Göktalay Gökhan, Cavun Sinan, Levendusky Mark C, Resch Garth E, Veno Patricia A, Millington William R
Department of Basic and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Albany College of Pharmacy, Union University, 106 New Scotland Avenue, Albany, NY 12208-3492, USA.
Brain Res. 2006 Jan 27;1070(1):45-55. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2005.11.076. Epub 2006 Jan 5.
Severe blood loss lowers arterial pressure through a central mechanism that is thought to include opioid neurons. In this study, we investigated whether hemorrhage activates proopiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons by measuring Fos immunoreactivity and POMC mRNA levels in the medial basal hypothalamus. Hemorrhage (2.2 ml/100 g body weight over 20 min) increased the number of Fos immunoreactive neurons throughout the rostral-caudal extent of the arcuate nucleus, the retrochiasmatic area and the peri-arcuate region lateral to the arcuate nucleus where POMC neurons are located. Double label immunohistochemistry revealed that hemorrhage increased Fos expression by beta-endorphin immunoreactive neurons significantly. The proportion of beta-endorphin immunoreactive neurons that expressed Fos immunoreactivity increased approximately four-fold, from 11.7+/-1.4% in sham-operated control animals to 42.0+/-5.2% in hemorrhaged animals. Hemorrhage also increased POMC mRNA levels in the medial basal hypothalamus significantly, consistent with the hypothesis that blood loss activates POMC neurons. To test whether activation of arcuate neurons contributes to the fall in arterial pressure evoked by hemorrhage, we inhibited neuronal activity in the caudal arcuate nucleus by microinjecting the local anesthetic lidocaine (2%; 0.1 or 0.3 microl) bilaterally 2 min before hemorrhage was initiated. Lidocaine injection inhibited hemorrhagic hypotension and bradycardia significantly although it did not influence arterial pressure or heart rate in non-hemorrhaged rats. These results demonstrate that hemorrhage activates POMC neurons and provide evidence that activation of neurons in the arcuate nucleus plays an important role in the hemodynamic response to hemorrhage.
严重失血通过一种被认为包括阿片样物质神经元的中枢机制降低动脉血压。在本研究中,我们通过测量内侧基底下丘脑的Fos免疫反应性和POMC mRNA水平,研究出血是否激活阿黑皮素原(POMC)神经元。出血(20分钟内2.2毫升/100克体重)增加了弓状核、视交叉后区以及弓状核外侧的弓状周区域(POMC神经元所在部位)整个头尾范围内Fos免疫反应性神经元的数量。双重标记免疫组织化学显示,出血显著增加了β-内啡肽免疫反应性神经元的Fos表达。表达Fos免疫反应性的β-内啡肽免疫反应性神经元的比例增加了约四倍,从假手术对照动物的11.7±1.4%增加到出血动物的42.0±5.2%。出血还显著增加了内侧基底下丘脑的POMC mRNA水平,这与失血激活POMC神经元的假设一致。为了测试弓状神经元的激活是否导致出血引起的动脉血压下降,我们在开始出血前2分钟双侧微量注射局部麻醉剂利多卡因(2%;0.1或0.3微升)抑制尾侧弓状核的神经元活动。利多卡因注射显著抑制了出血性低血压和心动过缓,尽管它对未出血大鼠的动脉血压或心率没有影响。这些结果表明出血激活了POMC神经元,并提供证据表明弓状核神经元的激活在对出血的血流动力学反应中起重要作用。