cyclic-gmp and Movement-Disorders

cyclic-gmp has been researched along with Movement-Disorders* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for cyclic-gmp and Movement-Disorders

ArticleYear
Cyclic nucleotides in cerebrospinal fluid of drug-free Parkinson patients.
    European neurology, 1987, Volume: 27, Issue:1

    Concentrations of cyclic nucleotides--adenosine-3',5'-monophosphate (c-AMP) and guanosine-3',5'-monophosphate (c-GMP)--were measured in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 17 drug-free Parkinson patients and 12 controls. No significant difference between the cyclic nucleotide contents (p greater than 0.05) in CSF of patients and controls was detected, nor was there a correlation between the content and the degree of neurological disability. Besides, no changes in the cyclic nucleotide contents were detected in the subgroups of patients according to the prominence of tremor or rigidity/akinesia as the main symptoms of the disease.

    Topics: Cyclic AMP; Cyclic GMP; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Movement Disorders; Muscle Rigidity; Parkinson Disease; Tremor

1987
Electrophysiology of Purkinje neurons in the weaver mouse: iontophoresis of neurotransmitters and cyclic nucleotides, and stimulation of the nucleus locus coeruleus.
    Brain research, 1976, Sep-10, Volume: 114, Issue:1

    We compared the Purkinje cells of adult normal and weaver mutant (wv/wv) mice by iontophoretic and electrophysiological tests. Although weaver Purkinje cells fire spontaneously at a rate (38 Hz) similar to normal mouse neurons (40 Hz), several abnormalities of firing were seen: high frequency bursts of single (simple) spikes occurred in 5-10-sec episodes in 38% of weaver cells, compared to 8% in normal mice; spontaneous complex spikes (climbing fiber-like burst responses) occurred in several different forms in a given Purkinje cell. As in normal mice and rats, the spontaneous single spike activity is readily depressed by electrical stimulation of the locus coeruleus, the presumed source of a dense noradrenergic plexus in the weaver cerebellar cortex. In a preliminary experiment the adrenergic blocking agent, fluphenazine, antagonized the responses to locus coeruleus stimulation. Iontophoresis of norepinephrine (NE), GABA and serotonin (5-HT) also uniformly depressed Purkinje cell single spike activity in all normal and weaver mice; cyclic AMP depressed 55% of normal and 70% of weaver Purkinje cells. Glutamate was always excitatory. The only qualitative difference was seen with acetylcholine, which was mostly inhibitory in normal mouse, but increased the firing rate in 42% of weaver Purkinje neurons. Cyclic GMP was predominantly excitatory in both types. Thus, despite the absence of parallel fibers, weaver Purkinje neurons grossly resemble normal Purkinje cells electrophysiologically as well as morphologically. Since several sites of indirect presynaptic actions are eliminated in weaver, our results further substantiate the direct post-synaptic inhibitory nature of GABA, 5-HT and NE, and the noradrenergic pathway from locus coeruleus to Purkinje cells. Similarly, consistent inhibitory responses to cyclic AMP in the weaver support the previously hypothesized role of cyclic AMP in the post-synaptic inhibitory response to NE.

    Topics: Acetylcholine; Action Potentials; Animals; Cerebral Ventricles; Cyclic AMP; Cyclic GMP; Electrophysiology; Fluphenazine; gamma-Aminobutyric Acid; Glutamates; Mice; Movement Disorders; Neural Pathways; Norepinephrine; Purkinje Cells; Ribonucleotides; Serotonin

1976