5 research outputs found

    Long-term plastic changes in galanin innervation in the rat basal forebrain

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    Galanin immunoreactive fibers hyperinnervate remaining cholinergic basal forebrain neurons in Alzheimer\u27s disease, perhaps exacerbating the cholinergic deficit. The purpose of our study is to determine whether a similar phenomenon occurs following intraparenchymal injection of 192 IgG-saporin, a specific cholinergic neurotoxin, within the nucleus of the horizontal limb of the diagonal band of Broca. Immunotoxic lesion produced on average a 31% reduction in cholinergic cell counts ipsilateral to the lesion, compared to the contralateral side. Increased galanin immunoreactivity, suggestive of increased fiber density, was observed within and adjacent to the lesion in 28 out of 36 rats, and this effect persisted across time up to 6 months (the longest time examined). We observed a parallel increase in the number of galanin positive neurons ipsilateral to the lesion, compared to the contralateral side. No correlative change could be detected in the number of galaninergic neurons in the amygdala or the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. There was no statistically significant correlation between the extent of cholinergic cell loss and the increase in galanin immunoreactivity surrounding the lesion. Yet, since both of these changes persist over time, we suggest that galanin plasticity is triggered by neuronal damage. Our model can be useful to test the role that galanin plays in the regulation of acetylcholine and the efficacy of galanin inhibitors as potential therapeutic interventions in Alzheimer\u27s disease. © 2002 IBRO. Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved

    Molecular and Physiological Responses to Juvenile Traumatic Brain Injury: Focus on Growth and Metabolism

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    Traumatic brain injury (TBI), one of the most frequent causes of neurologic and neurobehavioral morbidity in the pediatric population, can result in lifelong challenges not only for patients, but also for their families. Survivors of a brain injury experienced during childhood – when the brain is undergoing a period of rapid development – frequently experience unique challenges as the consequences of their injuries are overlaid on normal developmental changes. Experimental studies have significantly advanced our understanding of the mechanisms and underlying molecular underpinnings of the injury response and recovery process following a TBI in the developing brain. In this paper, normal and TBI-related alterations in growth, development and metabolism are comprehensively reviewed in the postweanling/juvenile age range in the rat (postnatal days 21–60). As part of this review, TBI-related changes in gene expression are presented, with a focus on the injury-induced alterations related to cerebral growth and metabolism, and discussed in the context of existing literature related to physiological and behavioral responses to experimental TBI. Increasing evidence from the existing literature and from our own gene microarray data indicates that molecular responses related to growth, development and metabolism may play a particularly important role in the injury response and the recovery trajectory following developmental TBI. While gene expression analysis shows many of these changes occur at the level of transcription, a comprehensive review of other studies suggests that the control of metabolic substrates may preferentially be regulated through changes in transporters and enzymatic activity. The interrelation between cellular metabolism and activity-dependent neuroplasticity shows great promise as an area for future study for an optimal translation of experimental data to clinical TBI, with the ultimate goal of guiding therapeutic interventions

    Neuroprotective Role for Galanin in Alzheimer’s Disease

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    Galanin (GAL) and GAL receptors (GALR) are overexpressed in degenerating brain regions associated with cognitive decline in Alzheimer\u27s disease (AD). The functional consequences of GAL plasticity in AD are unclear. GAL inhibits cholinergic transmission in the hippocampus and impairs spatial memory in rodent models, suggesting that GAL overexpression exacerbates cognitive impairment in AD. By contrast, gene expression profiling of individual cholinergic basal forebrain (CBF) neurons aspirated from AD tissue revealed that GAL hyperinnervation positively regulates mRNAs that promote CBF neuronal function and survival. GAL also exerts neuroprotective effects in rodent models of neurotoxicity. These data support the growing concept that GAL overexpression preserves CBF neuron function, which may in turn delay the onset of symptoms of AD. Further elucidation of GAL activity in selectively vulnerable brain regions will help gauge the therapeutic potential of GALR ligands in the treatment of AD

    Galanin, Galanin Receptors, and Drug Targets

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