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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 2002, 22(13):5597-5605
The Nitric Oxide Synthase Inhibitor
NG-Nitro-L-Arginine Increases
Basal Forebrain Acetylcholine Release during Sleep and Wakefulness
Jacqueline
Vazquez1, 2,
Ralph
Lydic1, and
Helen A.
Baghdoyan1
1 Department of Anesthesiology, University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, and 2 Department of Neuroscience
and Anatomy, The Pennsylvania State University, Hershey, Pennsylvania
17033
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ABSTRACT |
Cholinergic neurotransmission in the basal forebrain changes across
the sleep/wake cycle, and considerable data show cortical activation by
ACh originating from basal forebrain neurons. These findings have
stimulated efforts to elucidate molecular modulators of ACh release
within the basal forebrain. Basal forebrain cholinergic neurons contain
nitric oxide synthase (NOS), the enzyme that produces the gaseous
neuromodulator nitric oxide. This study tested the hypothesis that
administration of an NOS inhibitor to the basal forebrain would alter
basal forebrain ACh release, sleep, and respiratory rate. Seven cats
were instrumented for recording sleep and wakefulness and for in
vivo microdialysis and microinjection. Compared with Ringer's
solution (control), microdialysis delivery of the NOS inhibitor
NG-nitro-L-arginine (NLA;
10 mM) increased ACh release during wakefulness (33%),
non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep (70%), and rapid eye movement
(REM) sleep (16%). Mean ± SEM ACh levels (pmol/10 min) during
control and NLA dialysis, respectively, were 0.58 ± 0.03 and
0.77 ± 0.06 in wakefulness, 0.36 ± 0.01 and 0.61 ± 0.06 in NREM sleep, and 0.68 ± 0.06 and 0.79 ± 0.09 in REM
sleep. Increases in ACh release were not evoked by dialysis delivery of
the less active enantiomer
NG-nitro-D-arginine.
Dialysis administration of NLA did not alter respiratory rate.
Sleep-dependent changes in basal forebrain ACh release were localized
specifically to lateral basal forebrain regions and did not occur in
medial basal forebrain sites. Microinjection of NLA into the lateral
basal forebrain did not significantly alter the sleep/wake cycle. In
contrast to NLA-induced depression of REM sleep and ACh release in the
cat pons, the present results demonstrate that NLA increased ACh
release in the cat basal forebrain and had no effect on sleep. The
different effects of NLA on ACh release in the cat pons and cat basal
forebrain may prove relevant for developing compounds that
differentially alter cholinergic neurotransmission in specific brain regions.
Key words:
basal forebrain; in vivo microdialysis; nitric oxide; NG-nitro-L-arginine; sleep; substantia innominata
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INTRODUCTION |
Acetylcholine (ACh) release changes
significantly as a function of sleep and wakefulness in many brain
areas, including the basal forebrain (for review, see Baghdoyan and
Lydic, 2002 ). ACh originating from basal forebrain cholinergic neurons
and released in the cortex and the hippocampus participates in cortical
arousal, consciousness, and learning and memory (Sarter and Bruno,
2000 ; Semba, 2000 ; Szymusiak et al., 2000 ). Loss of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons results in cognitive deficits characteristic of
Alzheimer's disease and may contribute to the memory deficits of
normal aging (Mesulam, 1996 ). ACh release in the substantia innominata
(SI) region of the feline basal forebrain is greatest during the rapid
eye movement (REM) phase of sleep, intermediate during quiet
wakefulness, and lowest during non-REM (NREM) sleep (Vazquez and
Baghdoyan, 2001 ). Within the basal forebrain, the functional
significance of sleep-dependent changes in ACh release is unknown.
ACh release in rat basal forebrain is modulated by nitric oxide (Prast
and Philippu, 2001 ). Nitric oxide is synthesized by nitric oxide
synthase (NOS), which occurs in several isoforms. The neuronal isoform
is activated by Ca2+/calmodulin and
catalyzes the reaction of L-arginine and oxygen to produce
L-citrulline and nitric oxide (for review, see Leonard and
Lydic, 1999 ; Law et al., 2001 ). Several studies have shown that
systemic or intracerebroventricular administration of NOS inhibitors
alters control of the sleep cycle (Dzoljic and de Vries, 1994 ; Kapas et
al., 1994a ,b ; Dzoljic et al., 1996 ; Burlet et al., 1999 ). However, few
studies have localized the effects of NOS inhibitors on sleep and ACh
release to specific brain regions (Leonard and Lydic, 1995 , 1997 ).
