76 resultados para muscimol


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During brain development, spontaneous neuronal activity has been shown to play a crucial role in the maturation of neuronal circuitries. Activity-related signals may cause selective neuronal cell death and/or rearrangement of neuronal connectivity. To study the effects of sustained inhibitory activity on developing inhibitory (GABAergic) neurons, three-dimensional primary cell cultures of fetal rat telencephalon were used. In relatively immature cultures, muscimol (10 microns), a GABAA receptor agonist, induced a transient increase in apoptotic cell death, as evidenced by a cycloheximide-sensitive increase of free nucleosomes and an increased frequency of DNA double strand breaks (TUNEL labeling). Furthermore, muscimol caused an irreversible reduction of glutamic acid decarboxylase activity, indicating a loss of GABAergic neurons. The muscimol-induced death of GABAergic neurons was attenuated by the GABAA receptor blockers bicuculline (100 microns) and picrotoxin (100 microns), by depolarizing potassium concentrations (30 mM KCl) and by the L-type calcium channel activator BAY K8644 (2 microns). As compared to the cholinergic marker (choline acetyltransferase activity), glutamic acid decarboxylase activity was significantly more affected by various agents known to inhibit neuronal activity, including tetrodotoxin (1 micron), flunarizine (5 microns), MK 801 (50 microns) and propofol (40 microns). The present results suggest that the survival of a subpopulation of immature GABAergic neurons is dependent on sustained neuronal activity and that these neurons may undergo apoptotic cell death in response to GABAA autoreceptor activation.

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Objective: Gamma-aminobutyric acid A (GABAA) receptor activation with muscimol in the lateral parabrachial nucleus (LPBN) induces water and 0.3 M NaCl intake. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether a local inflammatory event, such as periodontal disease (PD), is able to alter the effects of muscimol on water and 0.3 M NaCl intake in fluid-replete rats and in rats treated with furosemide (FURO) combined with captopril (CAP) injected subcutaneously. Design: Male Wistar rats were divided into two groups: with PD and those without PD (control condition). Fifteen days after PD, both groups had cannulas implanted bilaterally into the LPBN. Results: In fluid-replete rats without PD, injections of muscimol (0.5 nmol/0.2 μl) into the LPBN induced 0.3 M NaCl and water intake and a pressor response. In fluid-replete rats with PD, a decrease was observed in water intake and pressor response but not in 0.3 M NaCl intake. In control rats with FURO + CAP treatment, injections of muscimol into the LPBN increased 0.3 M NaCl and water intake. In PD rats with FURO + CAP treatment, a decrease was observed in 0.3 M NaCl and water intake after muscimol in the LPBN. Alveolar bone loss and interleukin-6 (IL-6) and tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) plasmatic concentration were higher in PD rats in comparison with controls. Conclusion: These results suggest that PD is able to reduce the pressor response and the dipsogenic and natriorexigenic effects induced by the activation of GABAA receptors in the LPBN, probably due to the elevation of the plasmatic concentration of pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and TNF-α. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Background: Subcallosal cingulate gyrus (SCG) deep brain stimulation (DBS) is being investigated as a treatment for major depression. We report on the effects of ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) DBS in rats, focusing on possible mechanisms involved in an antidepressant-like response in the forced swim test (FST). Methods: The outcome of vmPFC stimulation alone or combined with different types of lesions, including serotonin (5-HT) or nore-pineprhine (NE) depletion, was characterized in the FST. We also explored the effects of DBS on novelty-suppressed feeding, learned helplessness, and sucrose consumption in animals predisposed to helplessness. Results: Stimulation at parameters approximating those used in clinical practice induced a significant antidepressant-like response in the FST. Ventromedial PFC lesions or local muscimol injections did not lead to a similar outcome. However, animals treated with vmPFC ibotenic acid lesions still responded to DBS, suggesting that the modulation of fiber near the electrodes could play a role in the antidepressant-like effects of stimulation. Also important was the integrity of the serotonergic system, as the effects of DBS in the FST were completely abolished in animals bearing 5-HT, but not NE, depleting lesions. In addition, vmPFC stimulation induced a sustained increase in hippocampal 5-HT levels. Preliminary work with other models showed that DBS was also able to influence specific aspects of depressive-like states in rodents, including anxiety and anhedonia, but not helplessness. Conclusions: Our study suggests that vmPFC DES in rats maybe useful to investigate mechanisms involved in the antidepressant effects of SCG DBS.

