Comparison of tonal response properties of primary auditory cortex neurons of adult rats under urethane and ketamine anesthesia

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Comparison of tonal response properties of primary auditory cortex neurons of adult rats under urethane and ketamine anesthesia"

Transcription

1 doi /j.issn Original Article Comparison of tonal response properties of primary auditory cortex neurons of adult rats under urethane and ketamine anesthesia HUANG Lingyue, BAI Lin, ZHAO Yan, XIAO Zhongju* Department of Physiology, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou , China Abstract: Objective To compare tonal response properties of neurons in the primary auditory cortex of Sprague-Dawley rats anesthetized with urethane and ketamine-xylazine. Methods Forty-five female Sprague-Dawley rats ( g) were randomized into two groups and anesthetized with urethane or ketamine-xylazine. Tone pips were chosen as the stimuli to obtain the action potentials of the single neurons by in vivo cell-attached recording. The features of the action potentials were extracted with Matlab software to comparatively analyze the acoustic response properties of the neurons between the two anesthetic groups. Results The Q values and the characteristic frequencies were independent of the types of anesthetic agents, but with urethane anesthesia, the neurons tended to have higher minimum thresholds, lower spontaneous firing rates, longer response latencies, and more frequent occurrence of tuning with stronger inhibition compared to those in ketamine-xylazine group. Conclusion Urethane and ketamine might have no obvious impact on the transmission pathway of frequency tuning from the periphery to the auditory cortex, but neurons from rats with urethane anesthesia receive enhanced inhibition mediated by the interneurons or have a lower intrinsic excitability. Key words: urethane; ketamine; primary auditory cortex; cell-attached recording INTRODUCTION Anesthetized animals are widely used in scientific experiments for their stability and controllability. However, anesthetic agents can influence the functionality and responses of the body, especially in the sensory and nervous systems. Many previous studies have been conducted to explore the changes of auditory processing in anesthetic condition. A functional magnetic resonance imaging study has proved that propofol dose-dependently attenuate responses of the [1] auditory cortex to acoustic stimulation. Electrophysiological experiments have also shown the changes of response characteristics (such as the spontaneous rate, response latency, tuning sharpness, and minimum threshold) of individual auditory neurons under different anesthesia protocols [2-3]. Non-volatile anesthetics, such as pentobarbital sodium [2-6], urethane [7-11], and ketamine [12-15], are commonly used in auditory experiments. Pentobarbital sodium has been demonstrated to produce hyperpolarizing effect by activating gammaaminobutyric acid (GABA), and reduces the firing rates of neurons in the inferior colliculus (IC) and the auditory Received: Accepted: Supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China ( ). HUANG Lingyue and BAI Lin contributed equally to this work. *Corresponding author: XIAO Zhongju, Professor, xiaozj@fimmu.com cortex (AC) [4, 16]. In addition, the response patterns and receptive areas of AC in most neurons also change under anesthesia with barbiturates [5]. Thus pentobarbital does not seem to be an ideal anesthetic for studies on AC. Ketamine is a rapid-acting anesthetic and used primarily for the induction and maintenance of general anesthesia, usually in combination with a sedative such as xylazine or medetomidine. As a noncompetitive N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors antagonist, ketamine produces an anesthetic state termed dissociative anesthesia [17], because it appears to selectively block signal transmission within the association pathway of the brain. Electroencephalography (EEG) showed that ketamine, in contrast to barbiturates, depressed the recruiting response when thalamic-neocortical activation was minimally affected [18], suggesting the less impact of ketamine on the response properties of the AC neurons. The disadvantage of ketamine is its short-term anesthetic effect to require additional doses for maintenance in long-term recording in vivo [19]. Urethane, with a long-lasting effect and less influence on breathing, is suitable for prolonged studies [7-9]. The molecular and cellular mechanisms of urethane are intricate and still poorly understood. Earlier studies have shown that urethane can enhance the inhibitory currents (γ-aminobutyric acid type A, GABA A and glycine currents) and the function of neuronal acetylcholine (nach) receptors, and simultaneously inhibit current responses of the excitatory receptors

2 786 (NMDA and α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid, AMPA receptors) [11, 20]. The dual effects of urethane on excitatory and inhibitory inputs may consequentially influence the integration of neural outputs. Previous extracellular study has also demonstrated the same effects of urethane on neurons in the IC [19]. The aforementioned electrophysiological studies of anesthetics for their impact on the auditory responses were conducted using mostly extracellular recording methods. The characteristic properties of individual neurons should be analyzed by sorting single unit responses from multiple units, through the shape features of action potentials [21]. The influence by the neighboring neurons can not be totally eliminated using this approach. In recent years, the development of in vivo patch-clamp techniques provides a more direct and accurate means to obtain the activities of single cells. By forming a high seal resistance (10 MΩ to >5 GΩ) between the pipette tip and the cell membrane, the method of cell-attached recording overcomes the disadvantage of extracellular sorting, and maintains a stable condition for the attached cell within several hours [22]. So far few studies have been reported to address the varying effects of different anesthetics on the auditory responses of single neurons using in vivo cell-attached recording techniques. We therefore conducted this study to investigate the diversities in the frequency-intensity receptive areas (FIRAs) and the response patterns of individual neurons in the primary auditory cortex (A1) to tone bursts in rats anesthetized with urethane or ketamine-xylazine (the mixture of ketamine and xylazine, K-X). The characteristic frequency (CF), minimum response threshold (MT), bandwidth (BW) and Q values of FIRA, spontaneous rates and response latencies were compared between the two anesthesia conditions, which may provide evidence for choice of anesthetics in further electrophysiological studies of the auditory system. MATERIALS AND METHODS Animals Forty-five healthy adult female Sprague-Dawley rats ( g) were purchased from the Animal Experiment Center of Southern Medical University. All the surgical procedures were approved by the Animal Care and Use Committee of Southern Medical University. Surgical procedures The rats were randomized into urethane group and K-X group. Atropine sulfate (1.2 mg/kg) was administered intraperitoneally before the surgery to reduce bronchial secretions in both groups. In urethane group, the rats received an intraperitoneal dose of urethane ( mg/kg) followed by tracheotomy and a cisternal drainage of the cerebrospinal fluid to minimize brain edema. The rats were then fixed by a head-holder device, and a rectal probe was deployed to record the body temperature (which was maintained around 37.3 using a homeothermic blanket system). Craniotomy was performed over the right auditory cortex (a 4 4 mm 2 window over A1 was carefully exposed under a surgical microscope) with the dura dissected. A tiny hole about mm 2 was drilled in the right parietal bone to place the reference electrode. The right ear canal was plugged with agarose (30 g/l). Heart rate, respiratory rate, and corneal reflex were monitored to ensure that a moderately deep anesthetic state was maintained during the whole recording procedure. Artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF) was administered periodically to prevent desiccation of the pial surface throughout the experiment. Low melting point paraffin was provided to cover the surgical sites to reduce the fluctuation of the brain during the recording. The rats in the K-X group were anesthetized with the mixture of ketamine (50 mg/kg) and xylazine (10 mg/kg) and anesthesia was maintained with supplemental doses at half of the initial doses every 1.5 h. The other operations were identical to those in the urethane group. In vivo cell-attached recording procedures All the following procedures were conducted in an electromagnetic shielding, shockproof, no reverberation, and sound-insulated chamber at controlled temperatures (24-28 ). Cell-attached recording electrodes were prepared from thick-walled borosilicate glass caplillaries using a micropipette puller (Sutter, P-97) and filled with ACSF (containing, in mmol/l, 132 NaCl, 20 NaHCO 3, 2.5 KCl, 1.2 NaH 2PO 4, 1.1 MgSO 4, 2 CaCl 2, 3 HEPES and 15 D-glucose) with 5-8 MΩ resistances. Blind recording was used throughout the experiment. The microelectrode (within 3 Psi positive pressures to avoid potential electrode tip blockage when penetrating the pia mater) was placed orthogonally above a selected point on the surface of A1 under the surgical microscope, and was advanced into the cortex with a remote-controlled micromanipulator (Narishige, SM-21). After electrode penetration to 100 μm below the pial surface, liquid paraffin was administered to prevent cortical pulsation, and the positive pressure within the electrode was reduced to 0.3 Psi. White noise was burst out to detect the acoustic response neurons during the electrode penetration. Once a neuron was probed, the positive pressure within the electrode was revoked, and 0.3 Psi suction was applied; the seal resistance between the recording pipette and the cell membrane was increased to 20 MΩ-0.5 GΩ to allow recording of the spikes only from the patched cell. After a few minutes for the patched cell to stabilize, the stimulus was changed into tone pips at a delivery rate of 2/s, and recording was initiated under voltage-clamp mode without an input current. Stimulus generation and delivery The acoustic signals were programmed, generated, and delivered with a Tucker-Davis Technologies System

