Abstract
The A1 catecholamine neurons of the caudal ventrolateral medulla transmit hemodynamic information to the vasopressin (VP) neurons in the hypothalamus. These neurons corelease ATP with norepinephrine. Perifused explants of the hypothalamoneurohypophyseal system were used to investigate the role of these substances on VP release. ATP (100 μm) increased VP release 1.5-fold (p = 0.027). The response was rapid but unsustained. It was blocked by the P2 receptor antagonist pyridoxal-phosphate-6-azophenyl-2′,4′-disulphonic acid (PPADS). The α1-adrenergic agonist phenylephrine (PE; 100 μm) also increased VP release by 1.5-fold (p = 0.014). Again, the response was rapid and unsustained. However, simultaneous perifusion of explants with ATP (100 μm) and PE (100 μm) resulted in a threefold to fourfold increase in VP release, which was sustained for as long as 4 hr. There was a similar synergistic effect of ATP and PE on oxytocin release. Interestingly, the synergistic response was delayed ∼40 min relative to the response to either agent alone. Several experiments were performed to elucidate the cellular mechanisms of this synergism. The effect was blocked by PPADS, a protein kinase C inhibitor (bisindolylmaleimide I HCl), and actinomycin, an inhibitor of gene transcription. These data suggest that P2X receptor activation, PKC-mediated phosphorylation, and gene transcription are required for the synergistic response. The marked synergism of these coreleased agents is probably important to achieve sustained increases in plasma VP in response to prolonged hypotension. These observations may also have broad applications to CNS function, because ATP may be coreleased at noradrenergic synapses throughout the CNS.
- norepinephrine
- ATP
- vasopressin
- supraoptic nucleus
- catecholamine
- neurohypophysis
- purinergic transmission
- blood pressure regulation
Vasopressin (VP)-synthesizing neurons of the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei (SON and PVN) receive direct, excitatory input from the A1 noradrenergic neurons of the caudal ventrolateral medulla (Alonso and Assenmacher, 1984; Day and Renaud, 1984; Day et al., 1984, 1992; Shioda et al., 1992; Ginsberg et al., 1994; Smith et al., 1995). In addition to norepinephrine (NE), various substances are colocalized or coreleased from the A1 neurons, including neuropeptide Y, substance P, and ATP (Everitt et al., 1984; Sawchenko et al., 1985; Blessing et al., 1986; Beroukas et al., 1989; Lundberg et al., 1989; Bittencourt et al., 1991; Sperlagh et al., 1998). Although abundant evidence supports the importance of the A1 pathway for stimulation of VP release in response to moderate decreases in blood pressure (Raby and Renaud, 1989; Smith et al., 1995), studies directed at demonstrating that NE is the primary transmitter mediating this response were not successful (Day et al., 1990). Adrenoceptor antagonists did not block A1 activation of VP cells, prompting the suggestion that these neurons use a substance other than NE as their principal transmitter (Day et al., 1990). In addition, injections of the broad-spectrum excitatory amino acid receptor antagonist kynurenic acid were ineffective in blocking excitation induced by stimulation of the A1 region, excluding the possibility that glutamate is responsible for VP cellular responses to A1 input (Day et al., 1990). A likely possibility is that colocalized, excitatory substances play a role in the regulation of VP release. The nucleotide ATP, which is commonly colocalized in catecholamine vesicles (Fried, 1980; Whittaker, 1982), may serve as a primary neurotransmitter to activate VP neurons in response to A1 input. A role for ATP in mediating responses to activation of the A1 pathway is supported by the finding that application of the P2 receptor blocker suramin (10 mm) in the SON reversibly blocked excitation of VP cells by A1 stimulation without preventing the excitatory effect of locally applied NE (Day et al., 1992). Histological and electrophysiological evidence demonstrating purinergic receptors on SON neurons further supports a role for purinergic transmission (Hiruma and Bourque, 1995; Shibuya et al., 1998).
Central catecholamine neurons have been studied for decades, and much is known about their contribution to the regulation of a variety of behavioral, autonomic, and endocrine functions. Little is known, however, about the functional consequences of noradrenergic–purinergic cotransmission in the CNS. In the periphery, ATP is known to function as a cotransmitter with NE in a number of tissues innervated by the sympathetic system (Burnstock, 1990; von Kugelgen and Starke, 1991). Central noradrenergic neurons might be expected to use similar cotransmission, especially as more evidence accumulates for the involvement of nonadrenergic neurotransmission (Gartside et al., 1995).