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The amygdala, the dorsal periaqueductal gray (dPAG), and the media] hypothalamus have long been recognized to be a neural system responsible for the generation and elaboration of unconditioned fear in the brain. It is also well known that this neural substrate is under a tonic inhibitory control exerted by GABA mechanisms. However, whereas there is a growing body of evidence to suggest that the amygdala and dPAG are also able to integrate conditioned fear, it is still unclear, however, how the distinct hypothalamic nuclei participate in fear conditioning. In this work we aimed to examine the extent to which the gabaergic mechanisms of this brain region are involved in conditioned fear using the fear-potentiated startle (FPS). Muscimol, a GABA-A receptor agonist, and semicarbazide, an inhibitor of the GABA synthesizing enzyme glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD), were used as an enhancer and inhibitor of the GABA mechanisms, respectively. Muscimol and semicarbazide were injected into the anterior hypothalamus (AHN). the dorsomedial part of the ventromedial nucleus (VMHDM), the dorsomedial (DMH) or the dorsal premammillary (PMD) nuclei of male Wistar rats before test sessions of the fear conditioning paradigm. The injections into the DMH and PMD did not produce any significant effects on FPS. On the other hand, muscimol injections into the AHN and VMHDM caused significant reduction in FPS. These results indicate that injections of muscimol and semicarbazide into the DMH and PMD fail to change the FPS, whereas the enhancement of the GABA transmission in the AHN and VMHDM produces a reduction of the conditioned fear responses. On the other hand, the inhibition of this transmission led to an increase of this conditioned response in the AHN. Thus, whereas DMH and PMD are known to be part of the caudal-most region of the medial hypothalamic defensive system, which integrates unconditioned fear, systems mediating conditioned fear select the AHN and VMHDM nuclei that belong to the rostral-most portion of the hypothalamic defense area. Thus, distinct subsets of neurons in the hypothalamus could mediate different aspects of the defensive responses. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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The inferior colliculus (IC) together with the dorsal periaqueductal gray (dPAG), the amygdala and the medial hypothalamus make part of the brain aversion system, which has mainly been related to the organization of unconditioned fear. However, the involvement of the IC and dPAG in the conditioned fear is still unclear. It is certain that GABA has a regulatory role on the aversive states generated and elaborated in these midbrain structures. In this study, we evaluated the effects of injections of the GABA-A receptor agonist muscimol (1.0 and 2.0 nmol/0.2 mu L) into the IC or dPAG on the freezing and fear-potentiated startle (FPS) responses of rats submitted to a context fear conditioning. Intra-IC injections of muscimol did not cause any significant effect on the FPS or conditioned freezing but enhanced the startle reflex in non-conditioned animals. In contrast, intra-dPAG injections of muscimol caused significant reduction in FPS and conditioned freezing without changing the startle reflex in non-conditioned animals. Thus, intra-dPAG injections of muscimol produced the expected inhibitory effects on the anxiety-related responses, the FPS and the freezing whereas these injections into the IC produced quite opposite effects suggesting that descending inhibitory pathways from the IC, probably mediated by GABA-A mechanisms, exert a regulatory role on the lower brainstem circuits responsible for the startle reflex. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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The inferior colliculus (IC) is primarily involved in the processing of acoustic stimuli, being in a position to send auditory information to motor centers that participate in behaviors such as prey catching and predators` avoidance The role of the central nucleus of the IC (CIC) on fear and anxiety has been suggested on the basis that rats are able to engage in tasks to decrease the aversiveness of CIC stimulation, increased Fos immunolabeling during diverse aversive states and increased CIC auditory evoked potentials (AEP) induced by conditioned fear stimuli Additionally it was shown that brainstem AEP, represented by wave V, for which the main generator is the IC, is increased during experimentally induced anxiety Rats segregated according to their low or high emotional reactivity have been used as an important tool in the study of fear and anxiety The IC contains a high density of GABA receptors Since the efficacy of an anxiolytic compound is a function of the animal`s anxiety level, it is possible that GABA-benzodiazepine (Bzp) agents affect LA and HA animals differently In this study we investigated the GABA-Bzp influence