Data from both rats and cats show that basal forebrain cholinergic
neurons containing NOS are found in the lateral and medial septal
nuclei, the horizontal and vertical divisions of the diagonal band of
Broca, the anterior hypothalamic area (HAA), and the substantia innominata (Mizukawa et al., 1989 ; Pasqualotto and Vincent, 1991 ; Kitchener and Diamond, 1993 ; Bickford et al., 1994 ; Sugaya and McKinney, 1994 ). The presence of NOS in cholinergic basal forebrain neurons and previous data showing that an NOS inhibitor decreased basal
forebrain ACh release in rats (Prast and Philippu, 1992 ) suggested that
nitric oxide may play a role in regulating ACh release within the
feline basal forebrain. No previous data have described how
administration of an NOS inhibitor to the cat basal forebrain affects
sleep or basal forebrain ACh release. Therefore, the present study
using intact, unanesthetized cats examined the hypothesis that
administration of an NOS inhibitor to the basal forebrain would alter
basal forebrain ACh release and sleep. Because dialysis delivery of an
NOS inhibitor to the pons significantly altered the rate of breathing
(Leonard and Lydic, 1997 ) and because basal forebrain has been shown to
modulate respiratory rate (Bringmann and Klingberg, 1989 ), the present
experiments also quantified the rate of breathing during dialysis
delivery of an NOS inhibitor to the basal forebrain. Finally, the basal
forebrain is composed of neurochemically distinct regions with
different afferent (Sarter and Bruno, 2000 ) and efferent (Semba, 2000 )
regulation. Thus microdialysis was used to test the hypothesis that ACh
release varies as a function of medial versus lateral basal forebrain
region. Portions of these data have been presented previously in
abstract form (Vazquez et al., 2001 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animal model and electrographic recordings of sleep,
wakefulness, and respiratory rate. All experiments followed the
Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (1996).
Seven adult, male cats were anesthetized with isoflurane (2-3% in
O2) and implanted with electrodes for
polysomnographic monitoring of sleep and wakefulness (Ursin and
Sterman, 1981 ). A plastic head-cap was built to contain the recording
electrodes and to permit access to the basal forebrain through the
cranium. Cats were trained to sleep in a veterinary examination bag
while in a head-stable position.
Electrographic recordings of the cortical electroencephalogram, eye
movements, muscle tone, and ponto-geniculo-occipital (PGO) waves were
made using a Grass Model 7 polygraph (Grass Instruments, West Warwick,
RI). These variables were used to objectively define states of
sleep and wakefulness according to standard criteria (Ursin and
Sterman, 1981 ). Briefly, wakefulness was scored when the animals
demonstrated a low-voltage, high-frequency cortical EEG; the eyes were
open and the electrooculogram (EOG) showed frequent eye movements; and
the amplitude of the nuchal electromyogram (EMG) indicated the presence
of muscle tone and reflected posture shifts. NREM sleep was scored when
there was a high-voltage, low-frequency EEG with spindles or slow
waves; the eyes were closed and the EOG revealed infrequent, slow eye
movements; and the EMG showed a lower amplitude than during
wakefulness. REM sleep was identified by the presence of a low-voltage,
high-frequency EEG similar to the EEG of wakefulness; closed eyes and
rapid eye movements in the EOG; skeletal muscle atonia in the EMG; and
PGO waves in the lateral geniculate bodies of the thalamus.
Wakefulness, NREM sleep, and REM sleep were scored for each minute of
an experiment. Respiratory rate (breaths per minute) was recorded using
a thermistor placed at the nares.
Basal forebrain microdialysis. In vivo
microdialysis procedures using intact, unanesthetized cats have been
described in detail previously (Leonard and Lydic, 1997 ; Vazquez and
Baghdoyan, 2001 ). The microdialysis probe membranes were polycarbonate
with a 20 kDa pore size, 0.5 mm diameter, and 2 mm length (CMA
Microdialysis, North Chelmsford, MA). Before beginning each experiment,
a probe was perfused continuously with Ringer's solution (147 mM NaCl, 2.4 mM
CaCl2, 4.0 mM KCl, and 10 µM neostigmine, pH 5.8) using a CMA/100 pump (3 µl/min; CMA Microdialysis). When the animal was in a state of quiet
wakefulness, the microdialysis probe was aimed stereotaxically for the
basal forebrain. Stereotaxic coordinates for dialysis aim sites were
divided into two groups. One group of aim sites ranged from lateral (L)
3.0 to L5.5 mm from the midline, anterior (A) 16.0 to A14.5, and
horizontal (H) 2.0 (Berman and Jones, 1982 ). This area subsequently
is referred to as the lateral basal forebrain region and includes the
SI and the diagonal band of Broca, horizontal division (DBH). A
second group of basal forebrain aim sites for dialysis ranged from L1.0
to L2.5, A16.0 to A14.5, and H 2.0 (Berman and Jones, 1982 ). This area
subsequently is referred to as the medial basal forebrain region and
includes the HAA and diagonal band of Broca, vertical division
(DBV). These lateral and medial dialysis aim sites include basal
forebrain regions known to contain choline acetyltransferase
immunoreactive neurons (Kimura et al., 1981 ; Steriade et al., 1987 ;
Vincent and Reiner, 1987 ; Parent et al., 1988 ; Gritti et al., 1998 ).