In the present investigation, perifused explants of the rat hypothalamoneurohypophyseal system (HNS) were used to study the role of ATP and NE in the regulation of VP and oxytocin release. Specifically, the effects of α1-adrenergic and purinergic receptor activation and the interactions of these agents were evaluated.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Explant preparation. Male Sprague Dawley rats (125–149 gm) were obtained from Zivic-Miller. After decapitation, explants of the HNS were prepared as described previously (Sladek and Knigge, 1977). The brain and pituitary were removed from the skull using a caudal approach to maintain the pituitary stalk intact. The anterior pituitary was removed under a dissecting microscope. After gently removing the meninges (dura mater and arachnoid), a triangular block of tissue is removed from the ventral hypothalamus by cutting rostral to the optic chiasm, lateral to either side of the median eminence, and undercutting at a depth of 1–2 mm. The explants included the magnocellular neurons of the supraoptic nucleus with their axonal projections extending through the median eminence and terminating in the neurohypophysis. By the use of a dissecting microscope, the explants were examined to insure that the neurohypophyseal stalk was intact. Also included in the explant are the suprachiasmatic, arcuate, and ventral portions of the ventromedial, preoptic, and periventricular nuclei as well as the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis.
Perifusion conditions. Each explant is placed in a 500 μl perifusion chamber, maintained at 37°C in the multiple microchamber unit (Cellex Biosciences, Inc., Minneapolis, MN), and perifused with F12 nutrient mixture (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) fortified with 20% fetal calf serum, 1 mg/ml glucose, 50 μU/ml penicillin, 50 μg/ml streptomycin, and 1 × 10−4m bacitracin. Bacitracin was added to the medium to prevent hormone degradation (Sladek and Armstrong, 1987). The final osmolality of the culture medium was 295–300 mosmol/kg of H2O. The medium was warmed (37°C) and gassed (95% O2 and 5% CO2) immediately before entering the explant chamber. Six explants were perifused simultaneously at a rate of ∼2.0 ml/hr, and outflow from the chambers was collected individually in 20 min intervals using a six-place fraction collector that was kept in a refrigerator (4°C) for subsequent measurement of VP or oxytocin (OT) concentration. Radioimmunoassay (RIA) was used to determine VP or OT concentration in these samples, and microvapor pressure osmometry (Wescor) was used to monitor osmolality of the perifusate.
Experimental design. Hormone release was allowed to stabilize for 4 hr before exposure to any experimental conditions. During the subsequent time period, explants were perifused with basal medium or exposed to the indicated concentrations of ATP and/or PE (Sigma). Explants were exposed to antagonists [pyridoxal-phosphate-6-azophenyl-2′,4′-disulphonic acid (PPADS; Sigma); bisindolylmaleimide I, HCl (BI; Calbiochem, San Diego, CA); and actinomycin (Calbiochem)] 30 min before the addition of ATP. Most drugs were dissolved directly into the media. Exceptions are as follows: Actinomycin was dissolved in 50% ethanol, and 50 μl of this stock solution was added to 50 ml of medium. PE was added to media containing 0.03% vitamin C to ensure stability. Control explants were exposed to the same concentrations of solvents used to dissolve the drugs.
Radioimmunoassay. VP and OT concentrations in the perifusate were determined by RIA as described previously (Sladek et al., 1986;Yagil and Sladek, 1990). The antisera used were generated in conjunction with Arnel Products (Brooklyn, NY) and were used at a final dilution of 1:100,000. The buffer for both VP and OT assays was 0.1m PBS, pH 7.6, with 1 mg/ml bovine serum albumin and 1 mg/ml sodium azide. Both assays were performed on 100 and 50 μl aliquots of each fraction collected from each explant. The standards and samples were incubated for 72 hr at 4°C in the presence of 5000 cpm of 125I-arginine vasopressin or for 96 hr at 4°C with 3500 cpm of125I-oxytocin (New England Nuclear). Ab-bound VP and OT were separated from free hormone with dextran-coated charcoal, and the amount of 125I-VP or125I-OT in the pellet was determined with a gamma counter. The picograms per milliliter were obtained by comparing samples with a standard curve of known concentrations of either VP or OT. All samples from a given experiment were assayed at the same time. The minimum sensitivity was 1.0 pg/tube for VP and 0.5 pg/tube for OT.
