| Literature DB >> 17506898 |
Michael I Sandstrom1, George V Rebec.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A physiological increase in extracellular ascorbate (AA), an antioxidant vitamin found throughout the striatum, elevates extracellular glutamate (GLU). To determine the role of behavioral arousal in this interaction, microdialysis was used to measure striatal GLU efflux in rats tested in either a lights-off or lights-on condition while reverse dialysis either maintained the concentration of AA at 250 microM or increased it to 1000 microM to approximate endogenous changes.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17506898 PMCID: PMC1884166 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2202-8-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurosci ISSN: 1471-2202 Impact factor: 3.288
Figure 1Locomotor responses to light manipulation among the two groups of animals tested: open bars indicate the group experiencing continuous ambient light; hatched bars indicate those experiencing 75-mins of darkness restricted to the experimental period. Mean (± SEM) quadrant crossings according to periods are collapsed across dialysis session in the main graph as AA treatment was found to have no effect on locomotor behavior. Status of lights is indicated by the upper X-axis, and the three consecutive dialysis periods by the lower from left to right. Note the increase in behavior associated with turning off lights during the experimental period, only among those animals that experienced lights off (hatched bars) that lingered when lights were turned back on (post period). * p < 0.02 for between-subject comparisons of lights-on versus darkness exposed animals (hatched versus open bars); † p < 0.05 for within-subjects comparisons with initial (lights on) baseline among darkness exposed animals (hatched bars only).
Figure 2GLU changes are presented as mean percent change from the median of four baseline collections (± SEM) for the dialysates indicated on the abscissa. A combination of 250 μM-AA CSF and "Lights ON" conditions were utilized wherever white or grey-filled icons appear. Black-filled icons indicate when animals were either responding to darkness (A & B), treated with 1000 μM AA (C & D), or both (B & D). The within-subjects factor was AA-treatment, as all animals were treated with both AA levels, 250 μM and 1000 μM AA, in separate dialysis sessions during the experimental period indicated below each graph. Separate graphs depict the GLU level changes occurring in response to lights-out (A & B), or AA treatment (C & D). The boxes within each graph depict time points where separate analyses were performed (last baseline through 45 min dashed, last baseline through 75 min solid). Repeated measures ANOVA analyses within the dashed boxes were significant in A, B, & C. The first 45-min was the only period during which a significant GLU increases in response to AA treatment across collections was exposed, and only during the "LIGHTS ON" experiment (C). Note the large effects of darkness exposure (Experimental period, black-filled icons) on striatal GLU levels depicted in graphs A & B. When the two "Post" collections (black & grey-filled versus white-filled) were included, significant increases in GLU levels occurred across all collections (15–120 min) compared to baseline when animals treated with 1000 μM AA were exposed to darkness (B). However increases in GLU were only significant during the Experimental period (15–75 min) when animals were treated with 250 μM AA (A).
Figure 3Representative microdialysis probe placement shown in a 40 μm coronal section. Wider cortex damage represents the intracerebral guide cannula termination, while the gliosis seen ventrally shows the typical terminal end of the 4.0 mm semipermeable microdialysis probe tip.