The minimal distance between each dialysis aim site in the same
animal was 1 mm. Only one experiment was performed at each aim site to
avoid the possibility of alterations in ACh levels caused by repeated microdialysis sampling from the same site (Moore et al., 1995 ). Microdialysis experiments in the same cat were separated by at least 1 week.
After insertion of the dialysis probe, ACh was quantified in several
serially collected dialysis samples (10 min/sample) to ensure stable
levels of release. Control dialysis samples (30 µl) then were
collected during polygraphically and behaviorally defined states of
wakefulness, NREM sleep, and REM sleep while the probe was perfused
with Ringer's solution. After 2-3 hr of sampling, a liquid switch was
used to perfuse the dialysis probe with Ringer's solution containing
either the NOS inhibitor
NG-nitro-L-arginine
(NLA) (10 mM; Research Biochemicals, Natick, MA)
or the less active enantiomer
NG-nitro-D-arginine
(NDA) (Wang et al., 1993 ) (10 mM; Research
Biochemicals). The change from control dialysis to dialysis with NLA or
NDA was always made when animals were awake. Dialysis samples (30 µl/10 min) were collected across the sleep/wake cycle during drug
administration. All dialysis samples were obtained during intervals
comprised entirely of a single state. The order of experiments
delivering NLA or NDA by dialysis was randomized.
HPLC with electrochemical detection.
Dialysis samples were analyzed for ACh immediately after collection
using a standard HPLC with electrochemical detection (EC) system
(Bioanalytical Systems, West Lafayette, IN) (Baghdoyan et al.,
1998 ; Vazquez and Baghdoyan, 2001 ). Samples were carried in a 50 mM
Na2HPO4 mobile phase
solution, pH 8.5, to an analytical column at a flow rate of 1.0 ml/min.
The analytical column separated ACh, which then passed through an
immobilized enzyme reactor column that produced hydrogen peroxide in
amounts proportional to the amount of ACh in the sample. Hydrogen
peroxide was measured at a 0.5 V applied potential on a platinum
electrode referenced to an Ag+/AgCl
electrode. Chromatograms were digitized and stored using ChromGraph
software (Bioanalytical Systems). The area under the chromatographic peak for each dialysis sample was compared with peak
areas generated from known ACh amounts to determine the picomole amount
of ACh in each sample. ACh values are expressed as picomoles/10 min of dialysis.
Basal forebrain microinjections. An additional set of
experiments characterized the effect of basal forebrain NLA
microinjections on sleep-cycle control. The rationale for the
microinjection studies was to deliver a known amount of NLA in a single
bolus. A limitation of drug delivery by microdialysis is that the
amount of drug administered cannot be specified. As described
previously (Baghdoyan et al., 1993 ), microinjections into the lateral
basal forebrain region were made using a 31 gauge stainless-steel
injector. Polyethylene 20 gauge tubing connected the injector to a 1 µl Hamilton syringe (Thomas Scientific, Swedesboro, NJ). Saline
(0.9%, 0.25 µl, pH 5.8) or NLA dissolved in saline (10 mM, 0.55 µg/0.25 µl, pH 5.8) was
microinjected over a 30 sec period using a manual microdrive. Microinjections into the same site in the same animal were separated by
a minimum of 3 d. The order of administration of NLA and saline was randomized. Microinjections were always made when the animal was in
a state of quiet wakefulness, and states of sleep and wakefulness were
recorded and quantified for 2 hr after the injection. Dependent measures included the amount of time spent in wakefulness, NREM sleep,
and REM sleep; latency to onset of the first NREM sleep and REM sleep
episodes; frequency of wakefulness, NREM sleep, and REM sleep epochs;
duration of wakefulness, NREM sleep, and REM sleep epochs; and the
number of state transitions (a measure of sleep fragmentation).
Histological analyses. After the final experiment, cats were
deeply anesthetized with pentobarbital (35-40 mg/kg, i.v.) and perfused transcardially with saline followed by formalin (10%). The
brains were removed and soak fixed in 10% formalin for 2-3 weeks.
Forebrain blocks then were placed in 30% sucrose formalin for 7 d
and serial, coronal sections were cut on a freezing microtome. Every
other section (40 µm thick) was stained with cresyl violet and
float-mounted onto gelatin-coated glass slides. Alternate sections were
processed for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) (Benevento and
McCleary, 1992 ; Miasnikov et al., 1999 ) before being mounted on slides.
All brain sections were defatted and coverslipped. Glial tracts caused
by microdialysis probes or microinjection cannulas were localized by
comparing the stained tissue sections with a cat forebrain atlas
(Berman and Jones, 1982 ). This technique permitted assignment of
stereotaxic coordinates to each microdialysis and microinjection site
and made it possible to distinguish dialysis experiments performed in
lateral and medial basal forebrain regions. Stereotaxic coordinates
were assigned to the deepest part of each lesion.
