262 results match your criteria: "Centre de Neurochimie du CNRS[Affiliation]"

Several hepatoma cell lines and hepatic ascite tumour cells were studied for the presence of glycoprotein ligands of an endogenous lectin, the "Cerebellar Soluble Lectin" (CSL). This lectin is also present in hepatocytes in vivo and in vitro and can be detected biochemically and immunologically. In transformed cells, the level of CSL glycoprotein ligands is increased 50-fold as compared to the control cells.

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The sequential methylation of ethanolamine and its phosphorylated derivatives has been studied with chick neurons in culture in the presence of several pharmacological agents. Incubation with [3H]ethanolamine in the presence of monomethylethanolamine and dimethylethanolamine indicated that in these neurons the preferential conversion to choline-containing compounds is via the methylation of phosphorylethanolamine. The possibility that there are two separate enzymes, i.

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The existence of long-lasting (15-18 h) alterations of neurotransmitter amino acid levels following a single or repeated acoustic stimulations in audiogenic seizure-prone Rb1 and Rb2 mice and seizure-resistant Rb3 mice were investigated. The levels of glutamate, aspartate, glycine, taurine, and of some of their precursors: glutamine and serine were determined. Fourteen brain areas were examined.

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Cerebellar glomeruli consist of large portions of the mossy fiber giant terminal, granule cell dendrites and Golgi neuron terminals. By modifying previously reported procedures we have developed a new method for bulk preparation of this polysynaptic complex from rat cerebellum. We obtained well preserved isolated glomeruli of satisfactory purity and homogeneity as indicated by electron microscopy and by determination of appropriate biochemical markers.

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Manganese is essential for normal development and activity of the nervous tissue. Mn2+ ions are involved in protein synthesis and may prevent free radical damage. Since it is now established that alcohol degradation may produce free radicals, we studied the effect of Mn2+ on ethanol induced alterations using cultured nerve cells as an experimental model of the central nervous system.

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The ontogeny of high affinity GABAA and central benzodiazepine receptors in the mouse cerebellum was investigated by measuring [3H]muscimol and [3H]flunitrazepam binding to membrane preparations during postnatal development. In the P2 fraction, [3H]muscimol binding was much more abundant than [3H]flunitrazepam binding at all ages. [3H]muscimol Bmax exhibited a peak around postnatal day 25 while [3H]flunitrazepam binding did not follow a parallel course.

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Intrathalamic injections of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid increase genetic absence seizures in rats.

Neurosci Lett

April 1991

Département de Neurophysiologie et Biologie des Comportements, Centre de Neurochimie du CNRS, Strasbourg, France.

The effects of intrathalamic injections of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) and of NCS 382 85, a specific antagonist of GHB receptors, were evaluated in rats with spontaneous generalized absence epilepsy. Bilateral injections of GHB (25 and 50 micrograms/side) into the mediolateral thalamus increased spontaneous spike and wave discharges (SWD) in a dose-dependent fashion. This effect was suppressed by administration of NCS 382 85 (50 micrograms/side).

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A rapid purification method is reported for bovine brain neurogranin, a calmodulin-binding protein kinase C (PKC) substrate. This method takes advantage of the fact that the protein remains soluble in 2.5% perchloric acid (PCA) and that it binds to a calmodulin-Sepharose column in the absence of calcium: Other PKC substrate proteins that remain to be identified were also found to share these two properties, suggesting that a class of calmodulin-binding PKC substrates may exist in the brain.

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The synthesis of six close analogues of baclofen [3-(4-chlorophenyl)-4-aminobutyric acid] (BAC), a potent GABAB agonist, are reported. The compounds were designed starting from the structural informations contained in the solid state of BAC, regarded as a possible bioactive conformation, in which the p-chlorophenyl ring is perpendicular to the GABA backbone. A similar conformational situation was created by rigidifying the BAC structure by means of methylene (1), ethylene (2 and 6), or propylene (3) units, or by introducing chlorine atoms (4 and 5) into the ortho positions ("ortho effect").

