951 resultados para Vagal Tone
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The thesis investigates the nature of the Purist discourse in photography, with the aim of unveiling its lack of a solid theoretical foundation and its unconscious content. Purism outlines the fact that photography is a unique craft, that may not borrow ideas from painting or any other art forms. What makes the Purist discourse suspect and attracts attention to its possible circular style? The fact that the views expressed by its supporters include a frenzied edge, an unnecessary ardor, a combative tone that discloses that there’s something hidden, something that doesn’t serve the purpose of presenting an unbiased philosophical claim
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The aim of the present study was to characterize the discharge properties of single neurons in the dorsal nucleus of the lateral lemniscus (DNLL) of the rat. In the absence of acoustic stimulation, two types of spontaneous discharge patterns were observed: units tended to fire in a bursting or in a nonbursting mode. The distribution of units in the DNLL based on spontaneous firing rate followed a rostrocaudal gradient: units with high spontaneous rates were most commonly located in the rostral part of the DNLL, whereas in the caudal part units had lower spontaneous discharge rates. The most common response pattern of DNLL units to 200 ms binaural noise bursts contained a prominent onset response followed by a lower but steady-state response and an inhibitory response in the early-off period. Thresholds of response to noise bursts were on average higher for DNLL units than for units recorded in the inferior colliculus under the same experimental conditions. The DNLL units were arranged according to a mediolateral sensitivity gradient with the lowest threshold units in the most lateral part of the nucleus. In the rat, as in other mammals, the most common DNLL binaural input type was an excitatory response to contralateral ear stimulation and inhibitory response to ipsilateral ear stimulation (EI type). Pure tone bursts were in general a more effective stimulus compared to noise bursts. Best frequency (BF) was established for 97 DNLL units and plotted according to their spatial location. The DNLL exhibits a loose tonotopic organization, where there is a concentric pattern with high BF units located in the most dorsal and ventral parts of the DNLL and lower BF units in the middle part of the nucleus.
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Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors are widely used today for the management of hypertension and congestive heart failure. These agents inhibit angiotensin II synthesis. In some particular circumstances they may be responsible for deterioration of renal function, e.g. in hypertensive patients with bilateral renal artery stenosis or with stenosis of the artery supplying a single kidney, or in patients with severe congestive heart failure or marked nephroangiosclerosis. In these patients renal perfusion pressure may become too low to maintain adequate glomerular filtration as there remains no angiotensin II to increase the tone of the efferent arteriole. In high risk patients it is therefore recommended that serum creatinine be checked after initiating therapy with an ACE inhibitor.
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The present study was aimed at examining the role of nitric oxide (NO) in the hypoxic contraction of isolated small pulmonary arteries (SPA) in the rat. Animals were treated with either saline (sham experiments) or Escherichia coli lipolysaccharide [LPS, to obtain expression of the inducible NO synthase (iNOS) in the lung] and killed 4 h later. SPA (300- to 600-micrometer outer diameter) were mounted as rings in organ chambers for the recording of isometric tension, precontracted with PGF2alpha, and exposed to either severe (bath PO2 8 +/- 3 mmHg) or milder (21 +/- 3 mmHg) hypoxia. In SPA from sham-treated rats, contractions elicited by severe hypoxia were completely suppressed by either endothelium removal or preincubation with an NOS inhibitor [NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), 10(-3) M]. In SPA from LPS-treated rats, contractions elicited by severe hypoxia occurred irrespective of the presence or absence of endothelium and were largely suppressed by L-NAME. The milder hypoxia elicited no increase in vascular tone. These results indicate an essential role of NO in the hypoxic contractions of precontracted rat SPA. The endothelium independence of HPV in arteries from LPS-treated animals appears related to the extraendothelial expression of iNOS. The severe degree of hypoxia required to elicit any contraction is consistent with a mechanism of reduced NO production caused by a limited availability of O2 as a substrate for NOS.