3 787 3 apparatus (TDT 3, Tucker-Davis Technologies). An array of tones (2-64 khz at 0.1 octave intervals, 50 ms duration, 5 ms raised ramp; 0-70 db SPL, 10 db SPL step) and white noise (70 db, 50 ms duration, and 5 ms ramps) were used as stimuli in this study. Acoustic stimuli were synthesized using a real-time processor (RP2.1) and a customized program (written with RPvdsEx software) and loaded into a programmable attenuator (PA5). The signals recorded were amplified by an electrostatic speaker driver (ED1) and delivered to the rat via a free-field loudspeaker (ES1, khz) placed 10 cm to the contralateral (left) ear. Acoustic calibration was performed with 1/8 and 1/4 inch microphones (Brüel and Kjaer 4138, 4135, Naerum, Denmark) and an amplifier (Brüel and Kjaer 2610, Naerum, Denmark) at the beginning of the experiment to ensure a flat frequency response (± 2 db SPL) of the loudspeaker's output. Signals collected by a low-noise data acquisition system (Axon, Digidata 1440A) were amplified ( , 000 ), band-pass filtered at khz, sampled at 20 khz with a digital amplifier (Axon, Multiclamp 700B), recorded and displayed with BrainWare software (which was also used to control the signal parameters, either manually or within the programming parameters). Data acquisition and analysis The acquired data were processed online using the TDT 3 system and BrainWare software. Offline analysis was done with Matlab 7.0 software, SPSS 13.0 statistical software, Photoshop 7.0, Origin 8.0 and Canvas 9.0 for different purposes. The relevant parameters of FIRAs, including CF, MT, BW, Q 10 and Q 30 (a CF divided by the BW at 10- and 30- db SPL above MT) as well as such parameters of the post-stimulus time histograms (PSTHs) as spontaneous firing rate, minimum response latency (L min), and peak latency (L peak) were analyzed. CF is the most sensitive frequency of an auditory neuron, which reflects the frequency response properties. In the current study, MT was defined as the lowest sound level at which responses in CF condition could be evoked. Combined with CF, MT represents the sensitivity of a neuron to acoustic stimuli. FIRAs of each neuron were obtained from 5 randomly selected presentations of the pure tone pips. Neural responses with a signal-noise ratio greater than 4: 1 were selected as action potential data for analysis. The pcolors (the color indicating the amount of responses to a given tone) of FIRAs were drawn by Matlab software, and the envelope curves of each neuron with obvious FIRA were outlined at the level of 30% of the neuron's largest spike count by Matlab 7.0. The simulative curves were taken as the frequency-threshold curves. The horizontal and ordinate values of the lowest point of each curve were defined as CF and MT of the neuron, respectively. BW 10dB and BW 30dB were the bandwidth 10- and 30- db SPL above MT of the curve, respectively, as shown in Fig.1A. PSTHs were generated from the same tone pips above, and with the 2 ms time bin. The X-axis represented the recording time window of a given tone, which began at 10 ms before acoustical stimuli bursting and ended at 200 ms after starting of stimuli. The Y-axis represented the amount of responses in each time bin to 5 presentations of tone pips. The spontaneous rate of each neuron was calculated from both the first 10 ms (stimuli not presented) and the last 40 ms. There was no significant difference between these two measurement methods (P=0.156 by paired t-test). L min was defined as the first bin over 2 standard deviations above the mean of spontaneous rate of each neuron, and L peak was the highest bin of PSTH. Statistical analysis The data were shown as Mean±SE. Mann-Whitney test was applied for comparing the distribution of different FIRA patterns and the response patterns between the two groups. Independent-sample t-test was used for comparing CF distributions between the two groups. Two-way ANOVA was used to compare the differences in MT and Q values, and Kruskal-Wallis test to compare spontaneous firing rate and L min between the two groups. The significance level of all hypothesis testing was set at α=0.05. RESULTS General description Complete data were obtained from 117 wellisolated single neurons collected from 45 rats. Among these neurons, 62 were recorded in 25 rats in urethane group and 55 in 20 rats in K-X group. Recording sites distributed over a small area about 4-6 mm posterior to the bregma and mm below the edge of the temporal bone, known as the A1 area. Scatter plots of the recording sites showed no regional selectivity between the two groups (data not shown). The recording depth was between 200 and 1200 μm below the pial surface with the seal resistances ranged from 20 MΩ to 250 MΩ (48.9±3.5 MΩ), and only the signals from the target neuron were recorded [23]. The ensemble and mean of action potential waveforms recorded in an example neuron was displayed in Fig.1G. Note the uniformity of the waveforms, which confirmed the homogeneity of the action potentials. FIRA patterns in the two anesthesia conditions FIRA reveals the tonal receptive field of individual neuron according to the responses of the neuron to tone stimuli with different frequencies and intensities. In this study, the FIRAs were represented by pcolor maps, with the color indicating the amount of responses to a given tone. Five different FIRA shapes were recorded from the rat A1: U/V-shaped, multi-peak, closed, atypical and untuned (examples are shown in Fig.1). According to the customized standard of group, neurons with FIRA resembling a single-peak "V" or "U" were sorted into V/ U-shaped type (Fig.1A). Multi-peak neurons (Fig.1B) had FIRAs with a closed bottom and an open top to form

4 788 a multi-peak shape. Neurons showing a non-monotonic response to sound intensity, with a closed FIRA shape, were defined as the closed type (Fig.1C). Atypical neurons (Fig.1D) exhibited a visible inhibitory region among a wider excitatory area, referred to also as inhibitory type in other studies. Neurons which responded to the broadband stimuli but showed no selectivity to any frequency/intensity combination were classified as Untuned (Fig.1E). The distribution of the FIRA patterns of A1 neurons showed significant difference between the two anesthesia conditions (Fig.1F, P<0.05 by Mann-Whitney test). The urethane group contained a greater proportion of V/U-shaped (45/ 62, 72.58%), closed (5/62, 8.06%) and untuned types (7/ 62, 11.29% ) compared with the K-X group (31/55, 53.4% ; 2/55, 3.6% ; 4/55, 7.3%, respectively). Conversely, multi-peak (14/65, 25.4% ) and atypical neurons (4/55, 7.3%) appeared more frequently in K-X group than urethane group (4/62, 6.45% ; 1/62, 1.61%, respectively). A B C D E F Fig.1 Examples of FIRA patterns and their distribution in the two groups. A: FIRA pcolor of a typical V/ U-shape neuron. Red profile indicates the simulative envelope curve of the FIRA. Color bar represents the amount of responses to a given tone with 5 repeats. The horizon and ordinate values of the lowest point of the curve separately display the CFand MT of the neurons (except for atypical and untuned types). Three dash lines from the bottom up indicate the MT, 10- and 30- db SPL above MT, respectively. Other FIRA patterns are shown in B (multi-peak), C (closed), D (atypical) and E (untuned) in the same manner. F: Distribution of different FIRA patterns in the two groups (white for urethane and black for K-X groups). Asterisks indicate a significant difference (P<0.05, Mann-Whitney test). G: The ensemble and mean of action potential waveforms recorded by in vivo cell-attached recording in an A1 neuron are displayed by blue lines and the red line separately. Influence of two anesthetics on CF and MT As shown in Fig.1A, the coordinate values of the lowest point in the envelop curve indicated CF (29.8 khz) and MT (26.5 db SPL) of the neuron. No accurate values of CF and MT were obtainable from atypical and

5 789 untuned neurons, therefore 54 of 62 neurons in the urethane group and 47 of 55 in the K-X group were analyzed. As shown by open circles in Fig.2, under urethane anesthesia condition, CFs of A1 neurons ranged from 6.5- to khz (28.0±1.5 khz) while CFs ranged from 7.0- to khz (28.1 ± 1.6 khz) in the K-X group. There was no significant difference in CFs distributions between the two groups (P=0.972, independent-sample t-test), suggesting that neither of the anesthetics obviously disturbed the auditory cortical neurons' frequency selectivity inherited from periphery auditory system. Meanwhile, the distributions and means of MTs were significantly different between the two conditions (urethane: 0- to db SPL, 22.4±2.7 db SPL vs K-X: 0- to db SPL, 13.8±2.8 db SPL). To distinguish the diversity of MT between the two groups precisely, the FIRA patterns considered as a fixed factor. The results showed that FIRAs of A1 neurons were turned to higher tone levels by urethane anesthesia than by K-X (P=0.007, Two-Way ANOVA), indicating that A1 neurons tended to have a lower excitability under urethane anesthesia. Influence of the two anesthetics on Q values For a given CF, Q values (Q=CF/BW) are dependent on BW. We compared the influence of the two different anesthetics on Q values (Q 10 and Q 30). In urethane group, Q 10 and Q 30 were both calculated in 46 neurons whose CF ranged from 6.5 to 48.6 khz (29.0± 1.6 khz); in K-X group, 45 neurons were analyzed with CF ranged from 7.0 to 55.7 khz (28.5 ± 1.6 khz). No MT (db SPL) Urethane K-X Mean of urethane Mean of K-X CF (khz) Fig.2 Distribution of MT with corresponding CF of each neuron recorded from A1 in the two groups. Open circles indicate 54 neurons in the urethane group, and solid circles represent 47 neurons in K-X group. Open and solid pentagram marks indicate the means under urethane and K-X anesthesia conditions, respectively. The diversity of MT between two groups shows significant difference (P=0.007, Two-Way ANOVA). significant difference was found in CF distribution between the two groups (P=0.841, independent-sample t-test), so that the the influence of the diversity of CF on Q values could be eliminated in different anesthesia conditions. As shown in Fig.3, although the neurons in the urethane group showed lower Q values, neither Q 10 (urethane: 2.7±0.3 khz/db vs K-X: 3.1±0.3 khz/db) nor Q 30 (urethane: 1.9±0.2 khz/db vs K-X=2.1±0.2 khz/db) displayed any remarkable difference between the two groups (P>0.05, Two-way ANOVA). Q10 (khz/db SPL) A B Urethane 6 K-X Mean of urethane Mean of K-X Q10 (khz/db SPL) CF (khz) CF (khz) Fig.3 Distribution of Q10 and Q30 with corresponding CF of individual neurons recorded from A1 in different anesthetic conditions. A: Distribution of Q10. Open circles represent 46 neurons in urethane group, and solid circles represent 45 neurons in K-X group. The open and the solid pentagram marks indicate the means under urethane and K-X anesthesia, respectively. B: Distribution of Q30. No significant difference was found in Q values between the two groups (P>0.05, Two-way ANOVN). Temporal response properties of neurons under the two narcotics Spontaneous rate of a neuron could reflect excitability of the neuron. While, anesthetic conditions do have some impact on the excitability. The first 10 ms discharges before the tone stimuli presentation were chosen as the time window to evaluate the diversity of spontaneous rate of each neuron between the two groups (arrows in Fig.4B). The mean of spontaneous rate was 2.5±0.6 spikes/s in urethane group, and 5.6±1.2 spikes/ s in K-X group. Apparently, neurons in urethane anesthetized animals tended to have lower spontaneous rate (P=0.028, Kruskal-Wallis test) and therefore lower

