164 research outputs found

    The spontaneous electrical activity of neurons in leech ganglia

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    Using the newly developed voltage-sensitive dye VF2.1.Cl, we monitored simultaneously the spontaneous electrical activity of 3c80 neurons in a leech ganglion, representing around 20% of the entire neuronal population. Neurons imaged on the ventral surface of the ganglion either fired spikes regularly at a rate of 1-5 Hz or fired sparse spikes irregularly. In contrast, neurons imaged on the dorsal surface, fired spikes in bursts involving several neurons. The overall degree of correlated electrical activity among leech neurons was limited in control conditions but increased in the presence of the neuromodulator serotonin. The spontaneous electrical activity in a leech ganglion is segregated in three main groups: neurons comprising Retzius cells, Anterior Pagoda, and Annulus Erector motoneurons firing almost periodically, a group of neurons firing sparsely and randomly, and a group of neurons firing bursts of spikes of varying durations. These three groups interact and influence each other only weakly

    Flavin-containing monooxygenase and ascorbic acid deficiency : Qualitative and quantitative differences

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    Ascorbic acid deficiency causes qualitative and quantitative differences in the guinea pig hepatic flavin-containing monooxygenase (FMO). Kinetic studies with purified FMO indicated no significant change in the apparent Km of dimethylaniline or NADPH in ascorbate-supplemented or -deficient animals. Following purification of ascorbate-deficient guinea pig FMO by DEAE-cellulose and blue agarose chromatography, exogenous FAD was required for 15% of the FMO microsomal activity recovered. In contrast, only 5% of the total microsomal enzyme recovered from ascorbate-supplemented animals required exogenous FAD. Furthermore, there was an enhanced sensitivity to time-dependent nonlinearity with the purified ascorbate-deficient guinea pig FMO. The degree of time-dependent nonlinearity was related to the concentration of substrate. Also, purified ascorbate-supplemented guinea pig FMO was stable for 4 weeks at -20[deg], whereas the ascorbate-deficient enzyme was inactivated. A decrease in the quantity of ascorbate-deficient guinea pig FMO compared to ascorbate-supplemented was indicated by a marked reduction in total FMO activity recovered from blue agarose chromatography and reduced protein staining intensity with SDS-PAGE at 56,000 daltons.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/26569/1/0000108.pd

    Linear and Nonlinear Measures Predict Swimming in the Leech

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    Stimulation of a trigger interneuron of an isolated nerve cord preparation of the medicinal leech, Hirudo medicinalis, sometimes leads to swimming; sometimes it does not. We investigate signals transmitted in the ventral cord of the leech after stimulation and seek quantitative measures that would make it possible to distinguish signals that predict swimming from those that do not. We find that a number of linear as well as nonlinear measures provide statistically significant distinctions between the two kinds of signals. The linear measures are the time dependence of (i) the standard deviation and (ii) the autocorrelation function at a small time delay. The nonlinear measures are (i) a measure of nonlinear predictability and (ii) the time dependence of a measure of the size of the embedded signal trajectory. Calculations using surrogate data suggest that the differences between the two classes of signals are dynamical as well as statistical

    Linear and Nonlinear Measures Predict Swimming in the Leech

    Get PDF
    Stimulation of a trigger interneuron of an isolated nerve cord preparation of the medicinal leech, Hirudo medicinalis, sometimes leads to swimming; sometimes it does not. We investigate signals transmitted in the ventral cord of the leech after stimulation and seek quantitative measures that would make it possible to distinguish signals that predict swimming from those that do not. We find that a number of linear as well as nonlinear measures provide statistically significant distinctions between the two kinds of signals. The linear measures are the time dependence of (i) the standard deviation and (ii) the autocorrelation function at a small time delay. The nonlinear measures are (i) a measure of nonlinear predictability and (ii) the time dependence of a measure of the size of the embedded signal trajectory. Calculations using surrogate data suggest that the differences between the two classes of signals are dynamical as well as statistical

    Identification of Neural Circuits by Imaging Coherent Electrical Activity with FRET-Based Dyes

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    AbstractWe show that neurons that underlie rhythmic patterns of electrical output may be identified by optical imaging and frequency-domain analysis. Our contrast agent is a two-component dye system in which changes in membrane potential modulate the relative emission between a pair of fluorophores. We demonstrate our methods with the circuit responsible for fictive swimming in the isolated leech nerve cord. The output of a motor neuron provides a reference signal for the phase-sensitive detection of changes in fluorescence from individual neurons in a ganglion. We identify known and possibly novel neurons that participate in the swim rhythm and determine their phases within a cycle. A variant of this approach is used to identify the postsynaptic followers of intracellularly stimulated neurons