Statistical analysis. As mentioned previously, each explant was allowed to equilibrate for 4 hr before exposure to drugs. Basal hormone release was calculated for each explant as the mean hormone release at the end of this equilibration period. Hormone content is expressed as a percentage of this basal value. Results are expressed as the mean ± SEM. Statistical significance was determined on log10-transformed data by ANOVA with repeated measures followed by a simple main effect analysis to establish specific group differences at individual time points. The level of significance was set to p < 0.05.
RESULTS
Effect of ATP on vasopressin release
To determine whether ATP stimulates VP release from HNS explants and to identify the effective concentration of ATP, HNS explants were prepared as described above and placed in a perifusion chamber. Explants were either exposed to sequentially increasing concentrations of ATP (10 μm, 100 μm, and 1 mm) at 2 hr intervals or maintained in basal medium (control group). As shown in Figure 1, there was a significant increase in VP release in the ATP-treated explants (F = 5.684; p = 0.0271). The 10 and 100 μm doses of ATP stimulated VP release. However, the response to 100 μm ATP was not sustained throughout the 2 hr exposure, nor was there a response to subsequent exposure to 1 mm ATP. To determine further whether previous exposure to 10 μm ATP limited the response to 100 μm ATP and to identify the type of receptor activated by ATP, explants were exposed to 100 μm ATP in the presence or absence of PPADS, an antagonist of the P2X purinoceptor subtype (Lambrecht, 1996). As shown in Figure2A, in the absence of PPADS, 100 μm ATP elicited the fast and unsustained increase in VP release observed previously, but in the presence of PPADS, no increase in VP release was observed (F = 6.310; p = 0.0332). Thus, the response to 100 μm ATP was similar regardless of whether explants were exposed to this dose initially or after exposure to 10 μm ATP. Because 10 μm PPADS had no significant effect on the basal release of VP (Fig. 2B), these data suggest that ATP acts at P2X receptors to increase VP release from HNS explants. The decay in the response may reflect receptor desensitization or depolarization blockade, because in a separate group of explants the response to 100 μm ATP was restored after a 2 hr washout period (response to first and second ATP exposures, 167 ± 16.2 and 172 ± 18%, respectively;n = 6).
Effect of ATP on OT release
Because ATP has been shown to act directly on nerve terminals in the neural lobe to increase VP but not OT release, the effect of ATP on OT release was evaluated to determine whether the effect of ATP on VP release reflected effects on stimulus-secretion coupling as opposed to action potential generation at the cell body. As shown in Figure3, in the absence of PPADS, 100 μm ATP elicited rapid and unsustained increases in OT release, but in the presence of PPADS, no increase in OT release was observed (F = 11.755; p = 0.0075). As seen with VP, 10 μm PPADS had no effect on the basal release of OT (data not shown). These data suggest that ATP acts at P2X receptors to increase OT release from the explants. Because the reported effects of ATP on stimulus-secretion coupling in the neural lobe were limited to VP, these data suggest that ATP has actions in the hypothalamic portion of the explant to stimulate VP and OT release, in addition to actions at the nerve terminals.
Effect of phenylephrine on VP and OT release
PE was used to evaluate the effect of activation of α1-adrenergic receptors on VP release, because NE has been shown to either stimulate or inhibit VP neurons. This effect is dependent on the type of adrenergic receptor activated (Day et al., 1985; Sladek and Yagil, 1990). Exposure of HNS explants to 1, 10, and 100 μm NE did not significantly alter VP release when compared with a time control group (data not shown). Explants were exposed sequentially to 1, 10, and 100 μm PE to determine the optimum concentration for stimulation of VP release. At 1 and 10 μm, PE was ineffective, but at 100 μm, PE increased VP release (data not shown). As shown in Figure4, exposure of HNS explants initially to 100 μm PE significantly increased VP release. The response was rapid and unsustained. ANOVA during the first hour of exposure to PE revealed a significant increase in VP release in the PE-treated explants (F = 7.522; p = 0.0139). In contrast, PE did not significantly alter OT release (data not shown).