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In fear conditioning, an animal learns to associate an unconditioned stimulus (US), such as a shock, and a conditioned stimulus (CS), such as a tone, so that the presentation of the CS alone can trigger conditioned responses. Recent research on the lateral amygdala has shown that following cued fear conditioning, only a subset of higher-excitable neurons are recruited in the memory trace. Their selective deletion after fear conditioning results in a selective erasure of the fearful memory. I hypothesize that the recruitment of highly excitable neurons depends on responsiveness to stimuli, intrinsic excitability and local connectivity. In addition, I hypothesize that neurons recruited for an initial memory also participate in subsequent memories, and that changes in neuronal excitability affect secondary fear learning. To address these hypotheses, I will show that A) a rat can learn to associate two successive short-term fearful memories; B) neuronal populations in the LA are competitively recruited in the memory traces depending on individual neuronal advantages, as well as advantages granted by the local network. By performing two successive cued fear conditioning experiments, I found that rats were able to learn and extinguish the two successive short-term memories, when tested 1 hour after learning for each memory. These rats were equipped with a system of stable extracellular recordings that I developed, which allowed to monitor neuronal activity during fear learning. 233 individual putative pyramidal neurons could modulate their firing rate in response to the conditioned tone (conditioned neurons) and/or non- conditioned tones (generalizing neurons). Out of these recorded putative pyramidal neurons 86 (37%) neurons were conditioned to one or both tones. More precisely, one population of neurons encoded for a shared memory while another group of neurons likely encoded the memories' new features. Notably, in spite of a successful behavioral extinction, the firing rate of those conditioned neurons in response to the conditioned tone remained unchanged throughout memory testing. Furthermore, by analyzing the pre-conditioning characteristics of the conditioned neurons, I determined that it was possible to predict neuronal recruitment based on three factors: 1) initial sensitivity to auditory inputs, with tone-sensitive neurons being more easily recruited than tone- insensitive neurons; 2) baseline excitability levels, with more highly excitable neurons being more likely to become conditioned; and 3) the number of afferent connections received from local neurons, with neurons destined to become conditioned receiving more connections than non-conditioned neurons. - En conditionnement de la peur, un animal apprend à associer un stimulus inconditionnel (SI), tel un choc électrique, et un stimulus conditionné (SC), comme un son, de sorte que la présentation du SC seul suffit pour déclencher des réflexes conditionnés. Des recherches récentes sur l'amygdale latérale (AL) ont montré que, suite au conditionnement à la peur, seul un sous-ensemble de neurones plus excitables sont recrutés pour constituer la trace mnésique. Pour apprendre à associer deux sons au même SI, je fais l'hypothèse que les neurones entrent en compétition afin d'être sélectionnés lors du recrutement pour coder la trace mnésique. Ce recrutement dépendrait d'un part à une activation facilité des neurones ainsi qu'une activation facilité de réseaux de neurones locaux. En outre, je fais l'hypothèse que l'activation de ces réseaux de l'AL, en soi, est suffisante pour induire une mémoire effrayante. Pour répondre à ces hypothèses, je vais montrer que A) selon un processus de mémoire à court terme, un rat peut apprendre à associer deux mémoires effrayantes apprises successivement; B) des populations neuronales dans l'AL sont compétitivement recrutées dans les traces mnésiques en fonction des avantages neuronaux individuels, ainsi que les avantages consentis par le réseau local. En effectuant deux expériences successives de conditionnement à la peur, des rats étaient capables d'apprendre, ainsi que de subir un processus d'extinction, pour les deux souvenirs effrayants. La mesure de l'efficacité du conditionnement à la peur a été effectuée 1 heure après l'apprentissage pour chaque souvenir. Ces rats ont été équipés d'un système d'enregistrements extracellulaires stables que j'ai développé, ce qui a permis de suivre l'activité neuronale pendant l'apprentissage de la peur. 233 neurones pyramidaux individuels pouvaient moduler leur taux d'activité en réponse