Statistical analysis. Results are reported as means ± SEM. p < 0.05 was considered statistically
significant. ANOVA, the Tukey-Kramer multiple-comparison test,
and the Student's t test were used to evaluate
significant effects of drugs on sleep, ACh release, and respiratory rate.
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RESULTS |
Lateral basal forebrain acetylcholine release was increased by
dialysis delivery of
NG-nitro-L-arginine
Basal forebrain ACh release was measured during behaviorally and
electrographically defined sleep/wake states (Fig.
1A). Representative chromatograms (Fig. 1B) show examples of the raw data
used to quantify ACh release during Ringer's solution (control)
dialysis and during dialysis with Ringer's solution containing the NOS inhibitor NLA. The time course of ACh release during a typical experiment is illustrated in Figure 2.
This study used an intensive, within-subjects design, and the number of
dialysis samples collected during each behavioral state varied from
experiment to experiment. One to five dialysis samples typically were
collected during each state (wakefulness, NREM sleep, and REM sleep) to
yield control levels of ACh release. A liquid switch was then activated
to begin dialysis delivery of NLA or NDA. The experimental goal was to obtain an additional one to five ACh measures during each sleep/wake state. Figure 3 summarizes ACh measures
obtained during 3780 min of dialysis. Dialysis delivery of NLA into the
lateral basal forebrain region increased ACh release over control
levels by 33% during wakefulness, 70% during NREM sleep, and 16%
during REM sleep. Figure 4 plots basal
forebrain ACh during dialysis delivery of NDA, the less active NOS
inhibitor. NDA did not significantly change ACh, indicating that the
NLA-induced increase in ACh release (Fig. 3) was stereospecific.

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Figure 1.
A, Polygraph recordings used to
identify and quantify states of sleep and wakefulness. Each
panel shows a 60 sec recording obtained from the same
cat. B, ACh chromatograph peaks obtained using
microdialysis and HPLC/EC. Representative ACh samples collected during
Ringer's solution dialysis (Control) and during
dialysis with Ringer's solution containing NLA are shown for
wakefulness (left), NREM sleep (middle),
and REM sleep (right). Note the increase in peak height,
indicating an increase in amount of ACh (in picomoles) caused by
dialysis administration of NLA. Resp, Respiration;
LGB, lateral geniculate body.
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Figure 2.
ACh release in the lateral basal forebrain region
during one experiment. Each histogram represents the amount of
ACh in one 10 min dialysis sample. Six samples (sample
numbers 1-6) were collected during dialysis with
Ringer's solution to obtain control levels of ACh release during
wakefulness (1, 2), NREM sleep (3-5),
and REM sleep (6). The dialysis probe then was
perfused with Ringer's solution containing NLA and 10 dialysis samples
(7-16) were collected during wakefulness
(7-9, 13, 16), NREM sleep (10-12,
14), and REM sleep (15).
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Figure 3.
Dialysis delivery of NLA to the lateral basal
forebrain region significantly increased ACh release. ACh release is
plotted as a function of arousal state and drug administration. Data
were obtained from 18 experiments using five cats. Two-way ANOVA
revealed significant (p < 0.0001) drug and
state main effects on ACh release and no significant drug-by-state
interaction. The Tukey-Kramer test showed that NLA significantly
(*p < 0.05) increased ACh over control levels
during wakefulness (n = 73 control dialysis samples
and 73 NLA samples) and NREM sleep (n = 109 control
and 80 NLA samples). During REM sleep (n = 18 control and 25 NLA samples), the NLA-induced increase in ACh release
did not reach statistical significance. Portions of the control
microdialysis data have been reported previously (Vazquez and
Baghdoyan, 2001 ).
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Figure 4.
Dialysis delivery of NDA to the lateral basal
forebrain region had no effect on ACh release. ACh release is plotted
as a function of arousal state and drug administration. Data were
obtained from 930 min of dialysis during five experiments in four cats.
Two-way ANOVA showed no significant drug main effect on ACh release, a
significant (p = 0.0145) state main effect,
and no significant drug-by-state interaction. ACh release was
quantified during wakefulness (n = 19 control
dialysis samples and 19 NDA samples), NREM sleep (n = 26 control and 17 NDA samples), and REM sleep (n = 7 control and 6 NDA samples).