Effect of combined exposure to ATP and PE on VP and OT release
Subsequent experiments focused on the combined effect of ATP and PE on VP and OT release. As shown in Figure5, simultaneous exposure of explants to 100 μm ATP and 100 μm PE resulted in synergistic responses that were delayed, larger, and sustained relative to the responses observed with ATP (100 μm) or PE (100 μm) individually. An overall ANOVA of the VP release data (Fig. 5A) revealed statistically significant differences in VP release between groups (F = 6.285; p= 0.0048). Subsequent ANOVA comparing the ATP plus PE group with the ATP or the PE groups revealed a significant increase in VP release in the ATP plus PE-treated explants compared with explants exposed to ATP (100 μm) (F = 5.58;p = 0.0263) or PE (100 μm) (F = 5.528; p = 0.0286). As Figure5B shows, OT release was comparably augmented by simultaneous exposure to ATP and PE. An overall ANOVA revealed statistically significant differences in OT release between groups (F = 18.862; p = 0.0001). Subsequent ANOVA comparing the ATP plus PE group with the ATP or the PE groups revealed a significant increase in OT release in the ATP plus PE-treated explants compared with explants exposed to ATP (100 μm) (F = 17.135;p = 0.0007) or PE (100 μm) (F = 31.919; p < 0.00001). The ability of ATP and PE to synergize in increasing OT release negates the possibility that the synergism is caused by ATP effects on stimulation secretion-coupling amplifying activation of α-adrenergic receptors on the dendrites and/or perikarya, because ATP does not stimulate OT release from isolated neural lobe terminals (Troadec et al., 1998). These data suggest that the release of cotransmitters may be responsible for maintaining a sustained increase in plasma VP in response to decreased blood pressure.
Role of the P2X receptor, PKC, and gene transcription in the synergism
To determine whether the P2X receptor is involved in the synergism, explants were exposed to PPADS (10 μm), ATP (100 μm), and PE (100 μm). As Figure 6demonstrates, there was a statistically significant inhibition of the synergistic response in the explants perifused with PPADS, ATP, and PE when compared with explants exposed to ATP and PE without PPADS (F = 23.724; p = 0.0009). As shown in Figure 7, PPADS had no effect on PE-mediated VP responses. PE still elicited a rapid increase in VP release in the presence of PPADS. These data, in conjunction with that in Figure 2, indicate that activation of the P2Xreceptor is required both for increases in VP release elicited by ATP alone and for the synergistic response elicited by combined exposure to ATP and PE.
Because α1 receptors are coupled to PKC via the phospholipase C (PLC) cascade, the role of PKC in the synergistic response of PE and ATP was evaluated using the cell-permeable PKC inhibitor BI. Explants were perifused with BI (1 μm) for 30 min before the addition of ATP (100 μm) and PE (100 μm) to the perifusate. As shown in Figure 8, BI significantly inhibited the sustained response observed with ATP and PE (F = 7.533; p = 0.0133). BI did not affect basal VP release (F = 0.393; p = 0.5481; data not shown). This demonstrates a requirement for PKC activation in the synergistic response.
The ATP plus PE-mediated synergism was delayed by ∼40 min after exposure to ATP and PE. Because this delay is sufficient to allow for new protein synthesis, the involvement of gene transcription was evaluated using actinomycin, an inhibitor of gene transcription. Previous studies demonstrated that a 2 hr exposure of HNS explants to actinomycin did not affect basal VP release and did not interfere with cAMP stimulation of VP release (Song et al., 1998). As shown in Figure9, explants perifused with actinomycin (10 μg/ml), which were also exposed to ATP and PE, did not respond with a synergistic increase in VP. This supports the hypothesis that gene transcription is required for the induction of the synergism.