on the modulation of AEP in rats with low (LA) or high-anxiety (HA) levels, as assessed by the elevated plus maze test (EPM) GABA-Bzp modulation on the unconditioned AEP response was analyzed by using intra CIC injections (0 2 mu l) of the GABA-Bzp agonists muscimol (121 ng) and diazepam (30 mu g) or the GABA inhibitors bicuculline (10 ng) and semicarbazide (7 mu g) In a second experiment, we evaluate the effects of contextual aversive conditioning on AEP using foot shocks as unconditioned stimuli On the unconditioned fear paradigm GABA inhibition in creased AEP in LA rats and decreases this measure in HA counterparts Muscimol was effective in reducing AEP in both LA and HA rats Contextual fear stimuli increased the magnitude of AEP In spite of no effect obtained with diazepam in LA rats the drug inhibited AEP in HA animals The specificity of the regulatory mechanisms mediated by GABA Bzp for the ascending neurocircuits responsible for the acquisition of aversive information in LA and HA animals shed light on the processing of sensory information underlying the generation of defensive reactions (C) 2010 IBRO Published by Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved

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Vocalization generated by the application of a noxious stimulus is an integrative response related to the affective-motivational component of pain. The rostral ventromedial medulla (RVM) plays an important role in descending pain modulation, and opiates play a major role in modulation of the antinociception mediated by the RVM. Further, it has been suggested that morphine mediates antinociception indirectly, by inhibition of tonically active GABAergic neurons. The current study evaluated the effects of the opioids and GABA agonists and antagonists in the RVM on an affective-motivational pain model. Additionally, we investigated the opioidergic-GABAergic interaction in the RVM in the vocalization response to noxious stimulation. Microinjection of either morphine (4.4 nmo1/0.2 mu l) or bicuculline (0.4 nmo1/0.2 mu l) into the RVM decreased the vocalization index, whereas application of the GABA(A) receptor agonist, musci-mol (0.5 nmo1/0.2 mu l) increased the vocalization index during noxious stimulation. Furthermore, prior microinjection of either the opioid antagonist naloxone (2.7 nmo1/0.2 mu l) or muscimol (0.25 nmo1/0.2 mu l) into the RVM blocked the reduction in vocalization index induced by morphine. These observations suggest an antinociceptive and pro-nociceptive role of the opioidergic and GABAergic neurotransmitters in the RVM, respectively. Our data show that opioids have an antinociceptive effect in the RVM, while GABAergic neurotransmission is related to the facilitation of nociceptive responses. Additionally, our results indicate that the antinociceptive effect of the opioids in the RVM could be mediated by a disinhibition of tonically active GABAergic interneurons in the downstream projection neurons of the descending pain control system; indicating an interaction between the opioidergic and GABAergic pathways of pain modulation. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Aims: Several physiological, pharmacological and behavioral lines of evidence suggest that the hippocampal formation is involved in nociception. The hippocampus is also believed to play an important role in the affective and motivational components of pain perception. Thus, Our aim was to investigate the participation of cholinergic, opioidergic and GABAergic systems of the dorsal hippocampus (DH) in the modulation of nociception in guinea pigs. Main methods: The test used consisted of the application of a peripheral noxious stimulus (electric shock) that provokes the emission of a vocalization response by the animal. Key findings: Our results showed that, in guinea pigs, microinjection of carbachol, morphine and bicuculline into the DH Promoted anti nociception, while muscimol promoted pronociception. These results were verified by a decrease and all increase, respectively, in the vocalization index in the vocalization test. This antinociceptive effect of carbachol (2.7 nmol) was blocked by previous administration of atropine (0.7 nmol) or naloxone (1.3 nmol) into the same site. In addition, the decrease in the vocalization index induced by the microinjection of morphine (2.2 nmol) into the DH was prevented by pretreatment with naloxone (1.3 nmol) or muscimol (0.5 nmol). At doses of 1.0 nmol, muscimol microinjection caused pronociception, while bicuculline promoted antinociception. Significance: These results indicate the involvement of the cholinergic, opioidergic and GABAergic systems of the DH in the modulation of antinociception in guinea pigs. In addition, the present study suggests that cholinergic transmission may activate the release of endorphins/enkephalin from interneurons of the DH, Which Would inhibit GABAergic neurons, resulting in antinociception. