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Correlation between oxytocin neuronal sensitivity and oxytocin receptor binding: An electrophysiological and autoradiographical study comparing rat and guinea pig hippocampus

Authors: Raggenbass, M. Tribollet, E. Dubois-Dauphin, M. Dreifuss, J.J. (Univ. Medical Center, Geneva (Switzerland))
 
Abstract: In transverse hippocampal slices from rat and guinea pig brains, the authors obtained unitary extracellular recordings from nonpyramidal neurones located in or near the stratum pyramidale in the CA1 field and in the transition region between the CA1 and the subiculum.^In rats, these neurones responded to oxytocin at 50-1,000 nM by a reversible increase in firing rate.^The oxytocin-induced excitation was suppressed by a synthetic structural analogue that acts as a potent, selective antioxytocic on peripheral receptors.^Nonpyramidal neurones were also excited by carbachol at 0.5-10 μM.^The effect of this compound was postsynaptic and was blocked by the muscarinic antagonist atropine.^In guinea pigs, by contrast, nonpyramidal neurones were unaffected by oxytocin, although they were excited by carbachol.^Light microscopic autoradiography, carried out using a radioiodinated selective antioxytocic as a ligand, revealed labeling in the subiculum and in the CA1 area of the hippocampus of rats, whereas no oxytocin-binding sites were detected in the hippocampus of guinea pigs.^The results indicate (i) that a hippocampal action of oxytocin is species-dependent and (ii) that a positive correlation exists between neuronal responsiveness to oxytocin and the presence in the hippocampus of high-affinity binding sites for this peptide.
Publication Date: 01 Jan 1989
Resource Type: Journal Article
Resource Relation: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America ; Vol/Issue: 86:2
Country of Publication: United States
Language: English
Keywords relating to this report:
-- BIOCHEMISTRY-- TRACER TECHNIQUES
CYTOCHEMISTRY
GUINEA PIGS
HIPPOCAMPUS-- AUTORADIOGRAPHY
IODINE 125
LABELLED COMPOUNDS
LIGANDS
NERVE CELLS
OXYTOCIN-- CROSS-LINKING
PHYSIOLOGY
RATS
RECEPTORS-- CROSS-LINKING
SENSITIVITY
Related subjects:
ANIMAL CELLS
ANIMALS
BETA DECAY RADIOISOTOPES
BIOCHEMISTRY
BODY
BRAIN
CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
CHEMICAL REACTIONS
CHEMISTRY
DAYS LIVING RADIOISOTOPES
ELECTRON CAPTURE RADIOISOTOPES
HORMONES
INTERMEDIATE MASS NUCLEI
IODINE ISOTOPES
ISOTOPES
MAMMALS
MEMBRANE PROTEINS
NERVOUS SYSTEM
NUCLEI
ODD-EVEN NUCLEI
ORGANIC COMPOUNDS
ORGANS
PEPTIDE HORMONES
PITUITARY HORMONES
POLYMERIZATION
PROTEINS
RADIOISOTOPES
RODENTS
SOMATIC CELLS
VERTEBRATES