12 research outputs found

    Characterization of nicotine’s ability to serve as a negative feature in a Pavlovian appetitive conditioning task in rats

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    Rationale Pavlovian feature negative discriminations have been widely used to understand inhibitory conditioning processes using exteroceptive stimuli. Comparatively little is known about inhibitory conditioning processes using a drug state as a negative feature. A negative feature signals that presentation of a conditional stimulus (CS) will not be paired with an unconditioned stimulus. Objectives: The present research examined whether nicotine served as a negative feature and started characterizing its properties. Methods and results: In acquisition, rats received intermixed saline and nicotine (0.4 mg/kg, base) sessions. On saline sessions, a 15-s light CS was paired with 4-s access to sucrose; the CS was presented on nicotine sessions, but sucrose was withheld. The discrimination was acquired with more goal tracking during the CS on saline sessions. Nicotine’s inhibition of this conditioned response (CR) was sensitive to nicotine dose (ED50=0.225) and injection to testing interval (CR returned at 200 min). Mecamylamine pretreatment, but not hexamethonium, produced a loss of inhibitory control by nicotine suggesting a role for central nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. Amphetamine, bupropion, arecoline, and chlordiazepoxide, but not caffeine, substituted for the nicotine feature. However, in locomotor tests, amphetamine and bupropion increased activity; arecoline and chlordiazepoxide decreased activity. For this reason, the motor effects of these ligands could not be dissociated from substitution via shared stimulus properties. Conclusions: This feature negative task provides a preclinical model for studying how drug states inhibit responding, although identifying the process(es) mediating CR inhibition will require further research

    Termination of calcium puffs and coupled closings of inositol trisphosphate receptor channels

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    Calcium puffs are localized Ca(2+) signals mediated by Ca(2+) release from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) through clusters of inositol trisphosphate receptor (IP3R) channels. The recruitment of IP3R channels during puffs depends on Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release, a regenerative process that must be terminated to maintain control of cell signaling and prevent Ca(2+) cytotoxicity. Here, we studied puff termination using total internal reflection microscopy to resolve the gating of individual IP3R channels during puffs in intact SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. We find that the kinetics of IP3R channel closing differ from that expected for independent, stochastic gating, in that multiple channels tend to remain open together longer than predicted from their individual open lifetimes and then close in near-synchrony. This behavior cannot readily be explained by previously proposed termination mechanisms, including Ca(2+)-inhibition of IP3Rs and local depletion of Ca(2+) in the ER lumen. Instead, we postulate that the gating of closely adjacent IP3Rs is coupled, possibly via allosteric interactions, suggesting an important mechanism to ensure robust puff termination in addition to Ca(2+)-inactivation

    lnteroceptive Pavlovian conditioning with nicotine as the conditional stimulus varies as a function of the number of conditioning trials and unpaired sucrose deliveries

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    In rats, the pharmacological (interoceptive) effects of nicotine can serve as a signal (conditional stimulus) in a Pavlovian (classical) conditioning task. In this task, nicotine administration (0.4 mg base/kg, subcutaneous) is typically paired with intermittent access to a liquid sucrose unconditional stimulus; sucrose is withheld on saline sessions. An increase in sucrose receptacle entries (goal tracking) on nicotine sessions indicates conditioning. Given our limited understanding of the functional relationships controlling conditioned responding to a nicotine conditional stimulus, the present research examined nicotine\u27s sensitivity to several manipulations shown to affect the conditioned responding in more widely studied Pavlovian conditioning tasks that use exteroceptive conditional stimuli: number of nicotine conditional stimulus-sucrose unconditional stimulus pairings per session (0, 3, 9, 18, or 36) and the impact of sucrose deliveries in saline sessions. Differential goal tracking developed in fewer sessions and asymptotic conditioned responding magnitude was greater with more nicotine-sucrose pairings. Further, goal tracking was more resistant to extinction (unconditional stimulus withheld) with more conditional-unconditional stimulus pairings during the acquisition phase. The discrimination was not acquired when sucrose presentations (9 or 18) also occurred during saline sessions. Furthermore, expression of the discrimination was disrupted when sucrose was presented in saline sessions; this disruption resulted from goal tracking in saline sessions. These results are consistent with the notion that nicotine-evoked goal tracking results from interoceptive conditioning processes