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Noxious stimulation of the leg increases hind limb blood flow (HBF) to the ipsilateral side and decreases to the contralateral in rat. Whether or not this asymmetrical response is due to direct control by sympathetic terminals or mediated by other factors such as local metabolism and hormones remains unclear. The aim of this study was to compare responses in lumbar sympathetic nerve activity, evoked by stimulation of the ipsilateral and contralateral sciatic nerve (SN). We also sought to determine the supraspinal mechanisms involved in the observed responses. In anesthetized and paralyzed rats, intermittent electrical stimulation (1 mA, 0.5 Hz) of the contralateral SN evoked a biphasic sympathoexcitation. Following ipsilateral SN stimulation, the response is preceded by an inhibitory potential with a latency of 50 ms (N=26). Both excitatory and inhibitory potentials are abolished following cervical Cl spinal transection (N=6) or bilateral microinjections of muscimol (N=6) in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM). This evidence is suggestive that both sympathetic potentials are supraspinally mediated in this nucleus. Blockade of RVLM glutamate receptors by microinjection of kynurenic acid (N=4) selectively abolished the excitatory potential elicited by ipsilateral SN stimulation. This study supports the physiological model that activation of hind limb nociceptors evokes a generalized sympathoexcitation, with the exception of the ipsilateral side where there is a withdrawal of sympathetic tone resulting in an increase in HBF. Crown Copyright (C) 2011 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Tonic immobility (TI) is a temporary state of profound motor inhibition induced by situations that generate intense fear, with the objective of protecting an animal from attacks by predators. A preliminary study by our group demonstrated that microinjection into the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala (BLA) of an agonist to 5-HT(1A) and 5-HT(2) receptors promoted a decrease in TI duration. In the current study, the effects of GABAergic stimulation of the BLA and the possible interaction between GABA(A) and 5-HT(2) receptors on TI modulation were investigated. Observation revealed that GABAergic agonist muscimol (0.26 nmol) reduced the duration of TI episodes, while microinjection of the GABAergic antagonist bicuculline (1 nmol) increased TI duration. Additionally, microinjection of 5-HT(2) agonist receptors (alpha-methyl-5-HT, 0.32 nmol) into the BLA decreased TI duration, an effect reversed by pretreatment with bicuculline (at the dose that had no effect per se, 0.2 nmol). Moreover, the activation of GABA(A) and 5-HT(2) receptors in the BLA did not alter the spontaneous motor activity in the open field test. These experiments demonstrated that the activation of GABA(A) and 5-HT(2) receptors of the BLA possibly produce a reduction in unconditioned fear that decreases the TI duration in guinea pigs, but this is not due to increased spontaneous motor activity, which could affect a TI episode nonspecifically. Furthermore, these results suggest an interaction between GABAergic and serotoninergic mechanisms mediated by GABA(A) and 5-HT(2) receptors. In addition, the GABAergic circuit of the BLA presents a tonic inhibitory influence on TI duration. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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En el hipotálamo en desarrollo, el ácido gamma-amino butírico (GABA) produce depolarización neuronal, pudiendo incluso disparar potenciales de acción y causar la apertura de canales de calcio dependientes de voltaje. Esto se debe a que la concentración intracelular de Cl- es alta respecto al medio extracelular, por lo que en reposo el potencial de equilibrio de GABA es más positivo que el potencial de membrana. A medida que el desarrollo transcurre, la concentración intracelular de Cl- disminuye y se produce un cambio en la respuesta de depolarizante (etapa excitatoria) a hiperpolarizante (etapa inhibitoria). Se ha demostrado que este cambio ocurre también en neuronas hipotalámicas in vitro. El dimorfismo sexual del cerebro de los vertebrados es consecuencia de la acción del estrógeno aromatizado a partir de andrógenos segregados por el testículo durante el "periodo crítico" del desarrollo cerebral. Evidencias previas de nuestro y otros laboratorios pusieron de manifiesto diferencias en el crecimiento y diferenciación de neuronas que no podían atribuirse a la acción hormonal, ya que ocurren antes que se inicie el brusco aumento de la secreción gonadal, alrededor del día 18 de desarrollo embrionario en la rata (E18). Además de las diferencias morfológicas, encontramos diferencias sexuales en la forma que las neuronas hipotalámicas responden a muscimol, un agonista específico del receptor GABAA. A los 9 días in vitro (9 DIV) la respuesta a muscimol fue hiperpolarizante (etapa inhibitoria) y además fue de mayor amplitud, área y duración en machos respecto a hembras. Esto nos indica que las neuronas provenientes de embriones machos son intrínsecamente diferentes a las de embriones hembra aún antes de la acción organizadora de los esteroides sexuales. En base a estas evidencias nos propusimos continuar nuestros estudios sobre la participación de GABA en la determinación de diferencias sexuales en el cerebro antes de la acción organizadora de los esteroides gonadales. Para ello, en cultivos de neuronas hipotalámicas de E16 separados por sexos, estudiaremos:- la respuesta a muscimol de las neuronas, en la etapa excitatoria (2 DIV) de la acción de GABA.