    Ascorbic acid deficiency and hepatic UDP-glucuronyl transferase : Qualitative and quantitative differences

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    The effect of dietary ascorbate on hepatic UDP glucuronyltransferase (UDPGT) appears to be selective in that only certain isozymes of UDPGT are jeopardized. In this study, ascorbic acid deficiency produced a 68% reduction in the specific activity of hepatic UDPGT towards p-nitrophenol. Earlier studies showed a reduction in UDPGT activity towards p-aminophenol in ascorbate-deficient guinea pigs, whereas bilirubin and acetaminophen glucuronidation were unaffected. Kinetic studies suggest that p-aminophenol and p-nitrophenol are metabolized by a single isozyme in tnat p-nitrophenol was found to be a competitive inhibitor of p-aminophenol glucuronidation. Both qualitative and quantitative studies on partially purified UDPGT from ascorbate-deficient and ascorbate-supplemented guinea pigs were carried out to investigate the biochemical role of the vitamin. Qualitative differences were observed in UDPGT from ascorbate-deficient animals and included an increased lability to: thermal inactivation; storage at 4[deg]; and purification with UDP-glucuronic acid agarose column chromatography. Furthermore, an analysis of the microsomal membrane showed a 14% increase in membrane fluidity in ascorbate deficiency. Ascorbic acid added in vitro could not reverse the increase in fluidity observed in ascorbate-deficient microsomal membranes; however, ascorbylpalmitate, a more lipophilic form of the vitamin, was effective. Palmitic acid had no effect on membrane fluidity in microsomes from either the ascorbate-supplemented or ascorbate-deficient animals. This increase in membrane fluidity could not be explained by differences in cholesterol, total phospholipid, or phosphatidylcholine content of hepatic microsomes. Furthermore, a quantitative reduction in UDPGT partially purified from ascorbate-deficient guinea pigs was indicated by a marked reduction in protein banding at 55,000 daltons when compared to UDPGT partially purified from ascorbate-supplemented animals.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/28679/1/0000496.pd

    On the Dynamics of the Spontaneous Activity in Neuronal Networks

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    Most neuronal networks, even in the absence of external stimuli, produce spontaneous bursts of spikes separated by periods of reduced activity. The origin and functional role of these neuronal events are still unclear. The present work shows that the spontaneous activity of two very different networks, intact leech ganglia and dissociated cultures of rat hippocampal neurons, share several features. Indeed, in both networks: i) the inter-spike intervals distribution of the spontaneous firing of single neurons is either regular or periodic or bursting, with the fraction of bursting neurons depending on the network activity; ii) bursts of spontaneous spikes have the same broad distributions of size and duration; iii) the degree of correlated activity increases with the bin width, and the power spectrum of the network firing rate has a 1/f behavior at low frequencies, indicating the existence of long-range temporal correlations; iv) the activity of excitatory synaptic pathways mediated by NMDA receptors is necessary for the onset of the long-range correlations and for the presence of large bursts; v) blockage of inhibitory synaptic pathways mediated by GABA(A) receptors causes instead an increase in the correlation among neurons and leads to a burst distribution composed only of very small and very large bursts. These results suggest that the spontaneous electrical activity in neuronal networks with different architectures and functions can have very similar properties and common dynamics

    The role of ascorbate in antioxidant protection of biomembranes: Interaction with vitamin E and coenzyme Q

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    One of the vital roles of ascorbic acid (vitamin C) is to act as an antioxidant to protect cellular components from free radical damage. Ascorbic acid has been shown to scavenge free radicals directly in the aqueous phases of cells and the circulatory system. Ascorbic acid has also been proven to protect membrane and other hydrophobic compartments from such damage by regenerating the antioxidant form of vitamin E. In addition, reduced coenzyme Q, also a resident of hydrophobic compartments, interacts with vitamin E to regenerate its antioxidant form. The mechanism of vitamin C antioxidant function, the myriad of pathologies resulting from its clinical deficiency, and the many health benefits it provides, are reviewed.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/44796/1/10863_2004_Article_BF00762775.pd
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