    Ca2+ Puffs Originate from Preestablished Stable Clusters of Inositol Trisphosphate Receptors

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    Intracellular calcium ion (Ca2+) signaling crucially depends on the clustered organization of inositol trisphosphate receptors (IP(3)Rs) in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane. These ligand-gated ion channels liberate Ca2+ to generate local signals known as Ca2+ puffs. We tested the hypothesis that IP3 itself elicits rapid clustering of IP(3)Rs by using flash photolysis of caged IP3 in conjunction with high-resolution Ca2+ imaging to monitor the activity and localization of individual IP(3)Rs within intact mammalian cells. Our results indicate that Ca2+ puffs arising with latencies as short as 100 to 200 ms after photorelease of IP3 already involve at least four IP3R channels, and that this number does not subsequently grow. Moreover, single active IP(3)Rs show limited mobility, and stochastic simulations suggest that aggregation of IP(3)Rs at puff sites by a diffusional trapping mechanism would require many seconds. We thus conclude that puff sites represent preestablished, stable clusters of IP(3)Rs and that functional IP(3)Rs are not readily diffusible within the ER membrane

    Termination of calcium puffs and coupled closings of inositol trisphosphate receptor channels

    No full text
    Calcium puffs are localized Ca(2+) signals mediated by Ca(2+) release from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) through clusters of inositol trisphosphate receptor (IP(3)R) channels. The recruitment of IP(3)R channels during puffs depends on Ca2+-induced Ca(2+) release, a regenerative process that must be terminated to maintain control of cell signaling and prevent Ca(2+) cytotoxicity. Here, we studied puff termination using total internal reflection microscopy to resolve the gating of individual IP(3)R channels during puffs in intact SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. We find that the kinetics of IP(3)R channel closing differ from that expected for independent, stochastic gating, in that multiple channels tend to remain open together longer than predicted from their individual open lifetimes and then close in near-synchrony. This behavior cannot readily be explained by previously proposed termination mechanisms, including Ca(2+)-inhibition of IP(3)Rs and local depletion of Ca(2+) in the ER lumen. Instead, we postulate that the gating of closely adjacent IP(3)Rs is coupled, possibly via allosteric interactions, suggesting an important mechanism to ensure robust puff termination in addition to Ca(2+)-inactivation

    Superresolution Localization of Single Functional IP3R Channels Utilizing Ca2+ Flux as a Readout

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    The subcellular localization of membrane Ca2+ channels is crucial for their functioning, but is difficult to study because channels may be distributed more closely than the resolution of conventional microscopy is able to detect. We describe a technique, stochastic channel Ca2+ nanoscale resolution (SCCaNR), employing Ca2+-sensitive fluorescent dyes to localize stochastic openings and closings of single Ca2+-permeable channels within <50 nm, and apply it to examine the clustered arrangement of inositol trisphosphate receptor (IP3R) channels underlying local Ca2+ puffs. Fluorescence signals (blips) arising from single functional IP3Rs are almost immotile (diffusion coefficient <0.003 μm2 s−1), as are puff sites over prolonged periods, suggesting that the architecture of this signaling system is stable and not subject to rapid, dynamic rearrangement. However, rapid stepwise changes in centroid position of fluorescence are evident within the durations of individual puffs. These apparent movements likely result from asynchronous gating of IP3Rs distributed within clusters that have an overall diameter of ∼400 nm, indicating that the nanoscale architecture of IP3R clusters is important in shaping local Ca2+ signals. We anticipate that SCCaNR will complement superresolution techniques such as PALM and STORM for studies of Ca2+ channels as it obviates the need for photoswitchable labels and provides functional as well as spatial information
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