New aspects of firing pattern autocontrol in oxytocin and vasopressin neurones

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Abstract

In the rat, oxytocin (OT) and vasopressin (AVP) neurones exhibit specific electrical activities which are controlled by OT and AVP released from soma and dendrites within the magnocellular hypothalamic nuclei. OT enhances amplitude and frequency of suckling-induced bursts, and changes basal firing characteristics: spike patterning becomes very irregular (spike clusters separated by long silences), firing rate is highly variable, oscillating before facilitated bursts. This unstable behaviour which markedly decreases during hyperosmotic stimulation (interrupting bursting) could be a prerequisite for bursting. The effects of AVP depend on the initial phasic pattern of AVP neurones: AVP excites weakly active neurones (increasing burst duration, decreasing silences) and inhibits highly active neurones; neurones with intermediate phasic activity are unaffected. Thus, AVP ensures all AVP neurones discharge with moderate phasic activity (bursts and silences lasting 20-40 s), known to optimise systemic AVP release. Via-type receptors are: involved in AVP actions. In conclusion, OT and AVP control their respective neurones in a complex manner to favour the patterns of activity which are the best suited for an efficient systemic hormone release.

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APA

Moos, F., Gouzènes, L., Brown, D., Dayanithi, G., Sabatier, N., Boissin, L., … Richard, P. (1998). New aspects of firing pattern autocontrol in oxytocin and vasopressin neurones. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-4871-3_18

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