The proposed research's focus is on the issue of identification of neurotransmitters in a subpopulation of spinal genglia neurons, their central representation, especially at the level of the cuneate nucleus of cats, and the intrinsic circuitry of this nucleus. One of the aims of the research is to identify dorsal ganglion neurons that use glutamate as neurotransmitter, to establish their percentage and whether these are primarily related to cutaneous, muscle or joint afferents. Histochemical, autoradiographic and immunocytochemical techniques will be used and, in most experiments, a combination of more than one approach will be employed in order to doublelabel neurons.
The second aim of the research is to study the pattern of arborization, collateralization, termination and the neurotransmitter of individual, electrophysiologically-identified primary afferents from the forelimb into the cuneate nucleus of cats. Also for this general project different experimentl strategies will be employed but the emphasis is on intracellular recording and staining with horseradish peroxidase. The third and final aim of the research is to define, from an investigation on processes that contain glutamic acid decarboxylase and are, therefore, presumed to use GABA as inhibitory neurotransmitter, the intrinsic circuitry of the cuneate n. and to elucidate the anatomical substrate of integrative mechanisms in it. The general goal of the research is to contribute to an understanding of basic functional properties of the somatosensory system in mammals a task that is made especially worth when considering that the bulk of the research on somesthesis is at the level of the thalamus and cerebral cortex. The degree of significance of such a research is by necessity going to be conditioned by the understanding of the mechanisms operating at a pre-thalamic level, i.e. in dorsal column nuclei and spinal cord.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01NS012440-10
Application #
3394857
Study Section
Neurology B Subcommittee 1 (NEUB)
Project Start
1978-07-01
Project End
1987-11-30
Budget Start
1984-12-01
Budget End
1985-11-30
Support Year
10
Fiscal Year
1985
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
078861598
City
Chapel Hill
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27599
Willcockson, Helen; Valtschanoff, Juli (2008) AMPA and NMDA glutamate receptors are found in both peptidergic and non-peptidergic primary afferent neurons in the rat. Cell Tissue Res 334:17-23
Lucifora, Simona; Willcockson, Helen H; Lu, Chun-Rong et al. (2006) Presynaptic low- and high-affinity kainate receptors in nociceptive spinal afferents. Pain 120:97-105
Lu, Chun-Rong; Willcockson, Helen H; Phend, Kris D et al. (2005) Ionotropic glutamate receptors are expressed in GABAergic terminals in the rat superficial dorsal horn. J Comp Neurol 486:169-78
Hwang, Se Jin; Burette, Alain; Rustioni, Aldo et al. (2004) Vanilloid receptor VR1-positive primary afferents are glutamatergic and contact spinal neurons that co-express neurokinin receptor NK1 and glutamate receptors. J Neurocytol 33:321-9
Lu, Chun-Rong; Hwang, Se Jin; Phend, Kristen D et al. (2003) Primary afferent terminals that express presynaptic NR1 in rats are mainly from myelinated, mechanosensitive fibers. J Comp Neurol 460:191-202
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Lu, Chun-Rong; Hwang, Se Jin; Phend, Kristen D et al. (2002) Primary afferent terminals in spinal cord express presynaptic AMPA receptors. J Neurosci 22:9522-9
Boukhelifa, M; Parast, M M; Valtschanoff, J G et al. (2001) A role for the cytoskeleton-associated protein palladin in neurite outgrowth. Mol Biol Cell 12:2721-9
Valtschanoff, J G; Rustioni, A; Guo, A et al. (2001) Vanilloid receptor VR1 is both presynaptic and postsynaptic in the superficial laminae of the rat dorsal horn. J Comp Neurol 436:225-35
Hwang, S J; Pagliardini, S; Rustioni, A et al. (2001) Presynaptic kainate receptors in primary afferents to the superficial laminae of the rat spinal cord. J Comp Neurol 436:275-89

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