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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Functional neuroanatomy of the noradrenergic locus coeruleus: its roles in the regulation of arousal and autonomic function part I: principles of functional organisation.

E. R Samuels, +1 more
- 31 Aug 2008 - 
- Vol. 6, Iss: 3, pp 235-253
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TLDR
The locus coeruleus is the major noradrenergic nucleus of the brain, giving rise to fibres innervating extensive areas throughout the neuraxis, resulting in complex patterns of neuronal activity throughout the brain.
Abstract
The locus coeruleus (LC) is the major noradrenergic nucleus of the brain, giving rise to fibres innervating extensive areas throughout the neuraxis. Recent advances in neuroscience have resulted in the unravelling of the neuronal circuits controlling a number of physiological functions in which the LC plays a central role. Two such functions are the regulation of arousal and autonomic activity, which are inseparably linked largely via the involvement of the LC. The LC is a major wakefulness-promoting nucleus, resulting from dense excitatory projections to the majority of the cerebral cortex, cholinergic neurones of the basal forebrain, cortically-projecting neurones of the thalamus, serotoninergic neurones of the dorsal raphe and cholinergic neurones of the pedunculopontine and laterodorsal tegmental nucleus, and substantial inhibitory projections to sleep-promoting GABAergic neurones of the basal forebrain and ventrolateral preoptic area. Activation of the LC thus results in the enhancement of alertness through the innervation of these varied nuclei. The importance of the LC in controlling autonomic function results from both direct projections to the spinal cord and projections to autonomic nuclei including the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus, the nucleus ambiguus, the rostroventrolateral medulla, the Edinger-Westphal nucleus, the caudal raphe, the salivatory nuclei, the paraventricular nucleus, and the amygdala. LC activation produces an increase in sympathetic activity and a decrease in parasympathetic activity via these projections. Alterations in LC activity therefore result in complex patterns of neuronal activity throughout the brain, observed as changes in measures of arousal and autonomic function.

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Pupillometry: A Window to the Preconscious?

TL;DR: A tight correlation between the activity of the locus coeruleus (i.e., the "hub" of the noradrenergic system) and pupillary dilation and neurophysiological findings provide new important insights to the meaning of pupillary responses for mental activity.
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β-Adrenergic Receptor Antagonism Prevents Anxiety-like Behavior and Microglial Reactivity Induced by Repeated Social Defeat

TL;DR: It is shown that repeated social defeat in mice increased c-Fos staining in brain regions associated with fear and threat appraisal and promoted anxiety-like behavior in a β-adrenergic receptor-dependent manner.
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Norepinephrine ignites local hotspots of neuronal excitation: How arousal amplifies selectivity in perception and memory.

TL;DR: GANE not only reconciles apparently contradictory findings in the emotion-cognition literature but also extends previous influential theories of LC neuromodulation by proposing specific mechanisms for how LC-NE activity increases neural gain.
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Pupil Dilation Signals Surprise: Evidence for Noradrenaline's Role in Decision Making.

TL;DR: This work demonstrates that the pupil does not signal expected reward or uncertainty per se, but instead signals surprise, that is, errors in judging uncertainty, and analyses this effect with respect to a specific mathematical model of uncertainty and surprise, namely risk and risk prediction error.
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References
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Receptor binding and functional evidence suggest that postsynaptic α2-adrenoceptors in rat brain are of the α2D subtype

TL;DR: It is argued strongly that postsynaptic α2-adrenoceptors in the rat cortex and Edinger-Westphal nucleus are of the α2D subtype.
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Immunocytochemical localization of β2-Adrenergic receptors in the rat spinal cord and their spatial relationships to tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive terminals

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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The results suggest that moxonidine acts on central alpha(2) adrenergic receptors to inhibit pilocarpine-induced salivation, and that this salivation is tonically inhibited by central alpha
Journal ArticleDOI

Alterations of locus coeruleus noradrenergic activity in relation to pituitary secretion after hemorrhage in cats

TL;DR: Increased vLC NA activity following the initial hemorrhage (InHem) persisted even after plasma hormone levels returned toward prestimulus values, suggesting that the LC may exert a modulatory role in the hemodynamic control of hypothalamic-pituitary axis function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wake-promoting actions of medial basal forebrain beta2 receptor stimulation.

TL;DR: Clenbuterol infusion into both MS and MPOA elicited a dose-dependent increase in time spent awake, which indicates that medial basal forebrain beta-sub-2 receptors participate in the noradrenergic-dependent modulation of behavioral state.
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