scholarly journals Effects of somatostatin on mammalian cortical neurons in culture: physiological actions and unusual dose response characteristics

1983 ◽  
Vol 3 (6) ◽  
pp. 1176-1188 ◽  
Author(s):  
JR Delfs ◽  
MA Dichter
2005 ◽  
Vol 32 (10) ◽  
pp. 3095-3105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Winkler ◽  
Alfred Hefner ◽  
Dietmar Georg

1990 ◽  
Vol 127 (3) ◽  
pp. 523-532 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Jockenhövel ◽  
S. A. Khan ◽  
E. Nieschlag

ABSTRACT Serum FSH levels in fertile and infertile men were determined by applying the Sertoli cell in-vitro bioassay and six different immunoassays. Bioassay and immunoassay estimates were significantly correlated (r ranging from 0·78 to 0·86; P<0·01). On average, all immunoassays measured lower FSH concentrations in samples with low FSH levels and higher FSH concentrations in those with high FSH levels compared with the bioassay. Ratios of bioactivity to immunoreactivity (B/I) were highest in fertile men and lowest in men with severe disturbances of testicular function. Depending on which immunoassay was used these differences were either significant or only marginal. Dose–response characteristics for WHO FSH standard preparation 78/549, used in the bioassay as well as in the immunoassays, were different between immunoassays and the bioassay, suggesting that decreasing B/I ratios with increasing FSH serum levels were method-related and reflected different slopes of the dose–response characteristics of the assays, rather than being true changes in the molecular composition of FSH. The present investigation underlines the necessity of choosing the immunoassay used for comparison with the bioassay carefully and of validating the system in regard to parallelism between dose–response characteristics. B/I ratios must be interpreted with great caution and previous studies which report changing B/I ratios in various endocrine situations may have to be reevaluated. Journal of Endocrinology (1990) 127, 523–532


1985 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 1356-1369 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Yamamoto ◽  
N. Yuyama ◽  
T. Kato ◽  
Y. Kawamura

The present report was designed to investigate neural coding of taste information in the cerebral cortical taste area of rats. The magnitude and/or type (excitatory, inhibitory, or no-response) of responses of 111 cortical neurons evoked by single concentrations of the four basic taste stimuli (sucrose, NaCl, HCl, and quinine HCl) were subjected to four types of analyses in the context of the four proposed hypotheses of taste-quality coding: across-neuron response-pattern, labeled-line, matrix-pattern, and across-region response-pattern notions (88 histologically located neurons). An across-neuron response-pattern notion assumes that taste quality is coded by differential magnitudes of response across many neurons. This theory utilizes across-neuron correlation coefficients as a metric for the evaluation of taste quality coding. Across-neuron correlations between magnitudes of responses to any pairs of the four basic taste stimuli across 111 cortical neurons were very high and were similar. However, calculations made with net responses (spontaneous rate subtracted) resulted in less positive correlations but still similar values among the various pairs of taste stimuli. This finding suggests that across-neuron response patterns of cortical neurons become less discriminating among taste qualities compared with those of the lower-order neurons. A labeled-line notion assumes that there are identifiable groups of neurons and that taste quality is coded by activity in these particular sets of neurons. Some investigators have classified taste-responsive neurons into best-stimulus categories, depending on their best sensitivity to any one of the four basic stimuli, such as sucrose-best, NaCl-best, HCl-best, and quinine-best neurons; they have suggested that taste can be classified along four qualitative dimensions that correspond to these four neuron types (i.e., four labeled lines). The present study shows that responsiveness of each of the four best-stimulus neurons had similar profiles between peripheral and cortical levels. That is, when the stimuli were arranged along the abscissa in the order of sucrose, NaCl, HCl, and quinine, there is a peak response in one place, and the responses decreased gradually from the peak. However, such response characteristics do not favor the labeled-line theory, since they can be explained in the context of the across-neuron pattern theory. A matrix-pattern notion assumes that taste quality is coded by a spatially arranged matrix pattern of activated neurons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Stroke ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 809-811 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Tracey Bjorkman ◽  
Zoe Ireland ◽  
Xiyong Fan ◽  
Willem M. van der Wal ◽  
Kit C.B. Roes ◽  
...  

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