au son conditionné (neurones conditionnés) et/ou au son non conditionné (neurones généralisant). Sur les 233 neurones pyramidaux putatifs enregistrés 86 (37%) d'entre eux ont été conditionnés à un ou deux tons. Plus précisément, une population de neurones code conjointement pour un souvenir partagé, alors qu'un groupe de neurones différent code pour de nouvelles caractéristiques de nouveaux souvenirs. En particulier, en dépit d'une extinction du comportement réussie, le taux de décharge de ces neurones conditionné en réponse à la tonalité conditionnée est resté inchangée tout au long de la mesure d'apprentissage. En outre, en analysant les caractéristiques de pré-conditionnement des neurones conditionnés, j'ai déterminé qu'il était possible de prévoir le recrutement neuronal basé sur trois facteurs : 1) la sensibilité initiale aux entrées auditives, avec les neurones sensibles aux sons étant plus facilement recrutés que les neurones ne répondant pas aux stimuli auditifs; 2) les niveaux d'excitabilité des neurones, avec les neurones plus facilement excitables étant plus susceptibles d'être conditionnés au son ; et 3) le nombre de connexions reçues, puisque les neurones conditionné reçoivent plus de connexions que les neurones non-conditionnés. Enfin, nous avons constaté qu'il était possible de remplacer de façon satisfaisante le SI lors d'un conditionnement à la peur par des injections bilatérales de bicuculline, un antagoniste des récepteurs de l'acide y-Aminobutirique.
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The complexity of the signaling network that underlies astrocyte-synapse interactions may seem discouraging when tackled from a theoretical perspective. Computational modeling is challenged by the fact that many details remain hitherto unknown and conventional approaches to describe synaptic function are unsuitable to explain experimental observations when astrocytic signaling is taken into account. Supported by experimental evidence is the possibility that astrocytes perform genuine information processing by means of their calcium signaling and are players in the physiological setting of the basal tone of synaptic transmission. Here we consider the plausibility of this scenario from a theoretical perspective, focusing on the modulation of synaptic release probability by the astrocyte and its implications on synaptic plasticity. The analysis of the signaling pathways underlying such modulation refines our notion of tripartite synapse and has profound implications on our understanding of brain function.
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SUMMARYIntercellular communication is achieved at specialized regions of the plasma membrane by gap junctions. The proteins constituting the gap junctions are called connexins and are encoded by a family of genes highly conserved during evolution. In adult mouse, four connexins (Cxs) are known to be expressed in the vasculature: Cx37, Cx40, Cx43 and Cx45. Several recent studies have provided evidences that vascular connexins expression and blood pressure regulation are closely linked, suggesting a role for connexins in the control of blood pressure. However, the precise function that each vascular connexin plays under physiological and pathophysiological conditions is still not elucidated. In this context, this work was dedicated to evaluate the contribution of each of the four vascular connexins in the control of the vascular function and in the blood pressure regulation.In the present work, we first demonstrated that vascular connexins are differently regulated by hypertension in the mouse aorta. We also observed that endothelial connexins play a regulatory role on eNOS expression levels and function in the aorta, therefore in the control of vascular tone. Then, we demonstrated that Cx40 plays a pivotal role in the kidney by regulating the renal levels of COX-2 and nNOS, two key enzymes of the macula densa known to participate in the control of renin secreting cells. We also found that Cx43 forms the functional gap junction involved in intercellular Ca2+ wave propagation between vascular smooth muscle cells. Finally, we have started to generate transgenic mice expressing specifically Cx40 in the endothelium to investigate the involvement of Cx40 in the vasomotor tone, or in the renin secreting cells to evaluate the role of Cx40 in the control of renin secretion.In conclusion, this work has allowed us to identify new roles for connexins in the vasculature. Our results suggest that vascular connexins could be interesting targets for new therapies caring hypertension and vascular diseases.
