Hypothalamic Function (hypothalamic + function)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Hypothalamic Function in Response to 2-Deoxy- d -Glucose in Long-Term Abstinent Alcoholics

ALCOHOLISM, Issue 5 2001
John C. Umhau
Background: The body adapts to diverse stressful stimuli with a response characterized by activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Chronic alcohol consumption can cause changes in the function of this neuroendocrine system. Although many studies have examined this phenomenon in drinking and recently sober alcoholics, few studies have examined HPA axis function in long-term sober alcoholics. Methods: To characterize HPA axis function in long-term sober alcoholics, we used a challenge paradigm with 2-deoxy-d-glucose (2-DG). An infusion of 2-DG (a nonmetabolizable glucose analog) induces a well-characterized stress response. In a previous study, our laboratory found an exaggerated corticotropin and cortisol response in alcoholics abstinent 3 weeks; in this investigation we compared the effects of an infusion of 2-DG on 19 healthy volunteers and 20 community-living alcoholics who had been abstinent more than 6 months. Results: In contrast to the previous study, long-term sober alcoholics did not have an exaggerated corticotropin and cortisol response after 2-DG. Conclusions: Previously observed abnormalities in cortisol regulation in 3-week-sober alcoholics may be related to the acute effects of recent alcohol consumption and withdrawal. Future investigations into the metabolic function of alcoholics, particularly investigations involving the HPA system, should consider the possibility that normalization may not occur until long-term abstinence has been achieved. [source]


Forebrain projections to the hypothalamus are topographically organized in anurans: conservative traits as compared with amniotes

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 7 2005
Nerea Moreno
Abstract The organization of the forebrain in amphibians (anamniotes) is currently being re-evaluated in terms of evolution and several evidences have corroborated numerous traits shared by amphibians and amniotes, such as the organization of the basal ganglia and the amygdaloid complex. In the present study we have analysed the organization of forebrain afferent systems to the hypothalamus of the frog Rana perezi. In vivo and in vitro tract-tracing techniques with dextran amines and immunohistochemistry for localizing nitric oxide synthase (NOS) in a series of single or combined experiments were used as NOS labelling reveals hypothalamic afferents arising from the lateral amygdala and the combination allowed analysis of the relationship between fibers of different origins in the same section. The results showed a large segregation of afferents in the hypothalamic region depending on their site of origin in the forebrain. Four highly topographically organized prosencephalic tracts reaching the anuran hypothalamus were observed: (i) the medial forebrain bundle, from the medial pallium and septal complex; (ii) the caudal branch of the stria terminalis formed by fibers arising in the lateral and medial amygdala; (iii) part of the lateral forebrain bundle with fibers from the central amygdala and (iv) the dorsal thalamo-hypothalamic tract. Fibers coursing in each tract reach the hypothalamus and terminate in distinct fields. The resemblance in pattern of forebrain-hypothalamic organization between amphibians and amniotes suggests that this feature represents an important trait conserved in the evolution of all tetrapods and therefore essential for the hypothalamic function. [source]


Alteration in Hypothalamic Neuropeptide Y (NPY) Secretion May Underlie Female Reproductive Ageing: Induction of Steroid-Induced Luteinising Hormone Surge by NPY in Ovariectomised Aged Rats

JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 8 2006
A. Sahu
A large body of evidence suggests that a defect in the hypothalamic function may be the primary cause of reproductive ageing in female rats. We have previously shown that luteinising hormone (LH)-surge associated changes in hypothalamic neuropeptide Y (NPY) gene expression and median eminence (ME) NPY levels seen in young rats do not occur in middle-aged (MA) rats. The present study examined whether hypothalamic NPY release is altered during the steroid-induced LH surge in ovariectomised (OVX) MA rats, and whether exogenous NPY initiates steroid-induced LH surge in OVX old rats. In the first study, NPY release from the ME-arcuate nucleus, as assessed by the push,pull cannula technique, was significantly increased before and during the progesterone-induced LH surge in oestrogen (E2)-primed ovariectomised young rats (2,3 months old). This antecedent increase in NPY release seen in young rats was not apparent in MA rats (11,13 months old) in association with a delayed and attenuated LH surge. In the second study, whereas progesterone failed to induce LH surges in E2 -primed ovariectomised old rats (23,25 months old), intracerebroventricular NPY (0.1,0.5 µg) injections at 1100, 1200 and 13.00 h resulted in LH surge induction in E2 + progesterone-primed ovariectomised old rats. Because increased hypothalamic NPY synthesis and release is obligatory for the preovulatory LH discharge in young rats, the present findings suggest that alteration in NPY release from the ME-arcuate nucleus contributes to the delayed and reduced LH surges in MA rats and may be involved in the subsequent loss of the LH surges in old rats. [source]