6 790 excitability. Response latency to acoustic stimulus of an auditory neuron can reflect the integrated outputs of both excitatory and inhibitory inputs of the neuron. First, we calculated L min of each neuron in the two groups (Fig.4A). L min in the urethane group was 19.7 ± 2.3 ms, significantly longer than that in K-X group (12.7 ± 1.2 ms, P=0.007, Kruskal-Wallis test). The response temporal pattern of the A1 neurons was sorted into different types according to L min and L peak. In principle, in the urethane group, auditory neurons in A1 could be divided into 4 groups: (1) Onset type (34/ 62, 54.8%, Fig.4B) with L min shorter than 30 ms ; (2) Long-latency type (7/62, 11.3%, Fig.4C) in which the neurons responded later than 30 ms after the tone burst, with a L peak shorter than 80 ms; (3) Rebound type (6/62, 9.7%, Fig.4D) in which the neurons displayed a postinhibitory rebound only with L min longer than 30 ms and L peak longer than 80 ms; (4) Onset combined with rebound type (Onset-Rebound; 15/62, 24.2%) with onset responses followed by a postinhibitory rebound (Fig.4E). Neurons recorded in the K-X group also exhibited onset type (53/55, 96.4% ), rebound type (1/55, 1.8% ), onset-rebound type (1/55, 1.8% ), but no long-latency type. Most of the neurons revealed onset responses within 30 ms after tone burst (79.0% in urethane group, and 98.2% in K-X group regardless of the rebound composition occurrence), and comparison of L min of onset compositions showed no obvious difference between urethane and K-X groups (12.0±0.6 ms vs 11.6± 0.4 ms, P=0.534 by Kruskal-Wallis test). However, as shown in Fig.4F, the distribution of the response patterns under the two conditions displayed a distinct diversity (P<0.05, Mann-Whitney test). Neurons recorded under K-X anesthesia contained a greater proportion of onset type, and the other types appeared sparse compared to those of the urethane group. Both of the anesthetics appeared to affect the temporal patterns of responses for A1 neurons to tone stimuli. The A1 neurons under urethane anesthesia seemed to receive more depressed excitatory inputs or inhibitory inputs than those under K-X anesthesia, resulting in greater probabilities of later responses or postinhibitory rebound. DISCUSSION The data we obtained demonstrate that some response parameters of A1 neurons to tone stimuli may differ in rats treated with different anesthetics. The V/ U-shaped FIRA represents the dominant response pattern of both anesthetics, consistent with the previous reports [24-25]. The CFs of FIRAs showed no statistical difference between the two groups. However, the probabilities of the 5 FIRA patterns varied significantly between the two groups: the V/U-shaped and closedtype neurons appeared more frequently with urethane anesthesia, and the multi-peak type more frequently with K-X anesthesia. Since the FIRA of an auditory neuron is mainly drawn by thalamocortical excitatory inputs and sharpened by cortical lateral inhibition [26-27], the V/U-shaped and the closed types, compared with the multi-peak type, seem to be a result of stronger lateral inhibition [23]. This suggests that these two anesthetics produce no obvious impact on the transmission pathway of frequency tuning from the periphery to the auditory cortex, but the neurons with urethane anesthesia received enhanced lateral inhibition mediated by activating GABA receptors of the interneurons, leading to more sharpening FIRA. The higher MT in the urethane group could further confirm this presumption. The Q value is quantitative descriptor of sharpness of FIRA. The higher Q values, the more sharply tuned the neurons are when CFs keep consistent [28]. The BW of the auditory nerve fiber was reported to be approximately consistent with that of psychophysics [26], and at the IC level, this consistency elevates to a great extent [29]. In this study, although the Q values were slightly higher in urethane group than in K-X group, no statistical correlation was found between the Q values and the anesthetics. These results differ from the viewpoint mentioned above, for U/V-shaped and closed types were more common with urethane and multi-peak type more frequent with K-X. This discrepancy arose, probably, from the relatively small sample size in our study. PSTH principally represented the integration of excitatory and the inhibitory inputs. Generally, neurons sensitive to acoustic stimuli are highly spontaneously active [30]. The lower spontaneous rate in urethaneanesthetized rats further verifies that urethane more strongly reduces the sensitivity to sound stimuli than K-X. With constant stimuli parameters (stimulus amplitude, rise time, and spectrum at the excitatory ear), the transmission pathway originating from the periphery and extending to the cortex is the determining factor of response latency [30]. Our data showed that the onset-type neurons in K-X-anesthetized rats were more numerous than those in urethane-anesthetized rats, but the longlatency neurons, observed in the IC in both group [19], appeared to be more frequent in rats anesthetized by urethane. It is assumed that urethane can enhance the inhibitory input in the auditory pathway. Scholfield pointed out that ketamine and urethane could double the inhibition postsynaptic potentials (IPSP) duration [31], and previous studies have shown that enhancement of inhibition could change the response pattern [32], such as lengthened response latency [33], which were supported by our data. The frequent occurrence of long-latency neurons in urethane-treated rats might involve the cellular and synaptic mechanisms of the two anesthetics. Hara and Harris demonstrated that urethane significantly potentiated the currents of the inhibitory receptors (GABA A receptors and glycine receptors), inhibited the current responses of the excitatory receptors (NMDA receptors and AMPA receptors) in a reversible and concentration-dependent manner in Xenopus oocytes transfected with several recombinant neurotransmistter receptors, and non-selectively affected the excitatory and inhibitory currents [11, 20]. In addition, Schreiner et al maintained that urethane's action on neocortical pyramidal cells in rat visual cortex could be thought of as a tonic reduction of intrinsic excitability through a

7 791 A B C D E F Fig.4 Temporal response properties of neurons recorded from A1 and distribution of temporal response patterns under different anesthesia. A: Histograms of Lmin of each neuron in urethane (white) and K-X (black) groups; B: PSTH of a typical onset type neuron with a 2 ms time bin. The X-axis represents the recording time window of a given tone, and the Y-axis the amount of responses in each time bin to 5 presentations of tone pips. Red dash line indicates the 2 standard deviations above mean of spontaneous rate of the neuron, and the time window (arrows) was the first 10 ms discharges before the tone stimuli presentation. The bar under PSTH marks the 50 ms duration of tones. Three other types, namely long-latency (C), rebound (D), and onset-rebound (E) are listed in sequence. F: Distribution of different types in the two groups. Asterisks indicate significant differences (P<0.05, Mann-Whitney test). specific K + back-ground leak conductance [34]. Based on the data of this study, we might assumed that urethane can both enhance the inhibitory input of acoustic response neurons and depress the neurons' intrinsic excitability. Ketamine is reported to inhibit the channel function of NMDA receptors and nach receptors [17, 35], and prolong polysynaptic excitation [36-37]. Presumably, urethane, compared with ketamine-xylazine, has a wider range of inhibition to contribute to the greater frequency of long-latency neurons. Scholl et al emphasized that the excitatory and inhibitory currents were evoked by tone onset, and the occurrence of rebound was not correlated with the inhibitory currents [38]. Our finding that rebound and onset-rebound types, common in rats dosed with urethane, can confirm to some degree the assumption that urethane produces stronger inhibition on auditory pathway. Besides, some in vivo electrophysiological experiments demonstrated that both urethane and ketamine could depress the responsiveness of neurons in the visual cortex [34, 39-40], motor cortex and sensory cortex [41-43], indicating the nonspecific inhibitory effect of these two