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Mutations in the GJB2 gene encoding the gap junction protein connexin 26 are responsible for up to 30% of all cases of autosomal recessive nonsyndromic hearing impairment (HI) with prelingual onset in most populations. The corresponding locus DFNB1, located on chromosome 13q11-q12, is also affected by three distinct deletions. These deletions extended distally to GJB2, which remains intact. We report a novel large deletion in DFNB1 observed in a patient presenting profound prelingual HI. This deletion was observed in trans to a GJB2 mutated allele carrying the p.Val84Met (V84M) mutation and was shown to be associated with hearing loss. The deletion caused a false homozygosity of V84M in the proband. Quantification of alleles by quantitative fluorescent multiplex PCR (QFM-PCR) enabled us to study the breakpoints of the deletion. The deleted segment extended through at least 920kb and removed the three connexin genes GJA3, GJB2 and GJB6. The distal breakpoint inside intron 2 of CRYL1 gene differed from the breakpoints of the known DFNB1 deletions. This case highlights the importance of screening for large deletions in molecular studies of GJB2.
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Purpose: To study with a non invasive method any potential radiological change on the superior cerebellar artery (SCA) in patients treated radiosurgically for classic trigeminal neuralgia (CTN).Materials and methods: A retrospective measure of maximal dose received by SCA was performed analyzing the treatment planning in 55 consecutive patients treated by Gamma Knife radiosurgery for an CTN, then, a prospective study was designed using high resolution MR, with T2 SPIR, T1 without and with gadolinium enhancement, Proton density, 3D TONE and MIP reconstructions. Inclusion criteria were: patients followed at our institution, follow-up of one year or more, dose received by the SCA of 15 Gy or more and voluntary patient participation in the study. Patients with repeated Gamma Knife radiosurgery for failure or recurrence were excluded. The end points were: SCA occlusion, stenosis or infarction in the territory supplied by SCA.Results: Sixteen patients were studied, with a mean follow-up of 25.2 months (12-42 months). The mean maximal dose received by the SCA was 57.5 Gy. (15-87 Gy). Among these 16 patients studied, neither obstruction of the SCA nor infarction was demonstrated. In one patient a suspicion of asymptomatic SCA stenosis was visualized distant to the irradiation field.Conclusions: SCA can receive a high dose of irradiation during radiosurgical treatment for CTN. This study does not confirm any vascular damage to the SCA after radiosurgery for CTN. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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INTRODUCTION Hemodynamic resuscitation should be aimed at achieving not only adequate cardiac output but also sufficient mean arterial pressure (MAP) to guarantee adequate tissue perfusion pressure. Since the arterial pressure response to volume expansion (VE) depends on arterial tone, knowing whether a patient is preload-dependent provides only a partial solution to the problem. The objective of this study was to assess the ability of a functional evaluation of arterial tone by dynamic arterial elastance (Ea(dyn)), defined as the pulse pressure variation (PPV) to stroke volume variation (SVV) ratio, to predict the hemodynamic response in MAP to fluid administration in hypotensive, preload-dependent patients with acute circulatory failure. METHODS We performed a prospective clinical study in an adult medical/surgical intensive care unit in a tertiary care teaching hospital, including 25 patients with controlled mechanical ventilation who were monitored with the Vigileo(®) monitor, for whom the decision to give fluids was made because of the presence of acute circulatory failure, including arterial hypotension (MAP ≤65 mmHg or systolic arterial pressure <90 mmHg) and preserved preload responsiveness condition, defined as a SVV value ≥10%. RESULTS Before fluid infusion, Ea(dyn) was significantly different between MAP responders (MAP increase ≥15% after VE) and MAP nonresponders. VE-induced increases in MAP were strongly correlated with baseline Ea(dyn) (r(2) = 0.83; P < 0.0001). The only predictor of MAP increase was Ea(dyn) (area under the curve, 0.986 ± 0.02; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.84-1). A baseline Ea(dyn) value >0.89 predicted a MAP increase after fluid administration with a sensitivity of 93.75% (95% CI, 69.8%-99.8%) and a specificity of 100% (95% CI, 66.4%-100%). CONCLUSIONS Functional assessment of arterial tone by Ea(dyn), measured as the PVV to SVV ratio, predicted arterial pressure response after volume loading in hypotensive, preload-dependent patients under controlled mechanical ventilation.
