Metabolic and neuroanatomical correlates of barrel-rolling and oculoclonic convulsions induced by intraventricular endothelin-1 : a novel peptidergic signaling mechanism in visuovestibular and oculomotor regulation ?

The neuroactive peptide endothelin-1 has receptors distributed abundantly among subdivisions and nuclei of the visuovestibular and oculomotor systems. In previous work, we and others described the convulsive manifestations resulting from central injection of this neuropeptide, including nystagmus, o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental brain research 1993-08, Vol.95 (3), p.397-408
Hauptverfasser: GROSS, P. M, BENINGER, R. J, SHAVER, S. W, WAINMAN, D. S, ESPINOSA, F. J, WEAVER, D. F
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The neuroactive peptide endothelin-1 has receptors distributed abundantly among subdivisions and nuclei of the visuovestibular and oculomotor systems. In previous work, we and others described the convulsive manifestations resulting from central injection of this neuropeptide, including nystagmus, oculoclonus, exophthalmos, tonic hindlimb extension, and a generalized repetitive motor disturbance called barrel-rolling. We applied the quantitative, autoradiographic [14C]deoxyglucose method to examine the hypothesis that visuovestibular and oculomotor structures would become metabolically stimulated when endothelin was introduced into the brain via the ventricular system in conscious rats. Since previous work had demonstrated that hypermetabolic responses to endothelin in other neural systems were inhibited by an antagonist of neuronal calcium L-type channels, nimodipine, we further tested whether the increased function of vestibulooculomotor nuclei whose metabolic activity was sensitive to endothelin could be altered following nimodipine pretreatment via the ventricle. A single unilateral injection of endothelin (9 pmol in 3 microliters saline) into a lateral ventricle provoked significantly increased rates of glucose metabolism in 22 of 39 individual anatomical structures of the visuovestibular and oculomotor systems. Among those affected were the superficial stratum of the caudal superior colliculus (+25%), the optic tract bilaterally (+35 to 43%), the oculomotor cranial nerve nuclei (III, IV, VI; range of +21 to 47%), and the medial terminal nucleus of the accessory optic tract which harbors dense fields of endothelin binding sites (bilateral increase of +70 to 96%). Several other nuclei involved in the proprioceptive and visuovestibular disturbance caused by endothelin displayed increased metabolic activity, including the cuneate, gracile, sensory trigeminal, and prepositus hypoglossal nuclei, the vestibular subnuclear system, and the cerebellar flocculus. Identification of hypermetabolic responsivity to endothelin in these structures provides further information on the anatomical substrates mediating the behavioral phenomenology of endothelin-induced motor convulsions which involve the paroxysmal participation of the extraocular muscles and motor control systems producing barrel-rolling convulsions. Nimodipine pretreatment inhibited both the convulsive activity and the cerebral hypermetabolic responses to intraventricular endothelin. The results indicat
ISSN:0014-4819
1432-1106
DOI:10.1007/BF00227132