نتایج جستجو برای: gaba

تعداد نتایج: 16342  

Introduction: Synaptosomes are sealed particles that contain mitochondria, cytoskeleton and vesicles which are necessary to synaptic events like neurotransmitter release and uptake in the nervous system. However, the effect of high and low temperatures on synaptosome membrane integrity and function during a time course after its extraction is less known. The purpose of this study was to assess ...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 1997
J W Gibbs M D Shumate D A Coulter

Alterations in GABAergic function associated with the development of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) were examined with the use of patch-clamp recording techniques in dentate granule (DG) and CA1 neurons acutely isolated from control and spontaneously epileptic rats in which TLE was elicited by pilocarpine injection 3-17 wk before use. The maximal efficacy of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in acti...

2017
Moyoko Tomiyasu Noriko Aida Jun Shibasaki Masahiro Umeda Katsutoshi Murata Keith Heberlein Mark A. Brown Eiji Shimizu Hiroshi Tsuji Takayuki Obata

Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is the major inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain, and plays a key role in brain development. However, the in vivo levels of brain GABA in early life are unknown. Using edited MRS, in vivo GABA can be detected as GABA+ signal with contamination of macromolecule signals. GABA+ is evaluated as the peak ratio of GABA+/reference compound, for which creatine (Cr) o...

Journal: :Journal of neuroscience research 2004
M Jelitai M Anderová K Markó K Kékesi P Koncz E Syková E Madarász

gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) has been known to function as an autocrine/paracrine signal molecule in addition to its well-known inhibitory neurotransmitter function. Studies on the developing brain and on primary brain cell cultures provided evidence for a variety of GABA functions in periods preceding the formation of synapses. The exact role of GABA in the early neural development, however,...

2010
Richard W. Carr Ruth Sittl Johannes Fleckenstein Peter Grafe

BACKGROUND A proportion of small diameter primary sensory neurones innervating human skin are chemosensitive. They respond in a receptor dependent manner to chemical mediators of inflammation as well as naturally occurring algogens, thermogens and pruritogens. The neurotransmitter GABA is interesting in this respect because in animal models of neuropathic pain GABA pre-synaptically regulates no...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2003
Jeffry S Isaacson Harald Vitten

In the mammalian olfactory bulb, mitral cell dendrites release glutamate onto the dendritic spines of granule cells, which in turn release GABA back onto mitral dendrites. This local synaptic circuit forms the basis for reciprocal dendrodendritic inhibition mediated by ionotropic GABA(A) receptors in mitral cells. Surprisingly little is known about neurotransmitter modulation of dendrodendritic...

Journal: :Journal of neuroscience methods 2006
Niraj J Muni Haohua Qian Nasser M Qtaishat Richard A Gemeinhart David R Pepperberg

The present paper describes the design, construction and testing of a temperature-sensitive N-isopropylacrylamide hydrogel device for studying the controlled presentation of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) to GABA(C) membrane receptors expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. Upon temperature lowering, the GABA-loaded hydrogel positioned near the surface of the GABA(C)-expressing oocyte elicits a me...

Journal: :Neuron 2011
Karen M. Crosby Wataru Inoue Quentin J. Pittman Jaideep S. Bains

Changes in food availability alter the output of hypothalamic nuclei that underlie energy homeostasis. Here, we asked whether food deprivation impacts the ability of GABA synapses in the dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH), an important integrator of satiety signals, to undergo activity-dependent changes. GABA synapses in DMH slices from satiated rats exhibit endocannabinoid-mediated long-term depre...

Journal: :Cellular signalling 2007
Haijun Tu Philippe Rondard Chanjuan Xu Federica Bertaso Fangli Cao Xueying Zhang Jean-Philippe Pin Jianfeng Liu

gamma-aminobutyric acid type B (GABA(B)) receptor is an allosteric complex made of two subunits, GABA(B1) and GABA(B2). GABA(B2) plays a major role in the coupling to G protein whereas GABA(B1) binds GABA. It has been shown that GABA(B) receptor activates ERK(1/2) in neurons of the central nervous system, but the molecular mechanisms underlying this event are poorly characterized. Here, we demo...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 1999
V Lopantsev P A Schwartzkroin

The relationship between postsynaptic inhibitory responses [the fast GABA(A)-mediated inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP) and the slow GABA(B)-mediated IPSP] were investigated in hippocampal CA3 pyramidal cells. Mossy fiber-evoked GABA(B)-mediated IPSPs were, paradoxically, of greater amplitude in cells with resting membrane potential of -62 mV (13.6 +/- 0.5 mV; mean +/- SE) as compared wi...

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