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Neuroimaging with diffusion-weighted imaging is routinely used for clinical diagnosis/prognosis. Its quantitative parameter, the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), is thought to reflect water mobility in brain tissues. After injury, reduced ADC values are thought to be secondary to decreases in the extracellular space caused by cell swelling. However, the physiological mechanisms associated with such changes remain uncertain. Aquaporins (AQPs) facilitate water diffusion through the plasma membrane and provide a unique opportunity to examine the molecular mechanisms underlying water mobility. Because of this critical role and the recognition that brain AQP4 is distributed within astrocytic cell membranes, we hypothesized that AQP4 contributes to the regulation of water diffusion and variations in its expression would alter ADC values in normal brain. Using RNA interference in the rodent brain, we acutely knocked down AQP4 expression and observed that a 27% AQP4-specific silencing induced a 50% decrease in ADC values, without modification of tissue histology. Our results demonstrate that ADC values in normal brain are modulated by astrocytic AQP4. These findings have major clinical relevance as they suggest that imaging changes seen in acute neurologic disorders such as stroke and trauma are in part due to changes in tissue AQP4 levels.
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Exposure to perinatal hypoxia results in alteration of the adult pulmonary circulation, which is linked among others to alterations in K channels in pulmonary artery (PA) smooth muscle cells. In particular, large conductance Ca-activated K (BKCa) channels protein expression and activity were increased in adult PA from mice born in hypoxia compared with controls. We evaluated long-term effects of perinatal hypoxia on the cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)/protein kinase A (PKA) pathway-mediated activation of BKCa channels, using isoproterenol, forskolin, and dibutyryl-cAMP. Whole-cell outward current was higher in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells from mice born in hypoxia compared with controls. Spontaneous transient outward currents, representative of BKCa activity, were present in a greater proportion in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells of mice born in hypoxia than in controls. Agonists induced a greater relaxation in PA of mice born in hypoxia compared with controls, and BKCa channels contributed more to the cAMP/PKA-mediated relaxation in case of perinatal hypoxia. In summary, perinatal hypoxia enhanced cAMP-mediated BKCa channels activation in adult murine PA, suggesting that this pathway could be a potential target for modulating adult pulmonary vascular tone after perinatal hypoxia.
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Alterations in motor functions are well-characterized features observed in humans and experimental animals subjected to thyroid hormone dysfunctions during development. Here we show that congenitally hypothyroid rats display hyperactivity in the adult life. This phenotype was associated with a decreased content of cannabinoid receptor type 1 (CB(1)) mRNA in the striatum and a reduction in the number of binding sites in both striatum and projection areas. These findings suggest that hyperactivity may be the consequence of a thyroid hormone deficiency-induced removal of the endocannabinoid tone, normally acting as a brake for hyperactivity at the basal ganglia. In agreement with the decrease in CB(1) receptor gene expression, a lower cannabinoid response, measured by biochemical, genetic and behavioral parameters, was observed in the hypothyroid animals. Finally, both CB(1) receptor gene expression and the biochemical and behavioral dysfunctions found in the hypothyroid animals were improved after a thyroid hormone replacement treatment. Thus, the present study suggests that impairment in the endocannabinoid system can underlay the hyperactive phenotype associated with hypothyroidism.