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In the internal granular layer of the cerebellar cortex the polysynaptic complexes called glomeruli consist mainly of homogeneous populations of glutamatergic and GABAergic synapses, both located on granule cell dendrites. A subcellular fraction enriched in glomeruli was prepared from rat cerebellum, and the distribution of the different types of NMDA and non-NMDA glutamate binding sites was studied in the membranes derived from this fraction (fraction G) as compared to that in the membranes prepared from a total cerebellar homogenate (fraction T). Cl-/Ca2+ independent [3H]glutamate binding sites were not abundant and could be reliably measured only in fraction G.

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The correlation between the lethal effect of 7 beta-hydroxycholesterol (7 beta-OH-CH) on spontaneously transformed cell lines derived from rat astrocyte primary cultures (normal cells) and de novo cholesterogenesis was investigated. Both 7 beta-OH-CH and 7-keto-CH were not cytotoxic on normal cells but 7 beta-OH-CH affected markedly the viability of the transformed cells. The use of [14C]acetate or [14C]mevalonate indicated that 7-keto-CH inhibits de novo cholesterogenesis upstream of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl CoA reductase (HMGR) in both cell types whereas 7 beta-OH-CH also inhibits downstream of HMGR.

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We have previously shown that neuroblasts from cerebral hemispheres of 6-day-old chick embryos are able to proliferate when grown in the presence of fetal calf serum. We report here that in the presence of horse serum alone the proliferative rate of neuroblasts is strongly reduced. A high proliferative rate is restored upon the addition of bovine transferrin and to a lesser extent with added FeSO4 or hemin.

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The cytotoxicity of 7 beta-hydroxycholesterol (7 beta-OHC) was investigated on rat astrocyte primary cultures and spontaneously transformed cell lines derived from them. Confluent astrocyte primary cultures (normal cells) were unaffected by 20 microM 7 beta-OHC over a period of 72 h whereas 30 microM markedly affected the viability of the transformed cells within the first 72 h. Both cell types incorporated 18% of the total amount of 7 beta-OHC added to the cultures at concentrations of 20 microM or 30 microM.

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The ontogeny of type I and type II benzodiazepine binding sites was studied in mouse cerebellum by displacement of [3H]flunitrazepam binding by zolpidem, a ligand specific for the type I sites. Type I binding sites predominate throughout development and in the adult while type II sites account for 25% of total cerebellar benzodiazepine binding sites at birth and, during development, decrease to 10% or less in the adult. On a per cerebellum basis type II sites increase during the first postnatal week and then remain at a steady level while type I sites increase until adulthood.

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Acute forebrain ischemia reduced protein kinase C (PKC) activity in the adult rat cortex, striatum and hippocampus by 60-70% after 20 min ischemia episodes, followed by 48 h of recirculation. Ischemia of 1 min, followed by recirculation, produced a less pronounced but significant decrease in PKC activity. The ischemia-induced decrease of PKC affected both the soluble and the membrane-bound kinase.

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Primary neurons in culture from chick embryo cerebral hemispheres were treated with a mixture of gangliosides added to the growth medium (final concentration: 10(-5)M and 10(-8)M) from the 3rd to the 6th day in vitro. Under these conditions methylation processes measured with [3H] and [35S] methionine and [3H]ethanolamine as precursors showed an increased methylation of [3H]ethanolamine containing phospholipids, a correspondent increased conversion of these compounds to [3H]choline containing phospholipids, and a general increased methylation of trichloroacetic acid precipitable macromolecules containing labeled methionine. A small increase in protein synthesis was observed after incubation of neurons with [3H]- and [35S]methionine.

