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Comparative Study
. 2001 Feb 2;890(2):255-60.
doi: 10.1016/s0006-8993(00)03175-9.

Modulation by acute stress of chloride permeation across microdissected vestibular neurons membranes: different results in two rabbit strains and CRF involvement

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Comparative Study

Modulation by acute stress of chloride permeation across microdissected vestibular neurons membranes: different results in two rabbit strains and CRF involvement

M V Rapallino et al. Brain Res. .

Abstract

Free hand isolation of adult rabbit vestibular Deiters' neurons and dissection of their single membranes allows the study of their ionic permeability characteristics in a microchambers device. In the case of hare-like rabbits, the dissection of such membranes presents evidence of a high basal permeation of labelled chloride, possibly related to mechanical disturbance of the plasma membrane-related cytoskeleton and activation of chloride channels. This did not apply to the laboratory strain of white New Zealand rabbits. However, membranes from hare-like rabbits which were stressed by being rotated on a platform before the experiment, behaved like those from the New Zealand strain. Vice versa, habituation to handling day after day of New Zealand rabbits resulted in a chloride permeation equal to that of unstressed hare-like rabbits. We propose that the stressful conditions result in the release of neurochemical messages to the vestibular Deiters' cells which influence their electrophysiological behavior. The corticotropin releasing factor (CRF), a stress-related peptide present in the climbing fibers, actually blocks the basal chloride permeation across the Deiters' membranes and this effect is partially reversed by its receptor antagonist, alpha-helical CRF [9-41].

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