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Résumé Rôle du transporteur de glucose GLUT2 dans les mécanismes centraux de glucodétection impliqués dans le contrôle de la sécrétion du glucagon et de la prise alimentaire. Les mécanismes centraux de glucodétection jouent un rôle majeur dans le contrôle de l'homéostasie glucidique. Ces senseurs régulent principalement la sécrétion des hormones contre-régulatrices, la prise alimentaire et la dépense énergétique. Cependant, la nature cellulaire et le fonctionnement moléculaire de ces mécanismes ne sont encore que partiellement élucidés. Dans cette étude, nous avons tout d'abord mis en évidence une suppression de la stimulation de la sécrétion du glucagon et de la prise alimentaire en réponse à une injection intracérébroventriculaire (i.c.v.) de 2-déoxy-D-glucose (2-DG) chez les souris de fond génétique mixte et déficientes pour le gène glut2 (souris RIPG1xglut2-/-). De plus, chez ces souris, l'injection de 2-DG n'augmente pas l'activation neuronale dans l'hypothalamus et le complexe vagal dorsal. Nous avons ensuite montré que la ré-expression de GLUT2 dans les neurones des souris RIPG1xg1ut2-/- ne restaure pas la sécrétion du glucagon et la prise alimentaire en réponse à une injection i.c.v. de 2-DG. En revanche, l'injection de 2-DG réalisée chez les souris RIPG1xg1ut2-/- ré-exprimant le GLUT2 dans leurs astrocytes, stimule la sécrétion du glucagon et l'activation neuronale dans le complexe vagal dorsal mais n'augmente pas la prise alimentaire ni l'activation neuronale dans l'hypothalamus. L'ensemble de ces résultats démontre l'existence de différents mécanismes centraux de glucodétection dépendants de GLUT2. Les mécanismes régulant la sécrétion du glucagon sont dépendants de GLUT2 astrocytaire et pourraient être localisés dans le complexe vagal dorsal. L'implication des astrocytes dans ces mécanismes suggère un couplage fonctionnel entre les astrocytes et les neurones adjacents « sensibles au glucose ». Lors de cette étude, nous avons remarqué chez les souris RIPG1xg1ut2-/- de fond génétique pur C57B1/6, que seul le déclenchement de la prise alimentaire en réponse à l'injection i.p. ou i.c.v. de 2-DG est aboli. Ces données mettent en évidence que suivant le fond génétique de la souris, les mécanismes centraux de glucodétection impliqués dans la régulation de la sécrétion peuvent être indépendants de GLUT2. Summary. Role of transporter GLUT2 in central glucose sensing involved in the control of glucagon secretion and food intake. Central glucose sensors play an important role in the control of glucose homeostasis. These sensors regulate general physiological functions, including food intake, energy expenditure and hormones secretion. So far the cellular and molecular basis of central glucose detection are poorly understood. Hypoglycemia, or cellular glucoprivation by intraperitoneal injection of 2-deoxy¬glucose (2-DG) injection, elicit multiple glucoregulatory responses, in particular glucagon secretion and stimulation of feeding. We previously demonstrated that the normal glucagon response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia was suppressed in mice lacking GLUT2. This indicated the existence of extra-pancreatic, GLUT2-dependent, glucose sensors controllling glucagon secretion. Here, we have demonstrated that the normal glucagon and food intake responses to central glucoprivation, by intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injections of 2-DG, were suppressed in mice lacking GLUT2 (RIPG1xglut2-/- mice) indicating that GLUT2 plays a role in central glucose sensing units controlling secretion of glucagon and food intake. Whereas it is etablished that glucose responsive neurons change their firing rate in response to variations of glucose concentrations, the exact mechanism of glucose detection is not established. In particular, it has been suggested that astrocytic cells may be the primary site of glucose detection and that a signal is subsequently transmitted to neurons. To evaluate the respective role of glial and neuronal expression of GLUT2 in central glucodetection, we studied hypoglycemic and glucoprivic responses following cellular glucoprivation in RIPG1xglut2-/- mice reexpressing the transgenic GLUT2 specifially in their astrocytes (pGFAPG2xRIPG1xglut2-/- mice) or their neurons (pSynG2xRIPG1xglut2-/- mice). The increase of food intake after i.p. injection of 2-DG in control mice was not observed in the pGFAPG2xRIPG1xglut2-/- mice. Whereas a strong increase of glucagon secretion was observed in control and pGFAPG2xRIPG1xglut2-/- mice, not glucagonemic response was induced in