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Dialysis delivery of
NG-nitro-L-arginine did
not alter respiratory rate
For 12 microdialysis experiments in three animals, the respiratory
rate (breaths per minute) was quantified during control and NLA
dialysis. Two-way ANOVA showed a significant (p < 0.0001) state main effect on respiratory rate, no drug main effect,
and no state-by-drug interaction. During dialysis with Ringer's
solution alone, respiratory rate (mean ± SEM) was 46.1 ± 1.5 during wakefulness, 22.2 ± 0.6 during NREM sleep, and
34.3 ± 1.8 during REM sleep. During dialysis administration of
NLA, the respiratory rate was 48.6 ± 1.7 during wakefulness,
23.1 ± 0.8 during NREM sleep, and 32.3 ± 1.5 during REM sleep.
Acetylcholine release varied as a function of basal
forebrain laterality
All results described above were obtained from microdialysis
experiments localized to lateral regions of the basal forebrain. Additional experiments were designed to place microdialysis probes in
medial regions of the basal forebrain for measurement of ACh release
across the sleep/wake cycle. Figure 5
illustrates how GFAP immunohistochemistry facilitated localization of
microdialysis sites within lateral and medial basal forebrain regions.
Figure 6 summarizes the stereotaxic
coordinates for all basal forebrain microdialysis sites. Histological
analysis showed that all lateral region microdialysis sites were
localized to the SI and DBH and that all medial region microdialysis
sites were localized to the HAA and DBV. Stereotaxic coordinates for
microdialysis sites in the lateral basal forebrain region (Fig. 6,
gray cylinders) ranged from L3.5 to L6.5, A14.0 to A16.5,
and H 2.0. Mean ± SEM stereotaxic coordinates for lateral region
dialysis sites were as follows: L4.9 ± 0.1; A15.1 ± 0.1; and H 2.0. Microdialysis sites in the medial basal forebrain
region (Fig. 6, white cylinders) ranged from L0.5 to L2.0,
A14.5 to L16.0, and H 2.0, with a mean ± SEM of L1.6 ± 0.2; A15.3 ± 0.2; and H 2.0. Thus, the anterior and horizontal
coordinates of the dialysis sites were held constant between the
lateral and medial basal forebrain regions. Figure 7 plots ACh release as a function of
basal forebrain dialysis region (lateral, medial) and arousal state
(wakefulness, NREM sleep, REM sleep). ACh release in the medial basal
forebrain region (Fig. 7, solid circles) did not change
significantly as a function of the sleep/wake state. This is in
contrast to ACh release in the lateral basal forebrain region (Fig. 7,
open triangles), which was significantly decreased during
NREM sleep and significantly increased during REM sleep relative to
wakefulness. Within-state comparisons revealed that ACh release was
significantly greater in the lateral than in the medial basal forebrain
region during wakefulness (Fig. 7, asterisk). ACh release
was not different between lateral and medial regions during NREM sleep.
The small number of dialysis samples (n = 4) obtained
from the medial region during REM sleep did not permit a statistical
comparison with the lateral region.

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Figure 5.
Histological localization of basal forebrain
microdialysis sites. A, Line drawing of a cat forebrain
adapted from coronal atlas plate A15.6 of Berman and Jones (1982) . (The
boxed area is enlarged in B.)
B, Coronal section processed for GFAP shows a lesion
from one representative dialysis site in the lateral basal forebrain
region (right arrowhead) and one representative dialysis
site in the medial basal forebrain region (left
arrowhead). The lateral dialysis site is located in the SI ~4
mm from the midline. The medial dialysis site is localized within the
DBV ~1 mm from the midline. AC, Anterior commissure;
CA, caudate; IC, internal capsule;
LV, lateral ventricle.
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Figure 6.
Schematic localization of basal forebrain dialysis
sites. Dialysis sites are represented as 2-mm-long, 0.5-mm-wide
cylinders to indicate the length and diameter of the
dialysis probe membrane. Gray cylinders localize 31 lateral basal forebrain dialysis sites in six cats; white
cylinders localize seven medial basal forebrain dialysis sites
in four cats. Cylinders are shown on coronal atlas
plates at 14.5 and 15.6 mm anterior to stereotaxic zero [modified from
Berman and Jones (1982) ]. Tick marks on axes indicate
0.5 mm increments. AC, Anterior commissure;
CA, caudate; IC, internal capsule;
LV, lateral ventricle; OC, optic
chiasm.
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Figure 7.
State-dependent changes in ACh release are
localized to lateral regions of the basal forebrain. ACh release is
plotted as a function of the sleep/wake state for lateral and medial
basal forebrain regions. There was no significant effect of arousal
state on ACh release in medial basal forebrain regions. One-way ANOVA
showed that ACh release in lateral sites was state-dependent
(p < 0.0001). Lateral site data are based
on 3530 min of dialysis, including 133 dialysis samples collected
during wakefulness, 187 NREM sleep samples, and 33 REM sleep samples
obtained from 31 experiments in six cats. Medial site data are based on
940 min of dialysis, including 37 dialysis samples collected during
wakefulness, 53 NREM sleep samples, and four REM sleep samples obtained
from seven experiments in four cats. The asterisk
indicates a significant difference in ACh release between the lateral
and medial basal forebrain regions.
