scholarly journals INTEROCEPTIVE INFORMATION OF PHYSICAL VIGOR: OREXIN NEURONS GAUGE CIRCULATING IGF-I FOR MOTIVATIONAL MOTOR OUTPUT

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Adrian Zegarraa Valdivia ◽  
Jansen Fernandes ◽  
Julio Esparza ◽  
Kentaro Suda ◽  
Maria Estrella Fernandez de Sevilla ◽  
...  

Brain regulation of bodily functions requires interoceptive feedback signals carrying information about the periphery. As mice with low serum IGF-I levels (LID mice) show reduced spontaneous physical activity, we speculated that body vigor information might be conveyed by circulating IGF-I, a regulator of skeletal muscle and bone mass that enters the brain during physical activity. Since hypothalamic orexin neurons, that are involved in regulating physical activity, express IGF-I receptors (IGF-IR), we hypothesized that these neurons might gauge circulating IGF-I levels. Inactivation of IGF-IR in mouse orexin neurons (Firoc mice) reduced spontaneous activity. Firoc mice maintain normal physical fitness but show anxiety- and depressive-like behaviors that seems to interfere with the rewarding effects of exercise, as they were less sensitive to the rewarding actions of exercise. Further, in response to exercise, Firoc mice showed reduced activation of hypothalamic orexin neurons and ventro-tegmental area (VTA) monoaminergic neurons, as indicated by c-fos staining. Collectively, these results suggest that circulating IGF-I is gauged by orexin neurons to modulate physical activity in part by stimulation of the VTA to motivate motor output. Hence, serum IGF-I may constitute a feedback signal, informing orexin neurons to adapt physical activity to physical vigor.

2020 ◽  
pp. 107385842097571
Author(s):  
Bernat de las Heras ◽  
Lynden Rodrigues ◽  
Jacopo Cristini ◽  
Maxana Weiss ◽  
Anna Prats-Puig ◽  
...  

The Val66Met is a polymorphism of the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) gene that encodes a substitution of a valine (Val) to methionine (Met) amino acid. Carrying this polymorphism reduces the activity-dependent secretion of the BDNF protein, which can potentially affect brain plasticity and cognition. We reviewed the biology of Val66Met and surveyed 26 studies (11,417 participants) that examined the role of this polymorphism in moderating the cognitive response to physical activity (PA) and exercise. Nine observational studies confirmed a moderating effect of Val66Met on the cognitive response to PA but differences between Val and Met carriers were inconsistent and only significant in some cognitive domains. Only five interventional studies found a moderating effect of Val66Met on the cognitive response to exercise, which was also inconsistent in its direction. Two studies showed a superior cognitive response in Val carriers and three studies showed a better response in Met carriers. These results do not support a general and consistent effect of Val66Met in moderating the cognitive response to PA or exercise. Both Val and Met carriers can improve specific aspects of cognition by increasing PA and engaging in exercise. Causes for discrepancies among studies, effect moderators, and future directions are discussed.


1983 ◽  
Vol 102 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-42
Author(s):  
C. S. Cohan ◽  
G. J. Mpitsos

Rhythmic activity that is distributed to the brain and buccal ganglia and which underlies several types of behaviour, can be evoked from isolated nervous systems of Pleurobranchaea californica by tonic nerve stimulation. The experiments presented here were designed to test whether this rhythmic activity is produced by independent neuronal oscillators located in each ganglion or whether the rhythmic activity arises from a single oscillatory locus in the buccal ganglion and is transmitted passively to the brain. By interrupting the conduction of activity in the cerebrobuccal connectives (CBC) between brain and buccal ganglia we show that motor output from the brain depends on sustained, cycle to cycle input from the buccal ganglion and cannot be reset with respect to the buccal activity. The production of rhythmic activity in the brain depends on the generation of rhythmic activity in the buccal ganglia whether the rhythms are activated by stimulation of buccal roots or paracerebral command cells in the brain. Simultaneous intracellular recordings from brain motoneurones and buccal interneurones which project to the brain indicate that these interneurones provide both the drive and the pattern for rhythmic motor output in the brain. Tonic stimulation of the CBC can produce rhythmic activity in isolated brains in which all nerve roots and connectives have been cut. This can be explained by the fact that tonic stimulation of the connectives is transformed into phasic activity by the axons within the connective. We conclude therefore, that rhythmic, coordinated activity in the brain and buccal ganglia of Pleurobranchaea arises from oscillatory circuits that are located only in the buccal ganglia.


1993 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 765-780 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. Fetcho ◽  
K. R. Svoboda