pSynG2xRIPG1xglut2-/- mice. Our results show that GLUT2 reexpression in glial cells but not in neurons restored glucagon secretion and thus present a strong evidence that glucose detection and the control of glucagon secretion require a coupling between glial cells and neurons. Furthermore, these results show the existence of differents glucose sensors in CNS. Résumé tout public. Rôle du transporteur de glucose GLUT2 dans les mécanismes centraux de glucodétection impliqués dans le contrôle de la sécrétion du glucagon et de la prise alimentaire. Chez les mammifères, en dépit des grandes variations dans l'apport et l'utilisation du glucose, la glycémie est maintenue à une valeur relativement constante d'environ 1 g/l. Cette régulation est principalement sous le contrôle de deux hormones produites par le pancréas l'insuline et le glucagon. A la suite d'un repas, la détection de l'élévation de la glycémie par le pancréas permet la libération pancréatique de l'insuline dans le sang. Cette hormone va alors permettre le stockage dans le foie du glucose sanguin en excès et diminuer ainsi la glycémie. Sans insuline, le glucose s'accumule dans le sang. On parle alors d'hyperglycémie chronique. Cette situation est caractéristique du diabète et augmente les risques de maladies cardiovasculaires. A l'inverse, lors d'un jeûne, la détection de la diminution de la glycémie par le cerveau permet le déclenchement de la prise alimentaire et stimule la sécrétion de glucagon par le pancréas. Le glucagon va alors permettre la libération dans le sang du glucose stocké par le foie. Les effets du glucagon et de la prise de nourriture augmentent ainsi les concentrations sanguines de glucose pour empêcher une diminution trop importante de la glycémie. Une hypoglycémie sévère peut entraîner un mauvais fonctionnement du cerveau allant jusqu'à des lésions cérébrales. Contrairement aux mécanismes pancréatiques de détection du glucose, les mécanismes de glucodétection du cerveau ne sont encore que partiellement élucidés. Dans le laboratoire, nous avons observé, chez les souris transgéniques n'exprimant plus le transporteur de glucose GLUT2, une suppression de la stimulation de la sécrétion du glucagon et du déclenchement de la prise alimentaire en réponse à une hypoglycémie, induite uniquement dans le cerveau. Dans le cerveau, le GLUT2 est principalement exprimé par les astrocytes, cellules gliales connues pour soutenir, nourrir et protéger les neurones. Nous avons alors ré-exprimé spécifiquement le GLUT2 dans les astrocytes des souris transgéniques et nous avons observé que seule la stimulation de la sécrétion du glucagon en réponse à l'hypoglycémie est restaurée. Ces résultats mettent en évidence que la sécrétion du glucagon et la prise alimentaire sont contrôlées par différents mécanismes centraux de glucodétection dépendants de GLUT2.
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Exercise is known to reduce cardiovascular risk. However, its role on atherosclerotic plaque stabilization is unknown. Apolipoprotein E(-/-) mice with vulnerable (2-kidney, 1-clip: angiotensin [Ang] II-dependent hypertension model) or stable atherosclerotic plaques (1-kidney, 1-clip: Ang II-independent hypertension model and normotensive shams) were used for experiments. Mice swam regularly for 5 weeks and were compared with sedentary controls. Exercised 2-kidney, 1-clip mice developed significantly more stable plaques (thinner fibrous cap, decreased media degeneration, layering, macrophage content, and increased smooth muscle cells) than sedentary controls. Exercise did not affect blood pressure. Conversely, swimming significantly reduced aortic Ang II type 1 receptor mRNA levels, whereas Ang II type 2 receptor expression remained unaffected. Sympathetic tone also significantly diminished in exercised 2-kidney, 1-clip mice compared with sedentary ones; renin and aldosterone levels tended to increase. Ang II type 1 downregulation was not accompanied by improved endothelial function, and no difference in balance among T-helper 1, T-helper 2, and T regulatory cells was observed between sedentary and exercised mice. These results show for the first time, in a mouse model of Ang II-mediated vulnerable plaques, that swimming prevents atherosclerosis progression and plaque vulnerability. This benefit is likely mediated by downregulating aortic Ang II type 1 receptor expression independent from any hemodynamic change. Ang II type 1 downregulation may protect the vessel wall from the Ang II proatherogenic effects. Moreover, data presented herein further emphasize the pivotal and blood pressure-independent role of Ang II in atherogenesis.