8 792 anesthetics on the auditory cortex. In conclusion, FIRA patterns, Q values and CFs of the auditory neurons in A1 exhibit no obvious diversities in rats dosed with the two anesthetics, demonstrating that urethane and ketamine do not obviously affect the transmission pathway of frequency tuning from the periphery to the auditory cortex. Urethane produces stronger inhibition on the neurons than K-X in view of lower spontaneous rate and higher MT. These two anesthetics have nonspecific inhibitory effect on the auditory cortex. Taken together, our data indicate that when investigating acoustic response characteristics of the neurons in the auditory pathway, at least in A1, anesthetic factors should be carefully evaluated. REFERENCES [1] Dueck MH, Petzke F, Gerbershagen HJ, et al. Propofol attenuates responses of the auditory cortex to acoustic stimulation in a dose-dependent manner: a FMRI study[j]. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand, 2005, 49(6): [2] Cohen MS, Britt RH. Effects of sodium pentobarbital, ketamine, halothane, and chloralose on brainstem auditory evoked responses [J]. Anesth Analg, 1982, 61(4): [3] Cheung SW, Nagarajan SS, Bedenbaugh PH, et al. Auditory cortical neuron response differences under isoflurane versus pentobarbital anesthesia[j]. Hear Res, 2001, 156(1-2): [4] Wan X, Puil E. Pentobarbital depressant effects are independent of GABA receptors in auditory thalamic neurons[j]. J Neurophysiol, 2002, 88(6): [5] Gaese BH, Ostwald J. Anesthesia changes frequency tuning of neurons in the rat primary auditory cortex[j]. J Neurophysiol, 2001, 86(2): [6] Polley DB, Read HL, Storace DA, et al. Multiparametric auditory receptive field organization across five cortical fields in the albino rat [J]. J Neurophysiol, 2007, 97(5): [7] Maggi CA, Meli A. Suitability of urethane anesthesia for physiopharmacological investigations in various systems. Part 1: General considerations[j]. Experientia, 1986, 42(2): [8] Maggi CA, Meli A. Suitability of urethane anesthesia for physiopharmacological investigations in various systems. Part 2: Cardiovascular system[j]. Experientia, 1986, 42(3): [9] Maggi CA, Meli A. Suitability of urethane anesthesia for physiopharmacological investigations. Part 3: Other systems and conclusions[j]. Experientia, 1986, 42(5): [10] Capsius B, Leppelsack HJ. Influence of urethane anesthesia on neural processing in the auditory cortex analogue of a songbird[j]. Hear Res, 1996, 96(1-2): [11] Hara K, Harris RA. The anesthetic mechanism of urethane: the effects on neurotransmitter-gated ion channels[j]. Anesth Analg, 2002, 94(2): [12]Wu GK, Li P, Tao HW, et al. Nonmonotonic synaptic excitation and imbalanced inhibition underlying cortical intensity tuning [J]. Neuron, 2006, 52(4): [13]Carrasco A, Lomber SG. Differential modulatory influences between primary auditory cortex and the anterior auditory field [J]. J Neurosci, 2009, 29(26): [14]Anderson LA, Linden JF. Physiological differences between histologically defined subdivisions in the mouse auditory thalamus[j]. Hear Res, 2011, 274(1-2): [15]Llano DA, Sherman SM. Differences in intrinsic properties and local network connectivity of identified layer 5 and layer 6 adult mouse auditory corticothalamic neurons support a dual corticothalamic projection hypothesis[j]. Cereb Cortex, 2009, 19(12): [16]Feng Y, Wang J, Yin S. General anesthesia changes gap-evoked auditory responses in guinea pigs[j]. Acta Otolaryngol, 2007, 127 (2): [17]Yamakura T, Chavez-Noriega LE, Harris RA. Subunit-dependent inhibition of human neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors and other ligand-gated ion channels by dissociative anesthetics ketamine and dizocilpine[j]. Anesthesiology, 2000, 92(4): [18]Miyasaka M, Domino EF. Neural mechanisms of ketamine-induced anesthesia[j]. Int J Neuropharmacol, 1968, 7(6): [19]Astl J, Popelar J, Kvasnak E, et al. Comparison of response properties of neurons in the inferior colliculus of guinea pigs under different anesthetics[j]. Audiology, 1996, 35(6): [20]Koblin DD. Urethane: help or hindrance[j]?. Anesth Analg, 2002, 94(2): [21]Liang F, Yang W, Zheng X, et al. Response property of inferior collicular neurons inherited from peripheral origin in mouse[j]. Brain Res, 2011, 1369: [22]Perkins KL. Cell-attached voltage-clamp and current-clamp recording and stimulation techniques in brain slices[j]. J Neurosci Methods, 2006, 154(1-2): [23]Wu GK, Arbuckle R, Liu BH, et al. Lateral sharpening of cortical frequency tuning by approximately balanced inhibition[j]. Neuron, 2008, 58(1): [24]Phillips DP. Temporal response features of cat auditory cortex neurons contributing to sensitivity to tones delivered in the presence of continuous noise[j]. Hear Res, 1985, 19(3): [25]Schreiner CE, Read HL, Sutter ML. Modular organization of frequency integration in primary auditory cortex[j]. Annu Rev Neurosci, 2000, 23: [26]Ehret G, Schreiner CE. Frequency resolution and spectral integration (critical band analysis) in single units of the cat primary auditory cortex[j]. J Comp Physiol A, 1997, 181(6): [27]Calhoun BM, Schreiner CE. Spectral envelope coding in cat primary auditory cortex: linear and non-linear effects of stimulus characteristics[j]. Eur J Neurosci, 1998, 10(3): [28]Robles L, Ruggero MA. Mechanics of the mammalian cochlea[j]. Physiol Rev, 2001, 81(3): [29]Ehret G, Merzenich MM. Complex sound analysis (frequency resolution, filtering and spectral integration) by single units of the inferior colliculus of the cat[j]. Brain Res, 1988, 472(2): [30]Heil P. First-spike latency of auditory neurons revisited[j]. Curr Opin Neurobiol, 2004, 14(4): [31]Scholfield CN. Potentiation of inhibition by general anaesthetics in neurones of the olfactory cortex in vitro[j]. Pflugers Arch, 1980, 383 (3): [32]Kuwada S, Batra R, Stanford TR. Monaural and binaural response properties of neurons in the inferior colliculus of the rabbit: effects of sodium pentobarbital[j]. J Neurophysiol, 1989, 61(2): [33]Faure PA, Fremouw T, Casseday JH, et al. Temporal masking reveals properties of sound-evoked inhibition in duration-tuned neurons of the inferior colliculus[j]. J Neurosci, 2003, 23(7): [34]Sceniak MP, Maciver MB. Cellular actions of urethane on rat visual cortical neurons in vitro[j]. J Neurophysiol, 2006, 95(6): [35]Yamakura T, Mori H, Masaki H, et al. Different sensitivities of NMDA receptor channel subtypes to non-competitive antagonists [J]. Neuroreport, 1993, 4(6): [36]Chen CF, Chow SY. Effects of ketamine on synaptic transmission in cat spinal cord[j]. Neuropharmacology, 1975, 14(2): [37]Franks NP, Lieb WR. Molecular and cellular mechanisms of general anaesthesia[j]. Nature, 1994, 367(6464): [38]Scholl B, Gao X, Wehr M. Nonoverlapping sets of synapses drive on responses and off responses in auditory cortex[j]. Neuron, 2010, 65 (3): [39]Albrecht D, Davidowa H. Action of urethane on dorsal lateral geniculate neurons[j]. Brain Res Bull, 1989, 22(6): [40]Girman SV, Sauve Y, Lund RD. Receptive field properties of single neurons in rat primary visual cortex[j]. J Neurophysiol, 1999, 82(1): [41] Moore JA, Appenteng K. Contrasting effects of urethane and pentobarbitone anaesthesia on the electrical properties of rat jaw-elevator motoneurones[j]. Brain Res, 1990, 523(1): [42]Dringenberg HC, Vanderwolf CH. Some general anesthetics reduce serotonergic neocortical activation and enhance the action of serotonergic antagonists[j]. Brain Res Bull, 1995, 36(3): [43]Sloan T, Rogers J. Dose and timing effect of etomidate on motor evoked potentials elicited by transcranial electric or magnetic stimulation in the monkey and baboon[j]. J Clin Monit Comput, 2009, 23(4):

9 793 乌拉坦和氯胺酮麻醉条件下大鼠初级听皮层听觉神经元对纯音 反应特性的比较 反应特性的比 较 黄玲玥 柏 林 赵 岩 肖中举 南方医科大学基础医学院生理教研室 广东 广州 摘要 目的 用在体细胞贴附式记录的方式 比较乌拉坦和氯胺酮麻醉条件下初级听皮层听觉神经元对纯音的反应特性 探查两 种麻醉剂对初级听皮层单个神经元纯音编码机制的影响 方法 选取 45 只体质量 200~250 g 的 Sprague-Dawley 雌性健康大鼠 将其随机分为两组 分别用乌拉坦和氯胺酮作为基础麻醉剂 手术暴露初级听皮层 选取短纯音作为刺激条件 用在体细胞贴 附式记录的方式获得大鼠初级听皮层的单个听觉神经元动作电位发放情况 并用Matlab软件提取动作电位的相关参数 分析两 种麻醉剂对听神经元的声反应特性的影响 结果 除了特征频率和 Q 值 特征频率与频率带宽的比值 反应听觉神经元的频率 调谐特性 以外 最小阈强度 自发放水平 声反应的潜伏期 刺激时间直方图以及频率-强度调谐曲线的类型均受到麻醉剂类型 的影响 在乌拉坦麻醉条件下 声反应神经元对短声刺激表现出较高的阈强度 较低的自发放水平 较长的潜伏期 且接受较强 抑制性频率-强度调谐曲线出现较频繁 结论 乌拉坦和氯胺酮对声音频率信息在听觉通路中的传递无明显影响 但在乌拉坦 麻醉条件下 初级听皮层神经元受到更强的抑制 这可能与乌拉坦能加强中间抑制性神经元的作用或抑制听神经元本身的兴奋 性有关 关键词 乌拉坦 氯胺酮 初级听皮层 在体细胞贴附式记录 收稿日期 基金项目 国家自然科学基金 作者简介 黄玲玥 在读硕士研究生 huanglingyueliyan@yahoo.com.cn 柏 林 讲师 在读博士研究生 bolinwu@126.com 黄玲玥 柏林 共同为第一作者 通信作者 肖中举 教授 博士生导师 xiaozj@fimmu.com

Different forward masking patterns of sustained noise burst and segmental noise burst in the inferior collicular neurons of the mouse

Different forward masking patterns of sustained noise burst and segmental noise burst in the inferior collicular neurons of the mouse Acta Physiologica Sinica, April 25, 2006, 58 (2): 141-148 http://www.actaps.com.cn 141 Research Paper Different forward masking patterns of sustained noise burst and segmental noise burst in the inferior

More information

间歇性低氧运动对大鼠骨骼肌线粒体自由基代谢的影响

间歇性低氧运动对大鼠骨骼肌线粒体自由基代谢的影响 第 14 卷第 7 期 2007 年 10 月 体育学刊 Journal of Physical Education Vol.14 No.7 Oct.2007 间歇性低氧运动对大鼠骨骼肌线粒体自由基代谢的影响 1 1 弢 2, 2 13 (1. 华南师范大学体育科学学院, 广东广州 510631; 广州体育学院运动人体科学系, 广东广州 510500) 摘要 : 100 SD (40 )(60 )

More information

宫颈上皮内瘤变 ; IgG1 IgG2 亚类 ; 酶联免疫吸附试验 R A (2009)

宫颈上皮内瘤变 ; IgG1 IgG2 亚类 ; 酶联免疫吸附试验 R A (2009) 2009 年第 19 卷第 11 期 CHINA ONCOLOGY 2009 Vol.19 No.11 831 免疫球蛋白 G(immunoglobulin G,IgG) 是血清和细胞外液中含量最高的免疫球蛋白, 其某个亚类的升高, 可能与宫颈上皮内瘤变 (cervical intraepithelial neoplasia, CIN) 的发生 发展及转归有密切相关 然而对于 CIN 患者血清人乳头瘤病毒样颗粒

More information

Different firing patterns induced by veratridine and aconitine in injured dorsal root ganglion neurons

Different firing patterns induced by veratridine and aconitine in injured dorsal root ganglion neurons Acta Physiologica Sinica, April 25, 2005, 57 (2): 169-174 http://www.actaps.com.cn 169 Research Paper Different firing patterns induced by veratridine and aconitine in injured dorsal root ganglion neurons

More information

Study on current situation and development trends of domestic and foreign lead maximum level standards in food

Study on current situation and development trends of domestic and foreign lead maximum level standards in food 5 1 Vol. 5 No. 1 2014 1 Journal of Food Safety and Quality Jan., 2014 邵 1, 懿 2, 王君 1, 吴永宁 1* (1., 100022; 2., 100021) 摘要 : 目的, 方法 结果,, 结论,, 关键词 : ; ; ; Study on current situation and development trends

More information

Frequency (khz) Intensity (db SPL) Frequency (khz)

Frequency (khz) Intensity (db SPL) Frequency (khz) a Before After No. of spikes b No. of spikes 6 4 8 6 4 5 5 Time (ms) 5 5 Time (ms) Intensity (db SPL) Intensity (db SPL) 7 5 3 7 5 3 4 6 64 Frequency (khz) 4 6 64 Frequency (khz) Spike no. Spike no. 8

More information

1) 有哪些方法, 为什么需要采用这些方法? 2) 有哪些参数, 这些参数的生理学意义是什么? 3) 功能的研究如何提示机制的改变?

