Activity of magnocellular neuroendocrine cells in the hypothalamus of unanaesthetized monkeys
1. We recorded with tungsten micro-electrodes the spontaneous and evoked activity of single cells in the supraoptic nucleus (n.s.o.) and internuclear zone (i.n.z.) of trained, unanaesthetized monkeys who accepted experimental restraints and pituitary gland stimulation without anxiety. 2. Of the 125...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1973-08, Vol.232 (3), p.515-543 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. We recorded with tungsten micro-electrodes the spontaneous and evoked activity of single cells in the supraoptic nucleus
(n.s.o.) and internuclear zone (i.n.z.) of trained, unanaesthetized monkeys who accepted experimental restraints and pituitary
gland stimulation without anxiety.
2. Of the 125 hypothalamic neurones analysed, 109 (87%) we classified as magnocellular neuroendocrine cells on the basis of
the anatomical location of the cells, the pattern of spontaneous discharge, the effect of pituitary gland stimulation and
the response to arousing sensory stimuli.
3. Sixteen (13%) of the cells studied under identical conditions we labelled as non-neuroendocrine cells. Located in the i.n.z.
and supraoptic nucleusâoptic tract junction (n.s.o.ât.o.), these cells responded to arousing sensory stimuli, showed `continuously
active' (i.n.z.) and `high-frequency burster' (n.s.o.ât.o.) patterns of discharge and were not driven by pituitary stimuli.
4. Thirty-seven (30%) of the magnocellular neuroendocrine cells we describe as `identified' because with pituitary gland stimulation
we evoked antidromic potentials, mean latency 8·1 msec and mean conduction velocity 0·8 m/sec, with collision between orthodromic
and antidromic potentials. Antidromic excitation of neuroendocrine cells was followed by inhibition of spontaneous discharge
of cells for 80-125 msec suggesting the presence of recurrent collaterals in primate neuroendocrine cells. Seventy-two (57%)
of the magnocellular neuroendocrine cells we designated as `non-identified' because of lack of response, failure of collision
or non-tested to pituitary gland stimulation. None of these mangocellular neuroendocrine cells, `identified' or `non-identified',
responded to non-noxious arousing sensory stimuli.
5. We find seventy-nine (63%) magnocellular neuroendocrine cells in the supraoptic nucleus (n.s.o.) and thirty (24%) magnocellular
neuroendocrine cells in the internuclear zone (i.n.z.) with three basic patterns of spontaneous activity: `silent' cells (s.,
four cells, 3%); `low-frequency burster' cells (l.f.b., twenty-six cells, 21%); and `continuously active' cells (c.a., seventy-nine
cells, 63%).
6. Twenty-six (21%) l.f.b. magnocellular neuroendocrine cells exhibited regular, repetitive, periodic firing patterns with
a cycle of 17 sec, involving 5 sec of discharge at 5 spikes/sec and 12 sec of silence. The 26 spikes/burst showed no consistent
pattern of serial interspike interval distribution. The burst |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1973.sp010284 |