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Microinjection of
NG-nitro-L-arginine into
the lateral basal forebrain region did not alter sleep
The findings that sleep-dependent changes in basal forebrain ACh
release were localized to the lateral basal forebrain region (Fig. 7)
and that NLA increased ACh release in this lateral region (Fig. 3)
imply a functional role for nitric oxide and ACh within the lateral
basal forebrain. Published data show that pontine administration of NLA
decreased both ACh release and REM sleep (Leonard and Lydic, 1997 ).
Therefore, this study also examined the hypothesis that microinjection
of NLA into the lateral basal forebrain would significantly alter the
sleep/wake cycle. Three cats each received three microinjections of
saline and three microinjections of NLA. The results showed that the
amounts of sleep and wakefulness after saline (control) injections were
within normal ranges (Baghdoyan et al., 1993 ) and that microinjection
of NLA had no significant effect on any dependent measure of sleep or
wakefulness. Histological analysis (Fig.
8) revealed that NLA microinjection sites
were localized to the same lateral basal forebrain region in which dialysis delivery of NLA significantly increased ACh release. Stereotaxic coordinates of the microinjection sites ranged from L4.5 to
L5.0, A14.5 to A15.0, and H 2.0, with a mean ± SEM of L4.8 ± 0.2; A14.7 ± 0.2; and H 2.0.

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Figure 8.
Histological localization of basal forebrain
microinjection sites. A, Cat forebrain, adapted from
coronal atlas plate A14.5 of Berman and Jones (1982) . (The boxed
area is enlarged in B.) B,
Coronal section stained with cresyl violet shows a representative
microinjection-induced lesion (arrow) in the lateral
basal forebrain region. The microinjection site is located in the SI
~4 mm from the midline. Comparison with Figure 6 confirms that NLA
was microinjected into the same lateral basal forebrain region where
NLA was administered by microdialysis. AC, Anterior
commissure; CA, caudate; IC, internal
capsule; LV, lateral ventricle; OC, optic
chiasm.
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DISCUSSION |
The nitric oxide synthase inhibitor
NG-nitro-L-arginine
increased acetylcholine release in the lateral basal forebrain
region
Only one previous study has quantified ACh release across the
sleep/wake cycle within the feline basal forebrain. ACh release in the
substantia innominata region of the cat basal forebrain was greatest
during REM sleep, intermediate during wakefulness, and lowest during
NREM sleep (Vazquez and Baghdoyan, 2001 ). Those data, and evidence that
pontine ACh release was significantly decreased by dialysis
administration of NLA to cat pons (Leonard and Lydic, 1997 ), encouraged
the present investigation. In contrast to decreasing pontine ACh
release, dialysis delivery of NLA increased ACh release in the lateral
basal forebrain region (Figs. 1-3). The mechanisms underlying the
opposite effects of NLA on ACh release in the cat pons and basal
forebrain are unknown. Nitric oxide is thought to facilitate
transmitter release (Garthwaite and Boulton, 1995 ; Zhang and Snyder,
1995 ); thus, a decrease in nitric oxide levels attributable to
inhibition of the synthetic enzyme NOS would be expected to cause a
decrease in transmitter release, as was observed in the pons. One
speculation is that in the basal forebrain the NLA-induced decrease in
nitric oxide caused a decrease in the release of GABA, thereby reducing
GABAergic inhibition of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. NOS has
been localized to some GABAergic neurons (Valt-schanoff et al.,
1993 ; Meng et al., 1996 ), GABAergic neurons outnumber cholinergic
neurons by ~2:1 within the feline basal forebrain (Gritti et al.,
1993 ), and GABA inhibits basal forebrain cholinergic neurons (Khateb et
al., 1998 ). Nitric oxide also has been shown to modulate ACh release
via NMDA receptor mechanisms (Ikarashi et al., 1998 ). The
question of whether NLA increased basal forebrain ACh release by a
direct action on cholinergic neurons or by an indirect action remains
to be addressed.
The NLA-induced increase in basal forebrain ACh release also was
surprising in light of previous data showing that administration of NLA
to the basal forebrain of conscious rats decreased basal forebrain ACh
release (Prast and Philippu, 1992 ). Differences in species (rat vs
cat), drug delivery technique (push/pull perfusion vs microdialysis),
and drug concentration (0.1 vs 10 mM) preclude direct
comparisons between the previous study, which used rats (Prast and
Philippu, 1992 ), and the present study using cats. In addition, the
basal forebrain region examined in rats (Prast and Philippu, 1992 ) was
not homologous to the lateral basal forebrain region tested in the
present study. These differences encourage a future study specifically
designed to determine the extent to which the direction of the
NLA-induced change in ACh release is a function of species, drug
concentration, and site of drug delivery within the basal forebrain.