1) 有哪些方法, 为什么需要采用这些方法? 2) 有哪些参数, 这些参数的生理学意义是什么? 3) 功能的研究如何提示机制的改变? 心脏泵功能的 测量方法 1 1) 有哪些方法, 为什么需要采用这些方法? 2) 有哪些参数, 这些参数的生理学意义是什么? 3) 功能的研究如何提示机制的改变? 2 心功能测量方法 In vivo 1. 超声法 2. 超声 + 导管法 In vitro 1. Langendorff mode 2. Working heart mode 3. Papillary muscle 4. Skinned fibers

More information

Received Accepted This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No ).

Received Accepted This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No ). Acta Physiologica Sinica, August 25, 2012, 64(4): 449 454 http://www.actaps.com.cn 449 Research Paper Involvement of protein kinase A activation and phospholipase A 2 inhibition in the adenosine-activated

More information

Spectro-temporal response fields in the inferior colliculus of awake monkey

Spectro-temporal response fields in the inferior colliculus of awake monkey 3.6.QH Spectro-temporal response fields in the inferior colliculus of awake monkey Versnel, Huib; Zwiers, Marcel; Van Opstal, John Department of Biophysics University of Nijmegen Geert Grooteplein 655

More information

Population coding/vector Coding Distributed representing 群体编码 / 向量编码 / 分布式表征

Population coding/vector Coding Distributed representing 群体编码 / 向量编码 / 分布式表征 Neural coding Population coding/vector Coding Distributed representing 群体编码 / 向量编码 / 分布式表征 Theory:Single Cells as Feature Detector 外界世界的信息 ( 甚至运动输出和复杂的认知过程 ) 的编码可以由单个神经元来完成的 Running-out-of-neurons problem?

More information

Delayed inhibition creates amplitude tuning of mouse inferior collicular neurons

Delayed inhibition creates amplitude tuning of mouse inferior collicular neurons AUDITORYAND VESTIBULAR SYSTEMS Delayed inhibition creates amplitude tuning of mouse inferior collicular neurons Jie Tang a,b, Zhong-Ju Xiao a,c andjun-xianshen a a State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive

More information

Representation of sound in the auditory nerve

Representation of sound in the auditory nerve Representation of sound in the auditory nerve Eric D. Young Department of Biomedical Engineering Johns Hopkins University Young, ED. Neural representation of spectral and temporal information in speech.

More information

Doing Business in China

Doing Business in China Doing Business in China 1 Doing Business in China 在中国经商 How to Win in Business in China 怎么在中国赢取商机 Read the text below and do the activity that follows. 阅读下面的短文, 然后完成练习 China has changed enormously over

More information

Temporal and spatial pattern of RhoA expression in injured spinal cord of adult mice

Temporal and spatial pattern of RhoA expression in injured spinal cord of adult mice J South Med Univ, 3, 33(4): 463-468 doi.3969/j.issn.673-4254.3.4. 463 Original Article Temporal and spatial pattern of RhoA expression in injured spinal cord of adult mice KANG Xiaoning, WEN Jingkun, WANG

More information

Neural Recording Methods

Neural Recording Methods Neural Recording Methods Types of neural recording 1. evoked potentials 2. extracellular, one neuron at a time 3. extracellular, many neurons at a time 4. intracellular (sharp or patch), one neuron at

More information

Supplementary Information

Supplementary Information Hyperpolarization-activated cation channels inhibit EPSPs by interactions with M-type K + channels Meena S. George, L.F. Abbott, Steven A. Siegelbaum Supplementary Information Part 1: Supplementary Figures

More information

利用 PEN 项目网络教育 Making use of PEN project web-based education 发展聋人高等特殊教育 to develop higher education for the deaf

利用 PEN 项目网络教育 Making use of PEN project web-based education 发展聋人高等特殊教育 to develop higher education for the deaf 利用 PEN 项目网络教育 Making use of PEN project web-based education 发展聋人高等特殊教育 to develop higher education for the deaf 长春大学副校长庄树范 Vice-president of Changchun University Zhuang Shufan 一 PEN 项目与我校的机缘 内容提要 Informative

More information

Chapter 11: Sound, The Auditory System, and Pitch Perception

Chapter 11: Sound, The Auditory System, and Pitch Perception Chapter 11: Sound, The Auditory System, and Pitch Perception Overview of Questions What is it that makes sounds high pitched or low pitched? How do sound vibrations inside the ear lead to the perception

More information

Comment by Delgutte and Anna. A. Dreyer (Eaton-Peabody Laboratory, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, MA)

Comment by Delgutte and Anna. A. Dreyer (Eaton-Peabody Laboratory, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, MA) Comments Comment by Delgutte and Anna. A. Dreyer (Eaton-Peabody Laboratory, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, MA) Is phase locking to transposed stimuli as good as phase locking to low-frequency

More information

Theme 2: Cellular mechanisms in the Cochlear Nucleus

Theme 2: Cellular mechanisms in the Cochlear Nucleus Theme 2: Cellular mechanisms in the Cochlear Nucleus The Cochlear Nucleus (CN) presents a unique opportunity for quantitatively studying input-output transformations by neurons because it gives rise to

More information

Is action potential threshold lowest in the axon?

Is action potential threshold lowest in the axon? Supplementary information to: Is action potential threshold lowest in the axon? Maarten H. P. Kole & Greg J. Stuart Supplementary Fig. 1 Analysis of action potential (AP) threshold criteria. (a) Example

More information

Analysis of in-vivo extracellular recordings. Ryan Morrill Bootcamp 9/10/2014

Analysis of in-vivo extracellular recordings. Ryan Morrill Bootcamp 9/10/2014 Analysis of in-vivo extracellular recordings Ryan Morrill Bootcamp 9/10/2014 Goals for the lecture Be able to: Conceptually understand some of the analysis and jargon encountered in a typical (sensory)

More information

Bosworth, /1966. Clemmer, 1966 Driscoll McCorkle & Korn 1954 Ohlin 1956 Wheeler 1961 U U-shaped curve Wheeler

Bosworth, /1966. Clemmer, 1966 Driscoll McCorkle & Korn 1954 Ohlin 1956 Wheeler 1961 U U-shaped curve Wheeler 关于服刑人员适应监狱生活的经验性研究起源于 20 世纪的美国之后, 社 会学家开始用人类学方法研究, 然而在这些研究中, 关于女性服刑人员监狱适应的研究较 少, 并被当做男性服刑人员 附属物 来比较, 此后有学者开始关注监狱环境以及社会文化背 景对于女性服刑人员监狱适应性状况的影响本文通过回顾与反思认为, 对女性应从两个维 度即适应监狱制度环境和适应服刑人员群体或服刑人员亚文化入手并从中探讨两者间关

More information

500 中国肺癌杂志2010年5月第13卷第5期 C h i n J L u n g C a n c e r, M ay , Vo l. 1 3, No. 5 临床研究 血清TPS CEA Pro-GRP和CYFRA21-1 水平在肺癌患者中的临床意义 王敬慧 时广利 张树才 王群慧

500 中国肺癌杂志2010年5月第13卷第5期 C h i n J L u n g C a n c e r, M ay , Vo l. 1 3, No. 5 临床研究 血清TPS CEA Pro-GRP和CYFRA21-1 水平在肺癌患者中的临床意义 王敬慧 时广利 张树才 王群慧 5 临床研究 血清 和CYFRA- 水平在肺癌患者中的临床意义 王敬慧 时广利 张树才 王群慧 杨新杰 李曦 王海永 张卉 宋长兴 摘要 背景与目的 血清肿瘤标志物在肺癌的诊断 疗效 预后判断中起着重要作用 本研究探讨血清组 织多肽特异性抗原 tissue polypeptide specific antigen, 与癌胚抗原 carcinoembryonic antigen, 胃泌素释放 肽前体

More information

中国 HIV 新发感染检测发展及未来 Development and Future of HIV-1 Incidence Assay in China

中国 HIV 新发感染检测发展及未来 Development and Future of HIV-1 Incidence Assay in China 中国 HIV 新发感染检测发展及未来 Development and Future of HIV-1 Incidence Assay in China Yan Jiang MD, PhD. National HIV Reference Laboratory, China CDC 中国 HIV 检测体系 HIV Testing in China Screening Confirmatory Recent

More information

读书报告 2015 年 月 唐之韵

读书报告 2015 年 月 唐之韵 读书报告 2015 年 03-04 月 唐之韵 Mar. Apr. NEJM VOL.372 Kaukonen KM1, Bailey M, Pilcher D, et al. N Engl J Med. 2015 Apr 23;372(17):1629-38. Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome Criteria in Defining Severe Sepsis.