APJ Receptor mRNA Expression in the Rat Hypothalamic Paraventricular Nucleus: Regulation By Stress and Glucocorticoids

JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 11 2003
A.-M. O'Carroll
Abstract The apelin receptor (APJ receptor, APJR) has recently come to prominence following the isolation and identification of its endogenous ligand, apelin, from bovine stomach tissue extracts. Investigation of APJR mRNA expression has revealed a hypothalamic distribution similar to that of vasopressin suggesting that the apelin,APJR system may be involved in the regulation of the hypothalamic-adrenal-pituitary (HPA) stress axis. To investigate whether APJR is involved in the regulation of hypothalamic function during stress, APJR mRNA expression levels were measured by in situ hybridization in the hypothalamus of rats subjected to acute and repeated restraint stress. Acute stress caused an increase in APJR mRNA expression in the hypothalamic parvocellular paraventricular nucleus (pPVN) while repeated restraint stress induced a sustained up-regulation of pPVN APJR mRNA expression in intact rats. Removal of endogenous glucocorticoids by adrenalectomy also resulted in an increased expression of APJR mRNA in the PVN, suggesting a negative regulation of APJR mRNA expression by glucocorticoids. The role of glucocorticoids in mediating these stress-induced changes was investigated by analysing the effects of acute and repeated restraint stress on APJR mRNA levels in adrenalectomized rats. In these rats, APJR mRNA expression levels did not change above the already elevated levels of adrenalectomized-control rats. These data suggest that acute and repeated stress exert a stimulatory influence on APJR mRNA expression at the hypothalamic level that may be dependent on basal levels of circulating glucocorticoids, and further suggest a role for APJR in the regulation of hypothalamic function. [source]


Cocaine- and Amphetamine-Regulated Transcript is Present in Hypothalamic Neuroendocrine Neurones and is Released to the Hypothalamic-Pituitary Portal Circuit

JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 3 2003
P. J. Larsen
Abstract Cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) is present in a number of hypothalamic nuclei. Besides actions in circuits regulating feeding behaviour and stress responses, the hypothalamic functions of CART are largely unknown. We report that CART immunoreactivity is present in hypothalamic neuroendocrine neurones. Adult male rats received a systemic injection of the neuronal tracer Fluorogold (FG) 2 days before fixation, and subsequent double- and triple-labelling immunoflourescence analysis demonstrated that neuroendocrine CART-containing neurones were present in the anteroventral periventricular, supraoptic, paraventricular (PVN) and periventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus. In the PVN, CART-positive neuroendocrine neurones were found in all of cytoarchitectonically identified nuclei. In the periventricular nucleus, approximately one-third of somatostatin cells were also CART-immunoreactive. In the medial parvicellular subnucleus of the PVN, CART and FG coexisted with thyrotrophin-releasing hormone, whereas very few of the corticotrophin-releasing hormone containing cells were CART-immunoreactive. In the arcuate nucleus, CART was extensively colocalized with pro-opiomelanocortin in the ventrolateral part, but completely absent from neuroendocrine neurones of the dorsomedial part. To assess the possible role of CART as a hypothalamic-releasing factor, immunoreactive CART was measured in blood samples from the long portal vessels connecting the median eminence with the anterior pituitary gland. Adult male rats were anaesthetized and the infundibular stalk exposed via a transpharyngeal approach. The long portal vessels were transected and blood collected in 30-min periods (one prestimulatory and three poststimulatory periods). Compared to systemic venous plasma samples, baseline concentrations of immunoreactive CART were elevated in portal plasma. Exposure to sodium nitroprusside hypotension triggered a two-fold elevation of portal CART42-89 immunoreactivity throughout the 90-min stimulation period. In contrast, the concentration of portal plasma CART immunoreactivity dropped in the vehicle infused rats. The current study provides further evidence that CART is a neuroendocrine-releasing factor with a possible impact on anterior pituitary function during states of haemodynamic stress. [source]