NLA increased basal forebrain ACh release during all arousal states,
and this increase achieved statistical significance only during
wakefulness and NREM sleep (Fig. 3). The reason NLA did not
significantly enhance ACh release during REM sleep is not clear. Basal
forebrain ACh release reaches maximal levels during REM sleep (Fig. 3)
(Vazquez and Baghdoyan, 2001 ), perhaps making it difficult for NLA to
cause an additional increase in ACh release.
Basal forebrain dialysis delivery of NDA, the less active
D-enantiomer of NLA, did not significantly alter basal
forebrain ACh release (Fig. 4). The finding that NLA stereoselectively
increased basal forebrain ACh release (Figs. 3, 4) is consistent with
the interpretation that NLA inhibited NOS and decreased production of
nitric oxide (Fukuto and Chaudhuri, 1995 ). NLA-induced inhibition of
ACh release in the pontine reticular formation also was stereoselective (Leonard and Lydic, 1997 ). Pontine ACh release is regulated by laterodorsal and pedunculopontine tegmental (LDT/PPT) neurons. Electrical stimulation of LDT/PPT causes a monotonic increase in
pontine ACh release (Lydic and Baghdoyan, 1993 ), and electrical stimulation of LDT in a brain-slice preparation significantly enhances
LDT levels of nitric oxide (Leonard et al., 2001 ). Thus, independent
evidence from in vivo and in vitro studies
demonstrates parallel changes in levels of nitric oxide and pontine ACh release.
NG-nitro-L-arginine
administered to the lateral basal forebrain region did not alter sleep
or respiratory rate
Microinjection of 10 mM NLA into the lateral basal
forebrain had no effect on sleep. Previous studies have shown that
microinjection of cholinergic agonists into the lateral basal forebrain
increases wakefulness in cats (Baghdoyan et al., 1993 ) and normal dogs
(Nishino et al., 1995 ) and triggers cataplexy in narcoleptic dogs
(Nishino et al., 1995 ). The finding that basal forebrain microinjection of NLA did not alter sleep may mean that naturally occurring, sleep-dependent changes in basal forebrain ACh release (Vazquez and
Baghdoyan, 2001 ) do not regulate sleep. This interpretation is
consistent with the finding that the sleep/wake state does not
determine the discharge rate of putatively cholinergic neurons in the
lateral basal forebrain (Szymusiak et al., 2000 ). Another possible
interpretation is that NLA may have altered the release of other basal
forebrain transmitters that have effects on sleep opposite to those of
ACh. The lack of an effect of basal forebrain NLA on sleep differs from
findings in the pontine reticular formation, in which microinjection of
NLA significantly decreased REM sleep (Leonard and Lydic, 1997 ). This
comparison emphasizes the importance of taking the brain region into
account when evaluating the effects of NLA on sleep.
The concentration of NLA that decreased REM sleep when microinjected
into the pontine reticular formation was 22.8 mM (Leonard and Lydic, 1997 ). The present study systematically quantified the
effects on sleep of microinjecting 10 mM NLA into the basal forebrain; it is possible that a higher NLA concentration microinjected into the basal forebrain may have altered sleep. However, this possibility is unlikely, based on the fact that in two cats basal forebrain microinjection of 20 mM NLA did not alter any
dependent measure of sleep or wakefulness.
Respiratory rate was quantified after basal forebrain dialysis
administration of NLA, because forebrain structures receiving basal
forebrain cholinergic input contribute to respiratory control (King et
al., 1999 ). Central motor command to respiratory muscles produces a
perception of respiratory effort that is processed by multiple
forebrain regions. The sensation of breathlessness (dyspnea) is a
clinically significant problem (Manning and Schwartzstein, 1995 ), and
the corollary discharge hypothesis postulates that projections from
medullary respiratory neurons to the forebrain account for sensations
of breathlessness (Spengler et al., 1998 ). Respiratory rate also is
modulated by the parabrachial nuclei (for review, see Gilbert and
Lydic, 1994 ), and basal forebrain and parabrachial nuclei share
reciprocal neuroanatomical projections (Wild et al., 1990 ). These
projections likely mediate changes in the respiratory rate caused by
electrically stimulating the basal forebrain and parabrachial cuneiform
nucleus (Bringmann and Klingberg, 1989 ).
Although the basal forebrain contributes to respiratory control (Harper
et al., 1996 ), and cuneiform neurons may be an important source of
nitric oxide (Pose et al., 2000 ), the rate of breathing in the present
study was not altered by dialysis delivery of 10 mM NLA to
the basal forebrain. The lack of a respiratory response to basal
forebrain NLA is in contrast to the finding that microinjection of 22.8 mM NLA into the medial pontine reticular formation blocked the cholinergically induced respiratory rate depression (Leonard and
Lydic, 1997 ). These different respiratory effects of NLA may be a
function of dose (10 vs 22.8 mM), method of NLA delivery (microdialysis vs microinjection), or brain region (basal forebrain vs
pontine reticular formation). Whether basal forebrain NLA
administration can diminish or block decreases in the rate of breathing
caused by pontine cholinomimetics is open to investigation.