More information

病毒基因组学与 病毒进化 刘翟博士研究员 中国科学院微生物研究所

病毒基因组学与 病毒进化 刘翟博士研究员 中国科学院微生物研究所 病毒基因组学与 病毒进化 刘翟博士研究员 中国科学院微生物研究所 2016-6-27 新一代测序技术带来了测序成本的大大降低!!! $100,000,000 $10,000,000 Moore s Law $1,000,000 $100,000 $10,000 $1,000 $1,000 $100 Pathogens Genomics Pathogen infections are among the

More information

新型 DES 和 BVS 血栓发生现状及应对策略 钱菊英,MD, FACC,FESC 复旦大学附属中山医院上海市心血管病研究所

新型 DES 和 BVS 血栓发生现状及应对策略 钱菊英,MD, FACC,FESC 复旦大学附属中山医院上海市心血管病研究所 新型 DES 和 BVS 血栓发生现状及应对策略 钱菊英,MD, FACC,FESC 复旦大学附属中山医院上海市心血管病研究所 OCC2016 Increase of LST and death for first generation DES after stop of 6m DAPT BASKET-LATE Study P

More information

Current Status of Ultrasonic Device Calibration in China

Current Status of Ultrasonic Device Calibration in China APMP TCAUV - Changsha Current Status of Ultrasonic Device Calibration in China YANG Ping, NIM E-mail: yangp@nim.ac.cn 1 2 3 5 6 Contents 1 Ultrasound Power 2.1 Ultrasound Field Hydrophone Calibration

More information

Supplementary Figure 1. ACE robotic platform. A. Overview of the rig setup showing major hardware components of ACE (Automatic single Cell

Supplementary Figure 1. ACE robotic platform. A. Overview of the rig setup showing major hardware components of ACE (Automatic single Cell 2 Supplementary Figure 1. ACE robotic platform. A. Overview of the rig setup showing major hardware components of ACE (Automatic single Cell Experimenter) including the MultiClamp 700B, Digidata 1440A,

More information

Ling Zhao Huazhong Agricultural University Sep. 21, 2015

Ling Zhao Huazhong Agricultural University Sep. 21, 2015 Rabies vaccine development Ling Zhao Huazhong Agricultural University Sep. 21, 2015 Outlines 1. Rabies 2. Rabies virus 3. Rabies epidemiology 4. Rabies vaccine development 5. Perspective Rabies-one of

More information

Neurons of the Bed Nucleus of the Stria Terminalis (BNST)

Neurons of the Bed Nucleus of the Stria Terminalis (BNST) Neurons of the Bed Nucleus of the Stria Terminalis (BNST) Electrophysiological Properties and Their Response to Serotonin DONALD G. RAINNIE a Harvard Medical School and Department of Psychiatry, Brockton

More information

博士后学位论文. Importin 13: 一个新的角膜上皮前体细胞标志物. Importin 13:a Novel Potential Marker for Corneal Epithelial Progenitor Cells 指导教师 : 刘祖国 专业名称 : 眼科学

博士后学位论文. Importin 13: 一个新的角膜上皮前体细胞标志物. Importin 13:a Novel Potential Marker for Corneal Epithelial Progenitor Cells 指导教师 : 刘祖国 专业名称 : 眼科学 学校编码 :10384 学号 :BH17000206 博士后学位论文 Importin 13: 一个新的角膜上皮前体细胞标志物 Importin 13:a Novel Potential Marker for Corneal Epithelial Progenitor Cells 王华 指导教师 : 刘祖国 专业名称 : 眼科学 答辩日期 :2009 年 9 月 厦门大学学位论文原创性声明 本人呈交的学位论文是本人在导师指导下,

More information

DNA-EGS1386 in cells induced RNase P inhibits the expression of human cytomegalovirus UL49 gene

DNA-EGS1386 in cells induced RNase P inhibits the expression of human cytomegalovirus UL49 gene 生物工程学报 Chin J Biotech 2009, November 25; 25(11): 1690-1696 journals.im.ac.cn Chinese Journal of Biotechnology ISSN 1000-3061 cjb@im.ac.cn 2009 Institute of Microbiology, CAS & CSM, All rights reserved

More information

How is the stimulus represented in the nervous system?

How is the stimulus represented in the nervous system? How is the stimulus represented in the nervous system? Eric Young F Rieke et al Spikes MIT Press (1997) Especially chapter 2 I Nelken et al Encoding stimulus information by spike numbers and mean response

More information

Toxicity Pathways Mediated by Ion Channels

Toxicity Pathways Mediated by Ion Channels Toxicity Pathways Mediated by Ion Channels Philip J. Bushnell Neurotoxicology Division National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory Office of Research and Development, US EPA Research

More information

Systems Neurobiology: Plasticity in the Auditory System. Jason Middleton -

Systems Neurobiology: Plasticity in the Auditory System. Jason Middleton - Systems Neurobiology: Plasticity in the Auditory System Jason Middleton - jmiddlet@pitt.edu Auditory plasticity Plasticity Early development and critical period Adult plasticity and neuromodulation Brainstem

More information

Analysis of fatty acids composition and trans-fatty acids content in chocolate

Analysis of fatty acids composition and trans-fatty acids content in chocolate 6 4 Vol. 6 No. 4 2015 4 Journal of Food Safety and Quality Apr., 2015 * 王浩, 杨悠悠, 刘佟, 苗雨田, 杨永坛 (,, 102209) 摘要 : 目的 方法 -,, - 结果, 99.8%, 5, : 25%~27% 32%~35% 30%~32%; 0.4%~1.1%( ) 结论, 关键词 : ; ; ; - Analysis

More information

Effects of Remaining Hair Cells on Cochlear Implant Function

Effects of Remaining Hair Cells on Cochlear Implant Function Effects of Remaining Hair Cells on Cochlear Implant Function 8th Quarterly Progress Report Neural Prosthesis Program Contract N01-DC-2-1005 (Quarter spanning April-June, 2004) P.J. Abbas, H. Noh, F.C.

More information

LETTERS. Sustained firing in auditory cortex evoked by preferred stimuli. Xiaoqin Wang 1, Thomas Lu 1, Ross K. Snider 1 & Li Liang 1

LETTERS. Sustained firing in auditory cortex evoked by preferred stimuli. Xiaoqin Wang 1, Thomas Lu 1, Ross K. Snider 1 & Li Liang 1 Vol 435 19 May 2005 doi:10.1038/nature03565 Sustained firing in auditory cortex evoked by preferred stimuli Xiaoqin Wang 1, Thomas Lu 1, Ross K. Snider 1 & Li Liang 1 LETTERS It has been well documented

More information

The Central Auditory System

The Central Auditory System THE AUDITORY SYSTEM Each auditory nerve sends information to the cochlear nucleus. The Central Auditory System From there, projections diverge to many different pathways. The Central Auditory System There

More information

Cross-sectional study on the relationship between life events and mental health of secondary school students in Shanghai, China

Cross-sectional study on the relationship between life events and mental health of secondary school students in Shanghai, China 162 Shanghai Archives of Psychiatry, 2012, Vol.24, No.3 Cross-sectional study on the relationship between life events and mental health of secondary school students in Shanghai, China Linlin ZHOU, Juan

More information

Protective mechanisms of sevoflurane against one-lung ventilation-induced acute lung injury: role of cyclooxygenase-2 and 5-lipoxygenase pathways

Protective mechanisms of sevoflurane against one-lung ventilation-induced acute lung injury: role of cyclooxygenase-2 and 5-lipoxygenase pathways J South Med Univ, 13, 33(5): 5-3 doi 1.399/j.issn.173-5.13.5. 5 Original Article Protective mechanisms of sevoflurane against one-lung ventilation-induced acute lung injury: role of cyclooxygenase- and

More information

Introduction to Electrophysiology

Introduction to Electrophysiology Introduction to Electrophysiology Dr. Kwangyeol Baek Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School 2018-05-31s Contents Principles in Electrophysiology Techniques

More information

Quantitative analysis of synaptic vesicle release and readily releasable pool size in hippocampal neurons

Quantitative analysis of synaptic vesicle release and readily releasable pool size in hippocampal neurons Acta Physiologica Sinica, December 25, 2009, 61 (6): 505-510 http://www.actaps.com.cn 505 Research Paper Quantitative analysis of synaptic vesicle release and readily releasable pool size in hippocampal

More information

Nonoverlapping Sets of Synapses Drive On Responses and Off Responses in Auditory Cortex

Nonoverlapping Sets of Synapses Drive On Responses and Off Responses in Auditory Cortex Article Nonoverlapping Sets of Synapses Drive On Responses and Off Responses in Auditory Cortex Ben Scholl, 1 Xiang Gao, 1 and Michael Wehr 1, * 1 Institute of Neuroscience, Department of Psychology, University

More information

File name: Supplementary Information Description: Supplementary Figures, Supplementary Table and Supplementary References

File name: Supplementary Information Description: Supplementary Figures, Supplementary Table and Supplementary References File name: Supplementary Information Description: Supplementary Figures, Supplementary Table and Supplementary References File name: Supplementary Data 1 Description: Summary datasheets showing the spatial

More information

Thyroid gland & Root of the neck OUTLINE. Thyroid gland

Thyroid gland & Root of the neck OUTLINE. Thyroid gland Dept. of Human Anatomy, Si Chuan University Zhou hongying eaglezhyxzy@163.com Thyroid gland & Root of the neck OUTLINE Thyroid gland Location & superficial feature Blood supply & Venous drainage Relationship

More information

Thyroid gland & Root of neck. L o g o

Thyroid gland & Root of neck. L o g o Thyroid gland & Root of neck Dept. of Human Anatomy Zhou Hong Ying L o g o Thyroid gland Outline Location & superficial feature Blood supply & Venous drainage Relationship of its vessels and related nerves

More information

A Case Report on Primary Ovarian Leiomyo-Sarcoma and Some Related Documents Review

A Case Report on Primary Ovarian Leiomyo-Sarcoma and Some Related Documents Review Asian Case Reports in Oncology 亚洲肿瘤科病例研究, 2013, 2, 11-15 http://dx.doi.org/10.12677/acrpo.2013.23004 Published Online July 2013 (http://www.hanspub.org/journal/acrpo.html) A Case Report on Primary Ovarian

More information

Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics

Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics Volume 9, 3 http://acousticalsociety.org/ ICA 3 Montreal Montreal, Canada 2-7 June 3 Psychological and Physiological Acoustics Session 3aPP: Auditory Physiology and

More information

The control of spiking by synaptic input in striatal and pallidal neurons

The control of spiking by synaptic input in striatal and pallidal neurons The control of spiking by synaptic input in striatal and pallidal neurons Dieter Jaeger Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322 Key words: Abstract: rat, slice, whole cell, dynamic current

More information

Supporting Online Material for

Supporting Online Material for www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/317/5841/183/dc1 Supporting Online Material for Astrocytes Potentiate Transmitter Release at Single Hippocampal Synapses Gertrudis Perea and Alfonso Araque* *To whom

More information

FIRING PROPERTY OF INFERIOR COLLICULUS NEURONS AFFECTED BY FMR1 GENE MUTATION

FIRING PROPERTY OF INFERIOR COLLICULUS NEURONS AFFECTED BY FMR1 GENE MUTATION JOURNAL OF OTOLOGY FIRING PROPERTY OF INFERIOR COLLICULUS NEURONS AFFECTED BY FMR1 GENE MUTATION Brittany Mott, SUN Wei Abstract Fragile X syndrome is the most common form of inherited mental retardation

More information

How to Make the Choice?

