Showing papers on "Synaptic signaling published in 1997"
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TL;DR: Characterization of this pathway has provided new insights into the role of NO in brain physiology and disease.
302 citations
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TL;DR: These findings suggest that neurons may use the general mechanism of RNA targeting for different purposes, and may at last help to answer the question of why neurons sort mRNAs to different subcellular domains in the first place.
248 citations
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TL;DR: Both acetylcholine and serotonin can mediate fast synaptic transmission in the visual cortex; the early onset of these mechanisms suggests a role during initial stages of circuit formation and during subsequent experience-dependent remodeling of cortical connections.
Abstract: Cholinergic and serotonergic fiber systems invade the developing visual cortex several weeks before eye opening; both transmitters have been implicated in plasticity of neocortical circuits. These transmitters have been presumed to act predominantly through second messenger-coupled receptors, because fast cholinergic or serotonergic neurotransmission has never been observed in neocortex. However, acetylcholine and serotonin also act on ligand-gated ion channels; the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor and the serotonin 5-HT3receptor, respectively. Here, using whole-cell patch-clamp techniques in developing ferret visual cortex, we pharmacologically isolated fast, spontaneous, and evoked cholinergic and serotonergic synaptic events in pyramidal cells and interneurons of all cortical layers. The number of cells receiving such inputs increased with the ingrowth of thalamic afferents, and the frequencies of the spontaneous events increased at eye opening. Thus, both acetylcholine and serotonin can mediate fast synaptic transmission in the visual cortex; the early onset of these mechanisms suggests a role during initial stages of circuit formation and during subsequent experience-dependent remodeling of cortical connections.
205 citations