DISCUSSION
Information about decreases in blood volume and pressure associated with moderate hemorrhage is monitored by volume and baroreceptors in the atria and carotid sinus and transmitted to the A1 catecholamine neurons in the caudal ventrolateral medulla by way of the nucleus tractris solitarius (Raby and Renaud, 1989; Smith et al., 1995). The A1 neurons then synapse directly on and stimulate VP neurons in the SON and PVN (Alonso and Assenmacher, 1984; Day and Renaud, 1984;Day et al., 1984, 1992; Shioda et al., 1992; Ginsberg et al., 1994;Smith et al., 1995). Thus, the A1 pathway represents one of the final relays for transmission of hemodynamic regulatory information from the periphery to the magnocellular VP neurons. Pharmacological evidence supports a role for ATP as the chemical transmitter for this pathway, and hypothalamic synaptosomes release ATP after depolarization (Fredholm and Vernet, 1979; Potter and White, 1980). Furthermore, ATP and [3H]noradrenaline release experiments from rat hypothalamic slices demonstrated that a significant component of ATP and NE is coreleased from nerve terminals of the A1 catecholaminergic cell group (Sperlagh et al., 1998). This is similar to the peripheral nervous system in which ATP is colocalized with NE in synaptic vesicles in the sympathetic nervous system (Whittaker, 1982; Geffen and Livett, 1996). It is released after physiological nerve activity (Sperlagh and Vizi, 1996) and functions as a cotransmitter with NE in a number of tissues innervated by the sympathetic system (Burnstock, 1990; von Kugelgen and Starke, 1991). Thus, central noradrenergic neurons might use similar cotransmission. Indeed, there is abundant expression of P2purinoceptors in the CNS, and a high density of receptors exists in the hypothalamus (Balcar et al., 1995). Mounting evidence supports the hypothesis that noradrenergic pathways of the CNS use purinergic transmission (Day et al., 1993; Chen et al., 1994; Illes et al., 1996). The neurohypophyseal system is a useful model for neuronal function. Therefore, the present findings on the role of purinergic–adrenergic cotransmission in the regulation of VP release provide insights into the importance of putative purinergic–adrenergic cotransmission in other CNS pathways.
Several purinergic receptor types have been cloned. The P1 purinoceptors are responsive to adenosine and AMP, whereas the P2 purinoceptors are responsive to ATP (Zimmerman, 1994). Subtypes of the P2receptors include P2X, P2Y, P2U, P2T, P2D, and P2Z. The P2X type is a ligand-gated ion channel permeable to Na+, K+, and Ca+, whereas the P2Y, P2U, and P2T receptors are G-protein-linked receptors coupled to phospholipase C and inositol triphosphate formation (Chen et al., 1995). These receptors are differentiated by ligand selectivity, with UTP activating the P2U receptors and P2T responding to ADP. Multiple P2 purinoceptors are expressed in the CNS. The hypothalamus is one of the most densely labeled structures. Both P2X and P2Ureceptors have been demonstrated electrophysiologically on SON neurons (Hiruma and Bourque, 1995), and mRNA for five of the seven P2X receptor subtypes is expressed in the SON (Shibuya et al., 1998). PPADS, an antagonist of P2 receptors (Lambrecht, 1996), blocked electrical responses to ATP, but not UTP, in rat magnocellular neurosecretory cells of the SON (Hiruma and Bourque, 1995). It also blocked ATP stimulation of VP release, confirming a role for the P2X receptor.
The ATP-mediated rapid, but unsustained, increase in VP release is consistent with activation of ligand-gated ion channels that desensitize. The restoration of the ATP response after a washout period is consistent with receptor desensitization. Furthermore, the decay is unlikely to reflect depletion of releasable VP stores, because in other experiments, explants retained elevated VP release throughout 6 hr of perifusion with 25 mm KCl (Ludwig et al., 1997). In electrophysiological studies, some SON neurons showed little-to-moderate desensitization, whereas others showed strong desensitization (Shibuya et al., 1998).
Multiple sites of action for ATP exist in the explant. A direct action on VP neurons is likely because these neurons express P2X mRNA (Shibuya et al., 1998) and application of P2X agonists elicits TTX-insensitive depolarizations (Hiruma and Bourque, 1995) and increases in intracellular [Ca2+] in dissociated SON neurons (Shibuya et al., 1998). Additionally, ATP may activate other neurons afferent to the VP neurons, and it may act on VP terminals in the neural lobe. ATP is released from the neural lobe in a stimulus-dependent manner (Sperlagh et al., 1999), is costored with neuropeptides in the secretory granules of neurohypophyseal nerve endings in millimolar concentrations (Gratzl et al., 1980), and increases VP, but not OT, release from the isolated neurohypophyseal terminals (Troadec et al., 1998). Although this effect of ATP may have contributed to the VP responses observed in the current experiments, the fact that OT release was also stimulated indicates that this is not the only site of ATP action. Thus, the actions of ATP on HNS explants can be attributed at least in part to actions at the VP cell body.