1. We developed a fictive swimming preparation of goldfish that will allow us to study the cellular basis of interactions between swimming and escape networks in fish. 2. Stimulation of the midbrain in decerebrate goldfish produced rhythmic alternating movements of the body and tail similar to swimming movements. The amplitude and frequency of the movements were dependent on stimulus strength. Larger current strengths or higher frequencies of stimulation produced larger-amplitude and/or higher-frequency movements. Tail-beat frequency increased roughly linearly with current strength over a large range, with plateaus in frequency sometimes evident at the lowest and highest stimulus strengths. 3. Electromyographic (EMG) recordings from axial muscles on opposite sides at the same rostrocaudal position showed that stimulation of the midbrain led to alternating EMG bursts, with bursts first on one side, then the other. These bursts occurred at a frequency equal to the tail-beat frequency and well below the frequency of brain stimulation. EMG bursts recorded from rostral segments preceded those recorded from caudal segments on the same side of the body. The interval between individual spikes within EMG bursts sometimes corresponded to the interval between brain stimuli. Thus, whereas the frequency of tail beats and EMG bursts was always much slower than the frequency of brain stimulation, there was evidence of individual brain stimuli in the pattern of spikes within bursts. 4. After paralyzing fish that produced rhythmic movement on midbrain stimulation, we monitored the motor output during stimulation of the midbrain by using extracellular recordings from spinal motor nerves. We characterized the motor pattern in detail to determine whether it showed the features present in the motor output of swimming fish. The fictive preparations showed all of the major features of the swimming motor pattern recorded in EMGs from freely swimming fish. 5. The motor nerves, like the EMGs produced by stimulating midbrain, showed rhythmic bursting at a much lower frequency than the brain stimulus. Bursts on opposite sides of the body alternated. The frequency of bursting ranged from 1.5 to 13.6 Hz and was dependent on stimulus strength, with higher strengths producing faster bursting. Activity in rostral segments preceded activity in caudal ones on the same side of the body. Some spikes within bursts of activity occurred at the same frequency as the brain stimulus, but individual brain stimuli were not as evident as those seen in some of the EMGs. 6. The duration of bursts of activity in a nerve was positively and linearly correlated with the time between successive bursts (cycle time).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


1966 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-82 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. P. H. Poschel ◽  
F. W. Ninteman

Rats with electrodes in the posterior lateral hypothalamus were trained in a chamber having two platforms. When standing on one platform, S received rewarding brain stimulation continuously. Switching to the other platform turned stimulation off. The proportion of time spent on the positive platform indicated the reward value of stimulation. Preliminary tests determined that the time measure was positively related to stimulation intensity. Drug tests determined that tranylcypromine and methamphetamine greatly increased the reward value of weak stimulation, while chlorpromazine greatly decreased the reward value of strong stimulation. Since Ss were not required to work for brain stimulation, these effects on reward value were shown not to be mere artifacts of the drugs' effects on motor output.


1975 ◽  
Vol 20 (12) ◽  
pp. 923-924
Author(s):  
MADGE E. SCHEIBEL ◽  
ARNOLD B. SCHEIBEL

Diabetes ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 38 (10) ◽  
pp. 1217-1225 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. K. Sinha ◽  
C. Buchanan ◽  
N. Leggett ◽  
L. Martin ◽  
P. G. Khazanie ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 241-249
Author(s):  
Yoshiaki Omura

While a visiting Professor at the University of Paris, VI (formerly Sorvonne) more than 40 years ago, the Author became very good friends with Dr. Paul Nogier who periodically gave seminars and workshops in Paris. After the author diagnosed his cervical problem & offered him simple help, Dr. Nogier asked the Author to present lectures and demonstrations on the effects of ear stimulation, namely the effects of acupuncture & electrical stimulation of the ear lobules. It is only now, in 2019 that we have discovered 2–5 minute high frequency stimulation of the ear lobule inhibits cancer activity for 1– 4 hours post stimulation. Although the procedure is extremely simple. First take optimal dose of Vitamin D3, which has the most essential 10 unique beneficial factors required for every human cell activity. Next, apply high frequency stimulation to ear lobule while the worst ear lobule is held by all fingers with vibrator directly touching the surface of the worst ear lobule, preferably after patient repeatedly takes optimal dose of Vitamin D3. When the worst ear lobule is held between thumb & index fingers and applying mechanical stimulation of 250 ~ 500 mechanical vibration/second for 2 ~ 5 minutes using an electrical vibrator, there is rapid disappearance of cancer activity in both the brain and rest of the body for short time duration 1 ~ 4 hours. The effect often increases by additional pressure by holding fingers. As of May 2019, the Author found that many people from various regions of the world developed early stages of multiple cancers. For evaluation of this study, U. S. patented Bi-Digital O-Ring Test (BDORT) was used which was developed by the Author while doing his Graduate experimental physics research at Colombia University. BDORT was found to be most essential for determining the beneficial effects as well as harmful effects of any substance or treatment. Using BDORT, Author was the first to recognize severe increasing mid-backache was an early sign of pancreatic cancer of President of New York State Board of Medicine after top pain specialists failed to detect the cause after 3 years of effort, while the BDORT showed early stages of cancer whereas conventional X-Ray of the pancreas did not show any cancer image until 2 months after Author detected with BDORT. For example, the optimal dose of the banana is usually about 2.0 - 2.5 millimeters cross section of the banana. A whole banana is more than 50 ~ 100 times the optimal dose. Any substance eaten in more than 25 times of its optimal dose becomes highly toxic and creates DNA mutations which can cause multiple malignancies in the presence of strong electro-magnetic field. With standard medication given by doctor, patients often become sick and they are unable to reduce body weight, unless medication is reduced or completely stopped. When the amount of zinc is very high, DNA often becomes unstable and multiple cancers can grow rapidly in the presence of strong electromagnetic field. Large amount of Vitamin C from regular orange or orange juice inhibit the most important Vitamin D3 effects. At least 3 kinds of low Vitamin C oranges will not inhibit Vitamin D3. Since B12 particularly methyl cobalamin which is a red small tablet is known to improve brain circulation very significantly we examined its effect within 20 seconds of oral intake we found the following very significant changes. Acetylcholine in both sides of the brain often increases over 4,500 ng. Longevity gene Sirtuin 1 level increases significantly for short time of few hours. Thymosin α1 and Thymosinβ4 both increase to over 1500 ng from 20 ng or less.


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