Decreased kainate receptor binding in the arcuate nucleus of the sudden infant death syndrome

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Abstract

The human arcuate nucleus is postulated to be homologous to ventral medullary surface cells in animals that participate in ventilatory and blood pressure responses to hypercarbia and asphyxia. Recently, we reported a significant decrease in muscarinic cholinergic receptor binding in the arcuate nucleus in victims of the sudden infant death syndrome compared with control patients that died of acute causes. To test the specificity of the deficit to muscarinic cholinergic binding, we examined kainate binding in the arcuate nucleus in the same database. We assessed 3H-kainate binding to kainate receptors with tissue receptor autoradiography in 17 brainstem nuclei. Analysis of covariance was used to examine differences in binding by diagnosis, adjusted for postconceptional age (the covariate). Cases were classified as SIDS, 47; acute control, 15; and chronic group with oxygenation disorder, 17. (Acute controls are infants who died suddenly and unexpectedly and in whom a complete autopsy established a cause of death). The arcuate nucleus was the only region in which there was a significant difference in the age-adjusted mean kainate binding between the SIDS group (37±2 fmol/mg tissue) and both the acute controls (77±4 fmol/mg tissue) (p < 0.0001) and the chronic group (69±4 fmol/mg tissue) (p < 0.0001). There was a positive correlation between the density of muscarinic cholinergic and kainate binding in the SIDS cases only (R = 0.460; p = 0.003). The neurotransmitter deficit in the arcuate nucleus in SIDS victims involves more than one receptor type relevant to carbon dioxide and blood pressure responses at the ventral medullary surface.

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Panigrahy, A., Filiano, J. J., Sleeper, L. A., Mandell, F., Valdes-Dapena, M., Krous, H. F., … Kinney, H. C. (1997). Decreased kainate receptor binding in the arcuate nucleus of the sudden infant death syndrome. Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, 56(11), 1253–1261. https://doi.org/10.1097/00005072-199711000-00010

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