Coactivation of purinergic and α1-adrenergic receptors resulted in a response that was dramatically different from the responses achieved from the individual exposures to either ATP or phenylephrine. It was severalfold larger and sustained for several hours. Several intracellular mechanisms might underlie the synergistic increase in VP release. The first is recruitment of additional purinoceptor subtypes. This was considered feasible, because functional P2U receptors have been demonstrated electrophysiologically on SON neurons (Hiruma and Bourque, 1995). Because these receptors couple to the same class of G-proteins as the α-adrenergic receptors [Gq/11 (Zimmerman, 1994)], it seemed possible that previously undetected activation of these receptors amplified α-adrenergic-mediated activation of the PLC–PKC signal cascade. However, this possibility was eliminated by the finding that PPADS, which does not block P2Ureceptors, prevented the ATP plus PE-mediated synergism (Hiruma and Bourque, 1995). A second possibility is that the synergism results from convergence of the intracellular signaling cascades initiated by simultaneous opening of the P2X-gated ion channel and activation of the PLC cascade by PE. As shown in Figure10, both signal transduction pathways increase intracellular Ca2+, and this in turn activates PKC as well as other Ca2+-dependent kinases. Thus, intracellular Ca2+ may be central to the augmentation phenomenon. Blockade of the synergism by the PKC inhibitor supports a central role for Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation in the synergism. A third possibility is that PKC-induced phosphorylation of the ATP-gated ion channels changes conductance of the channel (Tien et al., 1994; Idriss et al., 2000) or decreases receptor desensitization. Although this is an intriguing possibility, it is not an adequate explanation for the synergism, because phosphorylation events occur within seconds to minutes, but the ATP and PE synergism was delayed by ∼40 min. This delay is long enough to allow for new protein synthesis. Blockade of the synergism by actinomycin demonstrates its dependence on new protein synthesis. This could occur as a result of Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation of transcription factors. New synthesis of receptors is one possible mechanism of synergism that might require gene transcription.
In addition to the above intracellular mechanisms, modulation of local afferents by either ATP or PE could contribute to the synergism. For example, application of NE to hypothalamic slices increases the frequency of EPSPs in PVN magnocellular neurons (Daftary et al., 1998). Similarly, inhibition of inhibitory afferents could lead to a potentiated response. However, these mechanisms would be activated rapidly and therefore are not solely responsible for the delayed synergism.
The synergistic effect of ATP and PE is likely to have physiological significance for the hemodynamic regulation of VP release, because corelease of transmitters may be required to achieve maximal and sustained increases in plasma VP in response to decreases in blood pressure or chronic hypotension. Thus, the colocalized substances may reflect the need for rapid release of VP, while promoting sustained increases in VP. This study provides the first demonstration of a synergistic effect of purinergic–adrenergic cotransmission on VP release. It may also provide insight into the role of purinergic cotransmission at other synapses in the hypothalamus and throughout the CNS. The A1 cell group contributes up to 60% of the total noradrenergic input to the whole hypothalamus (Palkovitis, 1981; Pacak et al., 1995), and the synergistic effect of ATP and PE on OT release demonstrates that the phenomenon is not limited to VP neurons. ATP may be coreleased with norepinephrine from locus coeruleus neurons (Shen and North, 1993). Putative purinergic–noradrenergic cotransmission by locus coeruleus neurons might have profound effects on the CNS, because they are associated with receiving and distributing information from and to sites associated with a number of motor, sensory, and behavioral functions. ATP is also stored and released with other neurotransmitters, including acetylcholine, nitric oxide, neuropeptide Y, substance P, and vasoactive intestinal peptide (Sneddon et al., 1999). The identification of extensive P2Xreceptor immunoreactivity and mRNA distribution throughout the CNS further supports a role for extracellular ATP in processes such as sensory transmission and sensory–motor integration and in neuronal phenomenon such as long-term potentiation and depression (Kanjhan et al., 1999). Thus, the current demonstration of purinergic and adrenergic synergism on VP release suggests functional ramifications of ATP cotransmission throughout the CNS.
Footnotes
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant R01-NS27975 to C.D.S. and by a grant-in-aid from Sigma Xi to J.R.K. The technical assistance of H. E. Sidorowicz is gratefully acknowledged.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Celia D. Sladek, Department of Physiology, Chicago Medical School, 3333 Green Bay Road, North Chicago, IL 60064. E-mail: sladekc{at}finchcms.edu.