dizocilpine-maleate and 4-4-dicarboxy-5-pyridoxylproline

dizocilpine-maleate has been researched along with 4-4-dicarboxy-5-pyridoxylproline* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for dizocilpine-maleate and 4-4-dicarboxy-5-pyridoxylproline

ArticleYear
Leptin Sensitizes NTS Neurons to Vagal Input by Increasing Postsynaptic NMDA Receptor Currents.
    The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience, 2020, 09-09, Volume: 40, Issue:37

    Leptin signaling within the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) contributes to the control of food intake, and injections of leptin into the NTS reduce meal size and increase the efficacy of vagus-mediated satiation signals. Leptin receptors (LepRs) are expressed by vagal afferents as well as by a population of NTS neurons. However, the electrophysiological properties of LepR-expressing NTS neurons have not been well characterized, and it is unclear how leptin might act on these neurons to reduce food intake. To address this question, we recorded from LepR-expressing neurons in horizontal brain slices containing the NTS from male and female LepR-Cre X Rosa-tdTomato mice. We found that the vast majority of NTS LepR neurons received monosynaptic innervation from vagal afferent fibers and LepR neurons exhibited large synaptic NMDA receptor (NMDAR)-mediated currents compared with non-LepR neurons. During high-frequency stimulation of vagal afferents, leptin increased the size of NMDAR-mediated currents, but not AMPAR-mediated currents. Leptin also increased the size of evoked EPSPs and the ability of low-intensity solitary tract stimulation to evoke action potentials in LepR neurons. These effects of leptin were blocked by bath applying a competitive NMDAR antagonist (DCPP-ene) or by an NMDAR channel blocker applied through the recording pipette (MK-801). Last, feeding studies using male rats demonstrate that intra-NTS injections of DCPP-ene attenuate reduction of overnight food intake following intra-NTS leptin injection. Our results suggest that leptin acts in the NTS to reduce food intake by increasing NMDAR-mediated currents, thus enhancing NTS sensitivity to vagal inputs.

    Topics: Animals; Dizocilpine Maleate; Eating; Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists; Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials; Female; Leptin; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Neurons; Proline; Pyridines; Rats; Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate; Solitary Nucleus; Synapses; Vagus Nerve

2020