Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effect on the afferent synaptic transmission of Ba2+, Sr2+, tetraethylammonium (TEA) and 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) has been investigated in the isolated frog labyrinth by intracellularly recording the posterior canal resting and evoked receptor discharge. BaCl2 (0.3 mM) or SrCl2 (1.8 mM) substitution for normal external CaCl2 restored the afferent activity without affecting the membrane potential of the sensory fibres. On further increasing Ba2+ concentration (0.5-5 mM) a dose-dependent increase in the EPSP and spike discharges was observed in all the units examined. Ba2+ (1.8-4 mM) removed the depression of the sensory activity operated by CoCl2 (3 mM), while its facilitatory effect was completely antagonized by raising Ca2+ concentration (up to 10 mM). TEA (20 mM) elicited a clear-cut increase in the EPSP and spike discharges which, however, was less consistent than that produced by Ba2+ (1 mM). The increment in spike frequency produced by TEA and Ba2+ proved to be inversely related to the initial resting firing level of the different units. The 4-AP (4-20 mM) effect resulted in a decrease of the sensory activity, which was fully restored by TEA or Ba2+. In normal saline a linear relationship was found between the mean unit resting discharge and the respective excitatory peak response during sinusoidal rotation (0.1-0.3 Hz). This result suggest that the mechanical response is mainly determined by the unit resting level. Consistent evoked responses were obtained under TEA and Ba2+ treatment which proved to depend linearly on the new mean resting discharge of the different units. Conversely, a reduced evoked response was invariably observed in all the fibres tested in the presence of 4-AP. The present results suggest that Ba2+ and Sr2+ may substitute for Ca2+ in the transmitter release process at the cyto-neural junction, the ability of Ba2+ being even larger than that of Sr2+ and Ca2+ itself. The effects of TEA and 4-AP are discussed in the light of their possible interaction with the presynaptic K+-currents recently described in hair cells.
...
PMID:The effect of barium and some channel blockers on sensory discharge of the frog labyrinth posterior canal recorded at rest and during rotation. 245 27

The use of end-plate current (e.p.c.) latency measurements to estimate the time course of the stochastic probabilistic process governing evoked release was investigated in the sciatic nerve-sartorius muscle preparation of the frog, Rana pipiens. We also examined the possibility that the release of a quantum depresses or enhances the subsequent release of additional quanta. Muscle end-plates were voltage clamped at 3-4 degrees C. Quantal release was restricted to a short, or localized, region of the nerve terminal using Ca2+-free, EGTA Ringer solution and a Ca2+-filled micropipette. The number of e.p.c.s containing 0, 1, 2, etc. quanta were totalled and compared to numbers predicted using Poisson's theorem. The differences between the actual and predicted numbers of events were not significant at the nineteen junctions studied (P less than 0.05). The latency of the first quantum observed in several hundred e.p.c.s was measured and used to calculate an estimate, alpha 1(t), of the time-dependent, probabilistic process, alpha (t), governing all evoked quantal release (Barrett & Stevens, 1972b). In three experiments, all quantal latencies were measured to obtain the actual alpha (t). The alpha 1(t) function gave an excellent approximation of alpha (t) (P greater than 0.2), in real and simulated latency data. The latency of the second quantum in the e.p.c.s was measured and used to provide another estimate, alpha 2(t), of alpha (t). The alpha 2(t) function was lower (depressed) during the first few milliseconds of the evoked release period, relative to alpha 1(t). The difference was significant (P greater than 0.01) in all experiments. Our measurement procedures were tested using computer-generated 'e.p.c.s' containing randomly occurring 'quanta'. These tests showed that the early depression was due to inadequate detection of the second quantum in the e.p.c.s. The effect of Sr2+ on evoked release was examined using double-barrelled pipettes containing 1 M-SrCl2 and CaCl2 solutions. The major result was that the durations of alpha 1(t) and alpha 2(t) were equally lengthened in Sr2+, relative to Ca2+.
...
PMID:Estimating the time course of evoked quantal release at the frog neuromuscular junction using end-plate current latencies. 348 94