tetrodotoxin and Starvation

tetrodotoxin has been researched along with Starvation* in 3 studies

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for tetrodotoxin and Starvation

ArticleYear
Effects of 5-hydroxytryptamine on the short-circuit current across the small intestine of the gerbil (Gerbillus cheesmani) in different dietary states.
    Physiological research, 2007, Volume: 56, Issue:5

    The effects of serosally added 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT, 100 microM) on the short circuit-current (Isc) across jejunum and ileum taken from fed, starved and undernourished (Gerbillus cheesmani) were investigated. The effects of the neurotoxin, tetrodotoxin (TTX, 10 microM) on the basal Isc as well as on the maximum increase in Isc induced by 5-HT were also studied. There were regional variations in the basal Isc as well as in the way by which the small intestine responds to 5-HT. The basal Isc was greater in jejunum than in ileum and such differences were TTX-sensitive. The maximum increase in Isc, which results from addition of 5-HT, was higher in jejunum than in ileum under all three feeding conditions. TTX reduced the maximum increase in Isc induced by 5-HT across stripped and intact intestine of the two regions in the three nutritional states. The 5-HT-induced Isc in the jejunum of both starved and undernourished gerbils and in the ileum of starved animals was the function of both submucosal and myenteric plexus. In jejunum and ileum taken from starved and undernourished gerbils the 5-HT-induced Isc was both chloride- and bicarbonate-dependent. Thus the results indicated that both starvation and undernourishment increase that response and such increases were TTX-sensitive and both chloride- and bicarbonate-dependent.

    Topics: Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena; Animals; Bicarbonates; Chlorides; Disease Models, Animal; Gerbillinae; Gluconates; Ileum; Jejunum; Malnutrition; Membrane Potentials; Neurotoxins; Serotonin; Starvation; Tetrodotoxin

2007
Effects of tetrodotoxin and ion replacements on the short-circuit current induced by Escherichia coli enterotoxin STa across the colon of the gerbil (Gerbillu cheesmani) in different dietary states.
    Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Toxicology & pharmacology : CBP, 2005, Volume: 141, Issue:1

    The effects of mucosally added Escherichia coli heat stable enterotoxin (STa, 30 ng mL(-1)) on the basal short-circuit current (Isc in microA cm(-2)) across stripped and unstripped sheets of proximal, mid and distal colon were investigated. Samples were taken from fed, starved (4 days, water ad lib) and undernourished (50% of control food intake for 21 days) gerbils (Gerbillus cheesmani). The effect of neurotoxin tetrodotoxin (TTX 10 microM) and the effect of replacing chloride by gluconate or the effect of removing bicarbonate from bathing buffer on the maximum increase in Isc induced by E. coli heat stable enterotoxin STa were also investigated. The results showed that there is a segmental difference both in the basal and STa-induced Isc. Also, STa is more effective in the proximal than distal colon in the three feeding conditions. Undernourishment raised the STa-induced Isc in the three regions of the colon. In fed and starved gerbils part of STa-induced Isc in the proximal colon was chloride-dependent, while the other was bicarbonate-dependent; in the mid colon, the STa-induced Isc was bicarbonate-dependent only. In the three regions of the colon taken from undernourished gerbil, the STa-induced Isc was both chloride-and bicarbonate-dependent. The increase in STa-induced Isc as a results of undernourishment in proximal and mid colon was chloride-dependent, while in the distal colon, it was both chloride- and bicarbonate-dependent.

    Topics: Animals; Bacterial Toxins; Bicarbonates; Buffers; Chlorides; Colon; Diet; Enterotoxins; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Proteins; Female; Gerbillinae; Gluconates; In Vitro Techniques; Ions; Male; Malnutrition; Starvation; Tetrodotoxin

2005
Diarrhoea of famine and malnutrition--investigations using a rat model. 2--Ileal hypersecretion induced by starvation.
    Gut, 1990, Volume: 31, Issue:2

    The effects of progressive starvation for up to three days on the basal and secretagogue stimulated secretory functions of the rat ileum were investigated in vitro and in vivo. The secretagogues used included agents acting via cyclic AMP (dibutyryl cyclic AMP, theophylline, forskolin, and PGE2) and those acting via Ca++ (acetylcholine, bethanecol, carbachol, 5-hydroxytryptamine, and A23187). Starving rats for 24 h (day 1) had no effect on the basal electrogenic secretion (measured as the short circuit current, Isc muamps/cm2) or on the stimulated maximum electrogenic secretion (measured as the delta Isc where delta Isc = maxIsc-basal Isc). By day 2 of starvation, however, both the basal Isc and the delta Isc induced by all the secretagogues were significantly greater than in the fed and increased even more on day 3. Replacement of all the chloride ions and inhibition by furosemide indicated that the enhanced secretion was due mainly to chloride ions. Cholinergic stimulation was blocked by atropine, indicating the stimulation was via muscarinic receptors while cholinergic dose - delta Isc response curves for fed and starved ilea showed significantly increased maximum electrogenic secretory response in the latter but no evidence of any change in the affinity (ED50) of the receptors mediating the response. The basal secretion and the secretory response to acetylcholine in both fed and starved ilea was unaffected by tetrodotoxin, revealing that the enhanced secretory response could be expressed via the muscarinic receptors on the enterocytes without the enteric neural network. Measurement of ileal fluid movement in vivo showed that in fed and day 1 starved rats the basal, unstimulated 'tone' of the ileum was absorptive. On day 2, however, the basal 'tone' had reversed to one of secretion which increased further on day 3. Stimulation of fluid secretion in vivo by bethanecol, carbachol, or PGE2 induced larger increases in the starved ilea by day 2 which increased even further on day 3. Lumenal chloride and bicarbonate concentrations were greater in the starved ileal fluid than in the fed. The studies in rat ileum confirm and extend those on rat jejunum and indicate that starvation creates a hypersensitive small bowel that responds to secretagogues and cholinergic neurotransmitters with a greatly enhanced secretory response.

    Topics: Acetylcholine; Animals; Atropine; Bethanechol Compounds; Bicarbonates; Chlorides; Diarrhea; Disease Models, Animal; Glucose; Ileum; Male; Rats; Starvation; Tetrodotoxin; Theophylline

1990