- las composición de subunidades de los receptores GABAA en la etapa excitatoria/inhibitoria de la acción de GABA.- la participación de los receptores GABAA sobre el crecimiento neurítico.- la activación de la vía de las MAP quinasas por muscimol.- la participación de los receptores GABAA sobre el crecimiento axonal inducido por estradiol in vitro.Toda la metodología propuesta es de uso habitual en nuestro laboratorio e involucra herramientas de la electrofisiología y la biología celular-molecular; como patch-clamp, cultivo de neuronas hipotalámicas, Western blot, RT-PCR, entre otras. Esperamos encontrar diferencias sexuales en la amplitud, área y duración de la respuesta de las neuronas hipotalámicas al muscimol a los 2 DIV, y que éstas se deban a una diferente composición de subunidades del receptor GABAA. En cuanto a la participación del receptor GABAA en la neuritogenesis, esperamos encontrar mayor longitud neurítica en neuronas macho como así también una activación sexualmente dimórfica de la vía de las MAP quinasas. Además esperamosque la acción de un antagonista del receptor GABAA interfiera con la axogénesis inducida por estradiol in vitro, característica que muestra diferencia sexual también a favor de los machos, lo que reforzaría nuestra hipótesis. La importancia y originalidad de este proyecto reside en la evaluación de la participación del sistema GABAérgico en la determinación de características que durante el desarrollo, podrían estar involucradas en la determinación de diferencias sexuales permanentes en el cerebro adulto independientemente de la acción de los esteroides sexuales. Hasta la fecha, no ha sido evaluada la influencia de los receptores GABAA en la diferenciación sexual del cerebro antes de la acción organizadora de los esteroides gonadales.

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Central amygdala (CeA) projections to hypothalamic and brain stem nuclei regulate the behavioral and physiological expression of fear, but it is unknown whether these different aspects of the fear response can be separately regulated by the CeA. We combined fluorescent retrograde tracing of CeA projections to nuclei that modulate fear-related freezing or cardiovascular responses with in vitro electrophysiological recordings and with in vivo monitoring of related behavioral and physiological parameters. CeA projections emerged from separate neuronal populations with different electrophysiological characteristics and different response properties to oxytocin. In vivo, oxytocin decreased freezing responses in fear-conditioned rats without affecting the cardiovascular response. Thus, neuropeptidergic signaling can modulate the CeA outputs through separate neuronal circuits and thereby individually steer the various aspects of the fear response.

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The GABAergic system modulates respiratory activity and undergoes substantial changes during early life. Because this maturation process is sensitive to stress, we tested the hypothesis that gestational stress (GS) alters development of GABAergic modulation of respiratory control in rat pups. The respiratory responses to the selective GABAA receptor agonist muscimol were compared between pups born to dams subjected to GS (bright light and predator odor; 20 min/day from G9 to G19) or maintained under standard (control) conditions. Respiratory activity was measured on 1 and 4 days old pups of both sexes using in vivo (whole body plethysmography) and in vitro (isolated brainstem-spinal cord preparation) approaches. In intact pups, muscimol injection (0.75 mg/kg; i.p.) depressed minute ventilation; this response was less in GS pups, and at P4, muscimol augmented minute ventilation in GS females. Bath application of muscimol (0.01-0.5 μM) onto brainstem preparations decreased inspiratory (C4) burst frequency and amplitude in a dose-dependent manner; the responsiveness decreased with age. However, GS had limited effects on these results. We conclude that the results obtained in vivo are consistent with our hypothesis and show that GS delays maturation of GABAergic modulation of respiratory activity. The differences in the results observed between experimental approaches (in vivo versus in vitro) indicate that the effect of prenatal stress on maturation of GABAergic modulation of respiratory control mainly affects the peripheral/metabolic components of the respiratory control system.