Specific binding of 59Fe to various brain structures was investigated in rats using nanomolar concentrations of "FeCl, and quantitative autoradiography. Saturation studies revealed high affinity binding (k, in the nanomolar range) with binding sites density (B,,J which varied in different brain regi
Autoradiographic analysis of second messenger and neurotransmitter receptor bindings in the strionigral system of the postischemic rat brain
β Scribed by Dr. H. Nagasawa; T. Araki; K. Kogure
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 718 KB
- Volume
- 33
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0360-4012
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
We studied the postischemic alterations of second messenger and receptor systems focusing on the striobigral pathway in order to clarify the mechanism of the delayed neuronal changes in remote areas of the rat brain after transient focal ischemia. Chronological changes of [^3^H]forskolin and [^3^H]SCH 23390 binding sites and ^45^Ca accumulation were determined by using autoradiographic methods after 90 min of right middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion and after such occlusion followed by differnt periods of recirculation. After the ischemic insult, ^45^Ca accumulation extended to the lateral segment of the caudate putamen (CPuβL) and to the cerebral cortex, both supplied by the occluded MCA. After the ischemia, [^3^H]forskolin binding sites were found to be markedly decreased in the early stage in the CPuβL, the ischemic focus in this model, but reduction of the dopamine Dβ1 receptor sites was first detected there 1 day after the ischemia. On the contrary, in the exoβfocal remote areas, there was no alteration of either [^3^H]forskolin of Dβ1 receptor binding sites on day 1. However, 3 days after the ischemia, marked reduction of both these binding sites was first observed in the ipsilateral substantia nigra, which had not been directly affected by the original ischemic insult. These postischemic delayed phenomena observed in the substantia nigra developed concurrently with abnormal ^45^Ca accumulation. These results suggest that strionigral terminal degeneration in the substantia nigra is caused by precedent ischemic damage of the ipsilateral caudate putamen and that intracellular signal transduction including both second messenger and receptor systems may be involved prior to the neuronal damage in the exoβfocal postischemic brain areas. Β© 1992 WileyβLiss, Inc.
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