20 research outputs found
Liens entre microbiote intestinal et comportement de type anxiodépressif chez le rongeur
International audienc
The CCK(2) agonist BC-264 decreases predatory fear freezing at high but not low dosages in PVG hooded rats during initial exposure to a cat.
BC-264 a CCK(2) agonist reverses chronically developed habituated predatory fear freezing behavior in PVG hooded rats. However, the acute effects of BC264 have not been previously examined. The effects of BC-264 (0.1-30microg/kg) on the mean percentage of PVG hooded rat freezing during an initial first time 20min cat exposure were calculated. At higher doses (15 or 30microg/kg) but not lower doses (0.1-1microg/kg) BC264 statistically significantly decreased freezing compared to control (p<0.001)
The chemokine stromal cell-derived factor-1/CXCL12 activates the nigrostriatal dopamine system.
We recently demonstrated that dopaminergic (DA) neurons of the rat substantia nigra constitutively expressed CXCR4, receptor for the chemokine stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1)/CXCL12 (SDF-1). To check the physiological relevance of such anatomical observation, in vitro and in vivo approaches were used. Patch clamp recording of DA neurons in rat substantia nigra slices revealed that SDF-1 (10 nmol/L) induced: (i) a depolarization and increased action potential frequency; and (ii) switched the firing pattern of depolarized DA neurons from a tonic to a burst firing mode. This suggests that SDF-1 could increase DA release from neurons. Consistent with this hypothesis, unilateral intranigral injection of SDF-1 (50 ng) in freely moving rat decreased DA content and increased extracellular concentrations of DA and metabolites in the ipsilateral dorsal striatum, as shown using microdialysis. Furthermore, intranigral SDF-1 injection induced a contralateral circling behavior. These effects of SDF-1 were mediated via CXCR4 as they were abrogated by administration of a selective CXCR4 antagonist. Altogether, these data demonstrate that SDF-1, via CXCR4, activates nigrostriatal DA transmission. They show that the central functions of chemokines are not restricted, as originally thought, to neuroinflammation, but extend to neuromodulatory actions on well-defined neuronal circuits in non-pathological conditions