How to Make the Choice? How to Make the Choice? Translational Approach for Cancer Treatment 闻丹忆 Danyi.wen@lidebiotech.com 181 9229 52 Nov 23, 214 1 Tumor volume (mm 3 ) Tumor growth (Efficacy study in LIX4-FP1+2) 15 Vehiclel,

More information

Preparation of Cu nanoparticles with ascorbic acid by aqueous solution reduction method

Preparation of Cu nanoparticles with ascorbic acid by aqueous solution reduction method Trans. Nonferrous Met. Soc. China 22(2012) 2198 2203 Preparation of Cu nanoparticles with ascorbic acid by aqueous solution reduction method LIU Qing-ming 1, 2, Takehiro YASUNAMI 1, Kensuke KURUDA 1, Masazumi

More information

Resonant synchronization of heterogeneous inhibitory networks

Resonant synchronization of heterogeneous inhibitory networks Cerebellar oscillations: Anesthetized rats Transgenic animals Recurrent model Review of literature: γ Network resonance Life simulations Resonance frequency Conclusion Resonant synchronization of heterogeneous

More information

病理学. Pathology 白求恩医学院病理学系 李伟

病理学. Pathology 白求恩医学院病理学系 李伟 病理学 Pathology 白求恩医学院病理学系 李伟 2010.9.21 The main duty of medicine Patients just want to know:? What disease am I suffering from?? How can you cure it?? How could you prevent me from having the illness in

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. Supplementary Figure 1

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. Supplementary Figure 1 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Supplementary Figure 1 The supralinear events evoked in CA3 pyramidal cells fulfill the criteria for NMDA spikes, exhibiting a threshold, sensitivity to NMDAR blockade, and all-or-none

More information

乙型肝炎疫苗初次免疫成年正常应答和高应答者 3 年抗体持久性观察

乙型肝炎疫苗初次免疫成年正常应答和高应答者 3 年抗体持久性观察 478 中华预防医学杂志 216 年 6 月第 5 卷第 6 期 Chin J Prev Med,June 216, Vol. 5, No. 6 乙型肝炎疫苗初次免疫成年正常应答和高应答者 3 年抗体持久性观察 吕静静 张丽 颜丙玉 刘甲野 冯艺 宋立志 陈士玉 周立波 梁晓峰 崔富强 王富珍 徐爱强 摘要 目的探讨乙型肝炎疫苗 (HepB) 初次免疫成年正常应答和高应答者 3 年的抗体持久性及其影响因素

More information

Nature Neuroscience: doi: /nn Supplementary Figure 1. Trial structure for go/no-go behavior

Nature Neuroscience: doi: /nn Supplementary Figure 1. Trial structure for go/no-go behavior Supplementary Figure 1 Trial structure for go/no-go behavior a, Overall timeline of experiments. Day 1: A1 mapping, injection of AAV1-SYN-GCAMP6s, cranial window and headpost implantation. Water restriction

More information

芬美意对嗅觉受体的研究和应用 - 服务社会, 创造商机

芬美意对嗅觉受体的研究和应用 - 服务社会, 创造商机 芬美意对嗅觉受体的研究和应用 - 服务社会, 创造商机 Firmenich Olfaction Receptor Biology: Understanding the human nose and its applications on social responsibility programs and business opportunities in the space of malodor

More information

How we study the brain: a survey of methods used in neuroscience

How we study the brain: a survey of methods used in neuroscience How we study the brain: a survey of methods used in neuroscience Preparing living neurons for recording Large identifiable neurons in a leech Rohon-Beard neurons in a frog spinal cord Living slice of a

More information

Determination of 7 kinds of heavy metal elements in oral tobacco products by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry

Determination of 7 kinds of heavy metal elements in oral tobacco products by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry 7 10 Vol. 7 No. 10 2016 10 Journal of Food Safety and Quality Oct., 2016 7 张东豫 1, 李鹏 2*, 朱琦 1, 孙世豪 2 1,, 屈展 2, 袁岐山 1, 宗永立 (1., 450000; 2., 450001) 2 摘要 : 目的 7 方法 7, 58 7 结果 5 ml 2 ml, 130 7, 0.9999, 0.013~0.026

More information

Stimulus-Specific Adaptation Occurs in the Auditory Thalamus

Stimulus-Specific Adaptation Occurs in the Auditory Thalamus The Journal of Neuroscience, June 3, 9 9():739 733 739 Brief Communications Stimulus-Specific Adaptation Occurs in the Auditory Thalamus Lucy A. Anderson, 1 G. Björn Christianson, 1 and Jennifer F. Linden

More information

Microcircuitry coordination of cortical motor information in self-initiation of voluntary movements

Microcircuitry coordination of cortical motor information in self-initiation of voluntary movements Y. Isomura et al. 1 Microcircuitry coordination of cortical motor information in self-initiation of voluntary movements Yoshikazu Isomura, Rie Harukuni, Takashi Takekawa, Hidenori Aizawa & Tomoki Fukai

More information

Cellular Bioelectricity

Cellular Bioelectricity ELEC ENG 3BB3: Cellular Bioelectricity Notes for Lecture 24 Thursday, March 6, 2014 8. NEURAL ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY We will look at: Structure of the nervous system Sensory transducers and neurons Neural coding

More information

Neural Representations of Temporally Asymmetric Stimuli in the Auditory Cortex of Awake Primates

Neural Representations of Temporally Asymmetric Stimuli in the Auditory Cortex of Awake Primates Neural Representations of Temporally Asymmetric Stimuli in the Auditory Cortex of Awake Primates THOMAS LU, LI LIANG, AND XIAOQIN WANG Laboratory of Auditory Neurophysiology, Department of Biomedical Engineering,

More information

Bursting dynamics in the brain. Jaeseung Jeong, Department of Biosystems, KAIST

Bursting dynamics in the brain. Jaeseung Jeong, Department of Biosystems, KAIST Bursting dynamics in the brain Jaeseung Jeong, Department of Biosystems, KAIST Tonic and phasic activity A neuron is said to exhibit a tonic activity when it fires a series of single action potentials

More information

AUDL GS08/GAV1 Signals, systems, acoustics and the ear. Pitch & Binaural listening

AUDL GS08/GAV1 Signals, systems, acoustics and the ear. Pitch & Binaural listening AUDL GS08/GAV1 Signals, systems, acoustics and the ear Pitch & Binaural listening Review 25 20 15 10 5 0-5 100 1000 10000 25 20 15 10 5 0-5 100 1000 10000 Part I: Auditory frequency selectivity Tuning

More information

Electrophysiological properties of spinal wide dynamic range neurons in neuropathic pain rats following spinal nerve ligation

Electrophysiological properties of spinal wide dynamic range neurons in neuropathic pain rats following spinal nerve ligation Neurosci Bull February 1, 2011, 27(1): 1-8. http://www.neurosci.cn DOI: 10.1007/s12264-011-1039-z 1 Original Article Electrophysiological properties of spinal wide dynamic range neurons in neuropathic

More information

The mammalian cochlea possesses two classes of afferent neurons and two classes of efferent neurons.

The mammalian cochlea possesses two classes of afferent neurons and two classes of efferent neurons. 1 2 The mammalian cochlea possesses two classes of afferent neurons and two classes of efferent neurons. Type I afferents contact single inner hair cells to provide acoustic analysis as we know it. Type

More information

STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM

STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM STRUCTURE AND MAINTENANCE OF NEURONS (a) (b) Dendrites Cell body Initial segment collateral terminals (a) Diagrammatic representation of a neuron. The break in

More information

Patient outcome and prognostic factors of renal cell carcinoma in clinical stage T1-3N1-2M0: a single-institution analysis

Patient outcome and prognostic factors of renal cell carcinoma in clinical stage T1-3N1-2M0: a single-institution analysis 211;31(5) J South Med Univ 749 Original Article atient outcome and prognostic factors of renal cell carcinoma in clinical stage T13N12M: a singleinstitution analysis CHEN Zhuangfei, WU eng, ZHENG Shaobin,

More information

Health: Acupuncture in the UK 健康 : 针灸在英国

Health: Acupuncture in the UK 健康 : 针灸在英国 Health: Acupuncture in the UK 健康 : 针灸在英国 1 Health: Acupuncture in the UK 健康 : 针灸在英国 A Better Way to Beat Back Pain? 腰疼有救吗? What is the single largest cause of sick leave in the UK? The answer is not the

More information

Neurobiology of Hearing (Salamanca, 2012) Auditory Cortex (2) Prof. Xiaoqin Wang

Neurobiology of Hearing (Salamanca, 2012) Auditory Cortex (2) Prof. Xiaoqin Wang Neurobiology of Hearing (Salamanca, 2012) Auditory Cortex (2) Prof. Xiaoqin Wang Laboratory of Auditory Neurophysiology Department of Biomedical Engineering Johns Hopkins University web1.johnshopkins.edu/xwang

More information

Nature Methods: doi: /nmeth Supplementary Figure 1. Activity in turtle dorsal cortex is sparse.

