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Publication : Excitatory actions of vasoactive intestinal peptide on mouse thalamocortical neurons are mediated by VPAC2 receptors.

First Author  Lee SH Year  2006
Journal  J Neurophysiol Volume  96
Issue  2 Pages  858-71
PubMed ID  16641377 Mgi Jnum  J:135747
Mgi Id  MGI:3794395 Doi  10.1152/jn.01115.2005
Citation  Lee SH, et al. (2006) Excitatory actions of vasoactive intestinal peptide on mouse thalamocortical neurons are mediated by VPAC2 receptors. J Neurophysiol 96(2):858-71
abstractText  Thalamic nuclei can generate intrathalamic rhythms similar to those observed at various arousal levels and pathophysiological conditions such as absence epilepsy. These rhythmic activities can be altered by a variety of neuromodulators that arise from brain stem regions as well as those that are intrinsic to the thalamic circuitry. Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) is a neuropeptide localized within the thalamus and strongly attenuates intrathalamic rhythms via an unidentified receptor subtype. We have used transgenic mice lacking a specific VIP receptor, VPAC(2), to identify its role in VIP-mediated actions in the thalamus. VIP strongly attenuated both the slow, 2-4 Hz and spindle-like 5-8 Hz rhythmic activities in slices from wild-type mice (VPAC(2)(+/+)) but not in slices from VPAC(2) receptor knock-out mice (VPAC(2)(-/-)), which suggests a major role of VPAC(2) receptors in the antioscillatory actions of VIP. Intracellular recordings revealed that VIP depolarized all relay neurons tested from VPAC(2)(+/+) mice. In VPAC(2)(-/-) mice, however, VIP produced no membrane depolarization in 80% of neurons tested. In relay neurons from VPAC(2)+/+ mice, VIP enhanced the hyperpolarization-activated mixed cation current, I(h), via cyclic AMP activity, but VIP did not alter I(h) in VPAC(2)-/- mice. In VPAC(2)-/- mice, pituitary adenylate cyclase activating-polypeptide (PACAP) depolarized the majority of relay neurons via I(h) enhancement presumably via PAC(1) receptor activation. Our findings suggest that VIP-mediated actions are predominantly mediated by VPAC(2) receptors, but PAC(1) receptors may play a minor role. The excitatory actions of VIP and PACAP suggest these peptides may not only regulate intrathalamic rhythmic activities, but also may influence information transfer through thalamocortical circuits.
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