smooth muscle contractile activity (ie. an equivalent of the Schultz-Dale reaction or in vitro anaphylaxis). The aims were to (1) characterize motility changes by monitoring intestinal myoelectric activity in conscious rats during the enteric phase of T. spiralis infection in immunized hosts, (2) detect the onset and magnitude of myoelectric changes caused by challenge infection in immunized rats, (3) determine the parasite stimulus causing changes, and (4) determine the specificity of host response to stimulation. Electrical slow wave frequency, spiking activity, normal interdigestive migrating myoelectric complexes and abnormal migrating action potential complexes were measured. Changes in myoelectric parameters induced by larvae inoculated into the duodenum of immune hosts differed from those associated with primary infection with respect to time of onset, magnitude and duration. Myoelectric changes elicited by live larvae could not be reproduced by inoculation of hosts with dead larvae, larval excretory-secretory products, or by challenge with a heterologous parasite, Eimeria nieschulzi. These results indicate that (1) local anaphylaxis is a component of the initial response to T. spiralis in immune hosts, since the rapid onset of altered smooth muscle function parallels in time the expression of rapid rejection of infective larvae, and (2) an active mucosal penetration attempt by the worm is necessary to elicit this host response. These findings provide evidence that worm rejection is a consequence of, or sequel to, an immediate hypersensitivity reaction elicited when parasites attempt to invade the gut mucosa of immunized hosts. ^

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Single-locus mutations in mice can express epileptic phenotypes and provide critical insights into the naturally occurring defects that alter excitability and mediate synchronization in the central nervous system (CNS). One such recessive mutation (on chromosome (Chr) 15), stargazer(stg/stg) expresses frequent bilateral 6-7 cycles per second (c/sec) spike-wave seizures associated with behavioral arrest, and provides a valuable opportunity to examine the inherited lesion associated with spike-wave synchronization.^ The existence of distinct and heterogeneous defects mediating spike-wave discharge (SWD) generation has been demonstrated by the presence of multiple genetic loci expressing generalized spike-wave activity and the differential effects of pharmacological agents on SWDs in different spike-wave epilepsy models. Attempts at understanding the different basic mechanisms underlying spike-wave synchronization have focused on $\gamma$-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor-, low threshold T-type Ca$\sp{2+}$ channel-, and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDA-R)-mediated transmission. It is believed that defects in these modes of transmission can mediate the conversion of normal oscillations in a trisynaptic circuit, which includes the neocortex, reticular nucleus and thalamus, into spike-wave activity. However, the underlying lesions involved in spike-wave synchronization have not been clearly identified.^ The purpose of this research project was to locate and characterize a distinct neuronal hyperexcitability defect favoring spike-wave synchronization in the stargazer brain. One experimental approach for anatomically locating areas of synchronization and hyperexcitability involved an attempt to map patterns of hypersynchronous activity with antibodies to activity-induced proteins.^ A second approach to characterizing the neuronal defect involved examining the neuronal responses in the mutant following application of pharmacological agents with well known sites of action.^ In order to test the hypothesis that an NMDA receptor mediated hyperexcitability defect exists in stargazer neocortex, extracellular field recordings were used to examine the effects of CPP and MK-801 on coronal neocortical brain slices of stargazer and wild type perfused with 0 Mg$\sp{2+}$ artificial cerebral spinal fluid (aCSF).^ To study how NMDA receptor antagonists might promote increased excitability in stargazer neocortex, two basic hypotheses were tested: (1) NMDA receptor antagonists directly activate deep layer principal pyramidal cells in the neocortex of stargazer, presumably by opening NMDA receptor channels altered by the stg mutation; and (2) NMDA receptor antagonists disinhibit the neocortical network by blocking recurrent excitatory synaptic inputs onto inhibitory interneurons in the deep layers of stargazer neocortex.^ In order to test whether CPP might disinhibit the 0 Mg$\sp{2+}$ bursting network in the mutant by acting on inhibitory interneurons, the inhibitory inputs were pharmacologically removed by application of GABA receptor antagonists to the cortical network, and the effects of CPP under 0 Mg$\sp{2+}$aCSF perfusion in layer V of stg/stg were then compared with those found in +/+ neocortex using in vitro extracellular field recordings. (Abstract shortened by UMI.) ^

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The findings presented in this dissertation detail the complex interaction between BBK32 and fibronectin and describe novel consequences of the interaction. BBK32 is a fibronectin-binding protein on Borrelia burgdorferi, the causative agent of Lyme disease. We found that BBK32 contains multiple fibronectin-binding motifs, recognizing the fibronectin N-terminal domain (NTD) and the gelatin binding domain (GBD) in an anti-parallel order, where corresponding sites in BBK32 and fibronectin are aligned so that there is a one-to-one interaction between the proteins. While characterizing this interaction, we discovered that binding of BBK32 to the GBD inhibits the migration stimulating factor's (MSF) motogenic activity. In the presence of BBK32, endothelial cells do not migrate in response to increasing concentrations of MSF or the GBD. MSF is found under wound healing conditions, and inhibition of its activity may allow the tick-transmitted spirochetes to delay wound healing and to establish an infection. ^ Biophysical structural studies, designed to identify a mechanism of interaction, revealed that BBK32 binding to the NTD leads to the unfolding of plasma fibronectin, which exposes α5β1 integrin recognition motifs. Binding assays demonstrate that the BBK32-NTD interaction enhances the plasma fibronectin-α5β1 integrin interaction, which may allow B. burgdorferi to invade host cells, and thereby evade the host immune system. ^ We also determined that BBK32 binds fibronectin F3 modules, which leads to plasma fibronectin aggregation and induction of superfibronectin. The resulting superfibronectin is conformationally distinct from plasma and cellular fibronectin, and can inhibit endothelial cell proliferation. BBK32's active superfibronectin-forming motif has been located to a region between residues 160 and 175, which contains two sequence motifs that are also found in anastellin, the only other known superfibronectin-inducing protein. ^ A potential consequence of BBK32-induced superfibronectin formation was identified. BBK32-induced superfibronectin formation results in the exposure of α4β1 integrin recognition sequences in fibronectin. The α4β1 integrin is required for leukocyte transendothelial cell migration. BBK32-induced superfibronectin inhibits this activity. The inhibition of leukocyte recruitment to the infection site may slow the activity of the host immune system, and permit the spirochetes to establish an infection. ^