Nature Methods: doi: /nmeth Supplementary Figure 1. Activity in turtle dorsal cortex is sparse. Supplementary Figure 1 Activity in turtle dorsal cortex is sparse. a. Probability distribution of firing rates across the population (notice log scale) in our data. The range of firing rates is wide but

More information

Histological Structure Difference of Dog s Olfactory Bulb Between Different Age and Sex

Histological Structure Difference of Dog s Olfactory Bulb Between Different Age and Sex 动物学研究 2008,Oct. 29(5):537 545 CN 53-1040/Q ISSN 0254-5853 Zoological Research DOI:10.3724/SP.J.1141.2008.05537 Histological Structure Difference of Dog s Olfactory Bulb Between Different Age and Sex WEI

More information

Processing in The Cochlear Nucleus

Processing in The Cochlear Nucleus Processing in The Cochlear Nucleus Alan R. Palmer Medical Research Council Institute of Hearing Research University Park Nottingham NG7 RD, UK The Auditory Nervous System Cortex Cortex MGB Medial Geniculate

More information

Bioscience in the 21st century

Bioscience in the 21st century Bioscience in the 21st century Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling Dr. Michael Burger Outline: 1. Why neuroscience? 2. The neuron 3. Action potentials 4. Synapses 5. Organization of the nervous system 6.

More information

Chapter 11 Introduction to the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter Outline

Chapter 11 Introduction to the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter Outline Chapter 11 Introduction to the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter Outline Module 11.1 Overview of the Nervous System (Figures 11.1-11.3) A. The nervous system controls our perception and experience

More information

SHANGHAI JIAO TONG UNIVERSITY 学士学位论文 THESIS OF BACHELOR 论文题目 : D-NNA 手性转化中转氨酶的鉴定 学生姓名 : 陈忠炜 学生学号 : 专 业 : 药 学 指导教师 : 郝 彬 学院 ( 系 ): 药学院

SHANGHAI JIAO TONG UNIVERSITY 学士学位论文 THESIS OF BACHELOR 论文题目 : D-NNA 手性转化中转氨酶的鉴定 学生姓名 : 陈忠炜 学生学号 : 专 业 : 药 学 指导教师 : 郝 彬 学院 ( 系 ): 药学院 SHANGHAI JIAO TONG UNIVERSITY 学士学位论文 THESIS OF BACHELOR 论文题目 : D-NNA 手性转化中转氨酶的鉴定 学生姓名 : 陈忠炜 学生学号 : 5061719022 专 业 : 药 学 指导教师 : 郝 彬 学院 ( 系 ): 药学院 上海交通大学 本科生毕业设计 ( 论文 ) 任务书 课题名称 : D-NNA 手性转化中转氨酶的鉴定 执行时间

More information

Journal of Acupuncture and Tuina Science, 2012, v. 10 n. 2, p The original publication is available at

Journal of Acupuncture and Tuina Science, 2012, v. 10 n. 2, p The original publication is available at Title What is the origin of acupoint Author(s) Li, L; Yau, T; Yau, C Citation Journal of Acupuncture and Tuina Science, 2012, v. 10 n. 2, p. 125-127 Issued Date 2012 URL http://hdl.handle.net/10722/160714

More information

Iodine excess or not: analysis on the necessity of reducing the iodine content in edible salt based on the national monitoring results

Iodine excess or not: analysis on the necessity of reducing the iodine content in edible salt based on the national monitoring results Asia Pac J Clin Nutr 2011;20 (4):501-506 501 Review Iodine excess or not: analysis on the necessity of reducing the iodine content in edible salt based on the national monitoring results Sumei Li 1, Qingsi

More information

Film: Harry Potter Premiere 电影 : 哈里 波特首映式

Film: Harry Potter Premiere 电影 : 哈里 波特首映式 Film: Harry Potter Premiere 电影 : 哈里 波特首映式 1 Film: Harry Potter Premiere 电影 : 哈里 波特首映式 Harry Potter Stars Drenched at Premiere 哈里 波特班底明星首映式遇倾盆大雨 Harry Potter's magic spells might be able to fight the forces

More information

Alive but not Kicking : The Molecular Neurobiology of Anesthesia.

Alive but not Kicking : The Molecular Neurobiology of Anesthesia. Alive but not Kicking : The Molecular Neurobiology of Anesthesia. Before anesthesia.. Early anesthetic use: In surgery In recreation Technology for administration of volatile anesthetics is developed for

More information

Thalamo-Cortical Relationships Ultrastructure of Thalamic Synaptic Glomerulus

Thalamo-Cortical Relationships Ultrastructure of Thalamic Synaptic Glomerulus Central Visual Pathways V1/2 NEUR 3001 dvanced Visual Neuroscience The Lateral Geniculate Nucleus () is more than a relay station LP SC Professor Tom Salt UCL Institute of Ophthalmology Retina t.salt@ucl.ac.uk

More information

运动心理学在残疾人体育领域中的应用研究综述

运动心理学在残疾人体育领域中的应用研究综述 第 14 卷第 4 期 2007 年 7 月 体育学刊 Journal of Physical Education Vol.14 No.4 Jul.2007 运动心理学在残疾人体育领域中的应用研究综述 1 2 1 31 ( 北京体育大学 1. 研究生院 ;2. 运动心理学教研室, 北京 100084) 摘要 : 关键词 : 中图分类号 :G804.8 文献标识码 :A 文章编号 :1006-7116(2007)04-0119-06

More information

Contribution of Inhibition to Stimulus Selectivity in Primary Auditory Cortex of Awake Primates

Contribution of Inhibition to Stimulus Selectivity in Primary Auditory Cortex of Awake Primates 7314 The Journal of Neuroscience, May 26, 2010 30(21):7314 7325 Behavioral/Systems/Cognitive Contribution of Inhibition to Stimulus Selectivity in Primary Auditory Cortex of Awake Primates Srivatsun Sadagopan

More information

biological psychology, p. 40 The study of the nervous system, especially the brain. neuroscience, p. 40

biological psychology, p. 40 The study of the nervous system, especially the brain. neuroscience, p. 40 biological psychology, p. 40 The specialized branch of psychology that studies the relationship between behavior and bodily processes and system; also called biopsychology or psychobiology. neuroscience,

More information

Signals, systems, acoustics and the ear. Week 5. The peripheral auditory system: The ear as a signal processor

Signals, systems, acoustics and the ear. Week 5. The peripheral auditory system: The ear as a signal processor Signals, systems, acoustics and the ear Week 5 The peripheral auditory system: The ear as a signal processor Think of this set of organs 2 as a collection of systems, transforming sounds to be sent to

More information

Lauer et al Olivocochlear efferents. Amanda M. Lauer, Ph.D. Dept. of Otolaryngology-HNS

Lauer et al Olivocochlear efferents. Amanda M. Lauer, Ph.D. Dept. of Otolaryngology-HNS Lauer et al. 2012 Olivocochlear efferents Amanda M. Lauer, Ph.D. Dept. of Otolaryngology-HNS May 30, 2016 Overview Structural organization Responses Hypothesized roles in hearing Olivocochlear efferent

More information

Uric acid status and its correlates in Hangzhou urban population

Uric acid status and its correlates in Hangzhou urban population 102 Asia Pac J Clin Nutr 2006;15 (1):102-106 Original Article Uric acid status and its correlates in Hangzhou urban population Duo Li PhD 1, Xiaomei Yu MB 2, Xiaoqun Zhou MB 2, Sirithon Siriamornpun PhD

More information

POSTSYNAPTIC INHIBITION OF CRAYFISH TONIC FLEXOR MOTOR NEURONES BY ESCAPE COMMANDS

POSTSYNAPTIC INHIBITION OF CRAYFISH TONIC FLEXOR MOTOR NEURONES BY ESCAPE COMMANDS J. exp. Biol. (1980), 85, 343-347 343 With a figures Printed in Great Britain POSTSYNAPTIC INHIBITION OF CRAYFISH TONIC FLEXOR MOTOR NEURONES BY ESCAPE COMMANDS BY J. Y. KUWADA, G. HAGIWARA AND J. J. WINE

More information

Binaural Hearing. Steve Colburn Boston University

Binaural Hearing. Steve Colburn Boston University Binaural Hearing Steve Colburn Boston University Outline Why do we (and many other animals) have two ears? What are the major advantages? What is the observed behavior? How do we accomplish this physiologically?

More information

Morphine treatment enhances extracellular ATP enzymolysis and adenosine generation in rat astrocytes

Morphine treatment enhances extracellular ATP enzymolysis and adenosine generation in rat astrocytes 20 http://www.actaps.com.cn Research Paper Morphine treatment enhances extracellular ATP enzymolysis and adenosine generation in rat astrocytes LIU Wei 1,2,* YANG Zhan-Li 2, ZHOU Le-Quan 1, LI Xiao-Ying

More information

Chinese Journal of Applied Entomology 2015, 52(6): DOI: /j.issn 红火蚁不同品级个体的药剂敏感性研究 刘家莉崔儒坤曾鑫年

Chinese Journal of Applied Entomology 2015, 52(6): DOI: /j.issn 红火蚁不同品级个体的药剂敏感性研究 刘家莉崔儒坤曾鑫年 Chinese Journal of Applied Entomology 2015, 52(6): 1392 1396. DOI: 10.7679/j.issn.2095 1353.2015.166 * 红火蚁不同品级个体的药剂敏感性研究 ** 郭文举 *** 刘家莉崔儒坤曾鑫年, 510642 摘要 目的 Solenopsis invicta Buren 方法 结果 3 4 3 428.77 mg/kg

More information

The Structure and Function of the Auditory Nerve

The Structure and Function of the Auditory Nerve The Structure and Function of the Auditory Nerve Brad May Structure and Function of the Auditory and Vestibular Systems (BME 580.626) September 21, 2010 1 Objectives Anatomy Basic response patterns Frequency

More information

Influenza Viruses: from Epidemiology to Host Jump

Influenza Viruses: from Epidemiology to Host Jump Influenza Viruses: from Epidemiology to Host Jump George F Gao( 高福 )DPhil China CDC Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences gaof@im.ac.cn Influenza Viruses: Emerging and Re-emerging Re-emerging:

More information