Literature DB >> 7606490

Glucose-sensitive neurons of the globus pallidus: I. Neurochemical characteristics.

L Lénárd1, Z Karádi, B Faludi, A Czurkó, C Niedetzky, I Vida, H Nishino.   

Abstract

The lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) and globus pallidus (GP) are basically involved in the regulation of feeding and metabolic processes. In the LHA, glucose-sensitive (GS) neurons were described: their activity was found to be specifically suppressed by electrophoretic application of glucose, and these neurons appeared to be also influenced by various feeding-associated neurochemical signals. The main goal of the present experiments was to examine whether similar GS neurons exist in the GP. In addition, neurochemical attributes of the cells were also tested. In anesthetized rats and anesthetized or awake monkeys, single-neuron activity of the GP was recorded by means of carbon fiber multibarreled microelectrodes and the effects of glucose, glutamate (Gt), GABA, dopamine (DA), noradrenaline (NA) and acetylcholine (Ach) were studied. In both the rat and monkey GP, approximately 12% of the neurons examined responded, with inhibition, to glucose. GP neurons, in a high proportion, were also inhibited by GABA and NA. After application of Gt, DA, or Ach, activity increase or decrease occurred. GS neurons exhibited remarkable sensitivity to these neurochemicals previously identified as neurotransmitters of the complex pallidal, extrapyramidal-limbic neuron loops. The results, along with previous data, indicate that GS cells of the GP, while possessing complex neurochemical characteristics, may belong to a hierarchically organized central glucose-monitoring system essential in the regulation of feeding.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7606490     DOI: 10.1016/0361-9230(94)00269-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res Bull        ISSN: 0361-9230            Impact factor:   4.077


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