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The myelin-deficient (mld) mutation is autosomal recessive mutation in the murine CNS exhibiting severe hypomyelination. The primary defect results in a drastic reduction of myelin basic protein synthesis caused by a duplication of the myelin basic protein gene with partial inversion of the upstream gene copy. The severe deficit of myelin basic protein is responsible for the absence of the major dense line but cannot explain the heterogeneity of myelin compaction found in mld.

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Protein kinase C (PKC) has been implicated in the mechanism of exocytosis, although various studies have been unable to pinpoint actual translocation or activation of PKC during exocytosis. We have studied, in neurohypophysial nerve endings, intracellular Ca2+ levels, secretion of neuropeptides and PKC translocation. Neurohormone secretion was triggered by K(+)-induced or electrically induced depolarization in both the absence and the presence of phorbol esters.

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Spontaneous spike trains were recorded from the periaqueductal gray matter (PAG) in frontal and horizontal mesencephalic slices in order to compare spontaneous activity of the slice preparation to previous in vivo records. The firing rates resembled those recorded in vivo. They were low notwithstanding the fact that the slicing procedure removed tonic inhibitory input to the PAG.

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Long-Evans female rats sustained aspirative lesions of the fimbria-fornix pathways and part of the overlying structures (Lesion). Eight or 9 days later, one third of these lesioned rats received intrahippocampal septal cell suspension grafts (Sept-G) and another third received grafts of hippocampal origin (Hipp-G). Sham-operated rats (Sham) served as controls.

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Purified soluble guanylate cyclase from rat brain was found to be directly activated by arachidonic acid. Arachidonic acid hydroperoxides, obtained by the action of lipoxygenase, were inhibitory. An inhibition of soluble guanylate cyclase and a decrease of cyclic GMP content were also observed in pure neuronal cultures treated with lipoxygenase.

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Levels and cellular distribution of FOS, the product of c-fos (onco)gene, were studied by immunohistochemistry during the development of mouse brain at rest and after the administration of convulsants. Basal FOS immunoreactivity became detectable only after postnatal day 20 (P20). Metrazol and kainate at the appropriate doses induced convulsions at all ages but, in both cases, FOS accumulated in limbic areas (particularly in the dentate gyrus) only after a certain age: P20 for kainate and P30 for Metrazol.

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The expression of NF-H neurofilament subunit mRNAs was investigated in the rat brain at different ontogenic stages. The levels of NF-H mRNAs vary 15-fold among brain regions with the highest level in the brainstem. In situ localization studies revealed that the NF-H mRNAs are mainly concentrated in the brainstem motoneuron nuclei.

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Long Evans female rats sustained aspirative lesions of the septohippocampal pathways; subsequently, they received intrahippocampal suspension grafts of fetal septal-diagonal band or hippocampal tissue. The long term (8-10 months post-surgery) effects of these treatments were examined in the hippocampus for the following variables: concentration of hippocampal acetylcholine (ACh), muscarinic-stimulated (carbachol) formation of inositol monophosphate, accumulation of tritiated choline, noradrenaline (3H-NA) and serotonin (3H-5-HT), electrically evoked release of 3H-acetylcholine (3H-ACh), 3H-NA and 3H-5-HT, and choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity. The lesions decreased the levels of endogenous ACh, the accumulation of 3H-choline and 3H-5-HT and the evoked release of both 3H-ACh and 3H-5-HT as well as the ChAT activity, but they failed to significantly affect the muscarinic-stimulated formation of inositol monophosphate and the accumulation and release of 3H-NA.

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We have shown previously that experimental modifications of the cellular lipid composition of an insulin-sensitive rat hepatoma cell line (Zajdela Hepatoma Culture, ZHC) affect both binding and biological actions of insulin. Discrepancies between insulin binding and actions implied a postbinding defect, responsible for the observed insulin resistance in lipid-treated cells. To elucidate the mechanism for this defect, we have studied insulin binding and insulin receptor kinase activity in partially purified receptor preparations from ZHC cells grown either in normal medium or in medium supplemented with linoleic acid or 25-hydroxycholesterol.

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