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J Neurophysiol


Title:L-arginine via nitric oxide is an inhibitory feedback modulator of Aplysia feeding
Author(s):Miller N; Saada R; Markovich S; Hurwitz I; Susswein AJ;
Address:"The Mina and Everard Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences and The Leslie and Susan Gonda (Goldschmied) Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center, Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel"
Journal Title:J Neurophysiol
Year:2011
Volume:20110127
Issue:4
Page Number:1642 - 1650
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00827.2010
ISSN/ISBN:1522-1598 (Electronic) 0022-3077 (Linking)
Abstract:"An increase in L-arginine hemolymph concentration acts as a postingestion signal inhibiting Aplysia feeding. At physiological concentrations (a 10-muM increase over background), the inhibitory effect of L-arginine is too weak to block feeding in hungry animals. However, a 10-muM increase in L-arginine concentration acts along with another inhibitory stimulus, the sustained presence of food odor, to inhibit feeding after a period of access to food. A physiological concentration of L-arginine also blocked the excitatory effect of a stimulus enhancing feeding, pheromones secreted by mating conspecifics. High concentrations of L-arginine (2.5 mM) alone also inhibited ad libitum feeding. L-arginine is the substrate from which nitric oxide synthase (NOS) produces nitric oxide (NO). Both an NO donor and a 10-muM increase in L-arginine inhibited biting in response to a weak food stimulus. Treatment with NOS inhibitors initiated food-finding and biting in the absence of food, indicating that food initiates feeding against a background of tonic nitrergic inhibition. Increased feeding in response to blocking NOS is accompanied by firing of the metacerebral (MCC) neuron, a monitor of food arousal. The excitatory effect on the MCC of blocking NOS is indirect. The data suggest that L-arginine acts by amplifying NO synthesis, which acts as a background stimulus inhibiting feeding. Background modulation of neural activity and behavior by NO may also be present in other systems, but such modulation may be difficult to identify because its effects are evident only in the context of additional stimuli modulating behavior"
Keywords:"Animals Aplysia/drug effects/*physiology Arginine/*pharmacology Behavior, Animal/drug effects/physiology Dose-Response Relationship, Drug Feedback, Physiological/*drug effects/physiology Feeding Behavior/*drug effects/physiology Hunger/physiology Nitric O;"
Notes:"MedlineMiller, N Saada, R Markovich, S Hurwitz, I Susswein, A J eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't 2011/01/29 J Neurophysiol. 2011 Apr; 105(4):1642-50. doi: 10.1152/jn.00827.2010. Epub 2011 Jan 27"

 
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