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Publication : Alpha-9 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors mediate hypothermic responses elicited by provocative motion in mice.

First Author  Tu L Year  2017
Journal  Physiol Behav Volume  174
Pages  114-119 PubMed ID  28302571
Mgi Jnum  J:336943 Mgi Id  MGI:6783346
Doi  10.1016/j.physbeh.2017.03.012 Citation  Tu L, et al. (2017) Alpha-9 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors mediate hypothermic responses elicited by provocative motion in mice. Physiol Behav 174:114-119
abstractText  Hypothermic responses accompany motion sickness in humans and can be elicited by provocative motion in rats. We aimed to determine the potential role in these responses of the efferent cholinergic vestibular innervation. To this end, we used knockout (KO) mice lacking alpha9 cholinoreceptor subunit predominantly expressed in the vestibular hair cells and CBA strain as a wild-type (WT) control. In WT mice, circular horizontal motion (1Hz, 4cm radius, 20min) caused rapid and dramatic falls in core body temperature and surface head temperature associated with a transient rise in the tail temperature; these responses were substantially attenuated in KO mice; changes were (WT vs. KO): for the core body temperature-5.2+/-0.3 vs. -2.9+/-0.3 degrees C; for the head skin temperature-3.3+/-0.2 vs. -1.7+/-0.2 degrees C; for the tail skin temperature+3.9+/-1.1 vs+1.1+/-1.2 degrees C. There was a close correlation in the time course of cooling the body and the surface of the head. KO mice also required 25% more time to complete a balance test. We conclude: i) that the integrity of cholinergic efferent vestibular system is essential for the full expression of motion-induced hypothermia in mice, and that the role of this system is likely facilitatory; ii) that the system is involvement in control of balance, but the involvement is not major; iii) that in mice, motion-induced body cooling is mediated via increased heat flow through vasodilated tail vasculature and (likely) via reduced thermogenesis. Our results support the idea that hypothermia is a biological correlate of a nausea-like state in animals.
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