State-dependent changes in acetylcholine release are
region-specific within the basal forebrain
An additional new finding to emerge from this study is that ACh
release in the medial basal forebrain region did not change significantly as a function of the sleep/wake state (Figs. 5-7). Thus,
sleep-dependent changes in ACh release are localized to the lateral
basal forebrain region (SI, DBH). This lateral-to-medial difference in
state-dependent ACh release profiles cannot be explained on the basis
of a differential distribution of cholinergic neurons. The medial basal
forebrain region (HAA, DBV) also contains choline acetyltransferase-positive (i.e., cholinergic) neurons (Kimura et al.,
1981 ; Steriade et al., 1987 ; Vincent and Reiner, 1987 ; Parent et al.,
1988 ; Gritti et al., 1998 ). Because of the lack of sleep-dependent
changes in ACh release within the medial basal forebrain region, this
study did not examine the effects on ACh release of NLA administered to
the medial basal forebrain region.
The few dialysis samples obtained from the medial basal forebrain
region during REM sleep must be acknowledged as a limitation. Several
factors account for this low number of REM sleep samples. First, the
relatively small size of the medial region permitted only one dialysis
experiment per hemisphere per cat. Second, the HPLC/EC system used to
quantify ACh requires a dialysis sample volume of 30 µl. At a
dialysis flow rate of 3 µl/min, 10 min of REM sleep are necessary to
obtain one dialysis sample. When a cat spends <10 min in REM sleep
during an experiment, it is not possible to obtain ACh measures during
REM sleep. Third, REM sleep occupies only ~15% of total
recording time in cats (Ursin and Sterman, 1981 ). Thus, Figure 7
presents only descriptive data for ACh release in the medial basal
forebrain region during REM sleep.
Conclusions
The data reported here characterize, for the first time, the
effects of basal forebrain NLA administration on basal forebrain ACh
release, states of sleep and wakefulness, and rate of breathing. Dialysis delivery of NLA significantly increased ACh release in the
lateral basal forebrain during sleep and wakefulness. This novel
finding suggests that nitric oxide modulates basal forebrain ACh
release. These data emphasize the importance of taking into account the
site of drug action within the brain, because dialysis delivery of the
same NLA concentration to the pontine reticular formation significantly
decreased pontine ACh release (Leonard and Lydic, 1997 ). Administration
of NLA into the basal forebrain did not alter the sleep/wake cycle,
implying that sleep-dependent changes in basal forebrain ACh release
follow, rather than cause, normal alternations between sleep and wakefulness.
This study also provides the first comparison of ACh release across the
sleep/wake cycle in lateral and medial regions of the basal forebrain.
State-dependent changes in basal forebrain ACh release were localized
to the lateral basal forebrain region. The functional significance of
differential state-dependent changes in ACh release in medial versus
lateral basal forebrain regions is not clear. ACh facilitates rhythmic
discharge in cholinergic basal forebrain neurons in vitro,
and it has been suggested that this facilitation may contribute to the
rhythmic modulation of cortical EEG (Khateb et al., 1997 ; Manns et al.,
2000 ). Whether ACh levels in medial versus lateral basal forebrain
regions differentially alter the cortical EEG remains to be studied.
Understanding the modulators of basal forebrain ACh release has
potential for drug development and animal models of Alzheimer's disease (Buccafusco and Terry, 2000 ). Recent evidence suggests that
nitric oxide may play a role in dementia-related neuronal degeneration
(de la Torre and Stefano, 2000 ; Law et al., 2001 ). The degree to which
future drugs can serve as effective countermeasures for the cognitive
decline and sleep-cycle disruptions characteristic of Alzheimer's
disease must be balanced against the side-effect profiles of such
agents. There is wide agreement that the diminished cognitive function
of Alzheimer's disease originates, at least in part, from the loss of
basal forebrain cholinergic neurons (Mesulam, 1996 ; Felder et al.,
2000 ). Therefore, maximum therapeutic efficacy with minimal undesirable
side effects can be achieved by developing drugs that have localized,
site-specific actions.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 11, 2002; revised March 22, 2002; accepted April 12, 2002.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants
MH45361, HL40881, HL57120, and HL65272, and by the Department of
Anesthesiology at the University of Michigan. C. A. Lapham and M. Wilcox provided expert assistance. We thank Dr. Kelli Sullivan and the University of Michigan Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation Center for the Study of Complications in Diabetes for help with GFAP
immunohistochemistry and microscopy.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Helen A. Baghdoyan,
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Michigan, 7433 Medical Sciences I, 1150 West Medical Center Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0615. E-mail: helenb{at}umich.edu.
 |
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