The Journal of Neuroscience, September 1, 2000, 20(17):6728-6733
Postural and Anticonvulsant Effects of Inhibition of the Rat
Subthalamic Nucleus
David
Dybdal and
Karen
Gale
Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience and Department of
Pharmacology, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington,
DC 20007
The subthalamic nucleus (STN) plays a crucial role as a regulator
of basal ganglia outflow by providing excitatory glutamatergic input
into the two output nuclei of the basal ganglia, substantia nigra pars
reticulata (SNpr), and entopeduncular nucleus. This study examined the
effects of suppressing activity in the STN of the awake, behaving rat.
Specifically, we evaluated the effects of unilateral and bilateral
focal inhibition of STN on posture, locomotion, and susceptibility to
limbic motor seizures.
Unilateral microinjection of a GABAA receptor agonist
(muscimol, 200 pmol) into STN produced a site-dependent contralaterally directed postural asymmetry without locomotor activation. This effect
differed from responses produced by the same dose of muscimol placed
into SNpr, which included locomotor activation in addition to
contralaterally directed postural asymmetry. Locomotor
activation and postural asymmetry were obtained also after blockade of
glutamate transmission in SNpr by the unilateral application of
kynurenate (100 nmol). Our observation that STN inhibition did not
induce the locomotor activation characteristic of SNpr inhibition
suggests that there are glutamatergic inputs to SNpr, other than those from STN, that are responsible for controlling locomotion.
Bilateral, but not unilateral, injection of muscimol (200 pmol) into
STN protected against limbic motor seizures evoked either by
intravenous bicuculline or by focal application of bicuculline into
anterior piriform cortex (area tempestas). These results demonstrate
that focal inhibition of STN reproduces the postural asymmetry and
anticonvulsant actions that are obtained with the inhibition of SNpr.
This provides behavioral support for the concept that STN contributes a
crucial tonic excitatory (glutamatergic) drive to the rat SNpr.
Key words:
subthalamic nucleus; substantia nigra pars reticulata; GABA; muscimol; seizures; posture
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