RESUMEN
The production of heat by mitochondria is critical for maintaining body temperature, regulating metabolic rate, and preventing oxidative damage to mitochondria and cells. Until the present, mitochondrial heat production has been characterized only by methods based on fluorescent probes, which are sensitive to environmental variations (viscosity, pH, ionic strength, quenching, etc.). Here, for the first time, the heat release of isolated mitochondria was unambiguously measured by a diamond thermometer (DT), which is absolutely indifferent to external non-thermal parameters. We show that during total uncoupling of transmembrane potential by CCCP application, the temperature near the mitochondria rises by 4-22 °C above the ambient temperature with an absolute maximum of 45 °C. Such a broad variation in the temperature response is associated with the heterogeneity of the mitochondria themselves as well as their aggregations in the isolated suspension. Spontaneous temperature bursts with comparable amplitude were also detected prior to CCCP application, which may reflect involvement of some mitochondria to ATP synthesis or membrane potential leaking to avoid hyperproduction of reactive oxygen species. The results obtained with the diamond temperature sensor shed light on the "hot mitochondria" paradox.
RESUMEN
The septal GABAergic system plays a central role in the regulation of activity and excitability of the hippocampus (the main locus of temporal lobe epilepsy, TLE), but the character of changes the septum undergoes in this pathology remains unknown. To address this issue we studied the influences on GABAergic receptors in septal slices from the brain of epileptic guinea pigs compared to a control. In the epileptic brain, the overall increase in the mean frequency of neuronal discharges and the rise in the number of bursting neurons were revealed. The inhibitory action of exogenously applied GABA on neuronal activity is sharply enhanced, whereas the efficacy of action of GABA(A) and GABA(B) receptor blockers decreases, indicating the alteration of intraseptal inhibitory processes in epilepsy. In epilepsy, GABA sharply increases the oscillatory activity of the part of pacemakers, and the opposite effect was observed in the control. In epileptic animals, the GABA receptor blockers did not affect burst neurons, indicating the disturbance of the tonic GABAergic control of the oscillatory activity. Thus, we demonstrated for the first time that the activity of septal neurons and their reactions to GABAergic substances in animals with TLE model changed sharply compared to healthy ones.
Asunto(s)
Epilepsia del Lóbulo Temporal/patología , Ácido gamma-Aminobutírico/metabolismo , Animales , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Encéfalo/patología , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Electrofisiología/métodos , Cobayas , Hipocampo/metabolismo , Ácido Kaínico/metabolismo , Modelos Biológicos , Neuronas/metabolismo , Oscilometría/métodos , Receptores de GABA-A/metabolismo , Receptores de GABA-B/metabolismoRESUMEN
Field potentials of the hippocampus and the medial septal-diagonal band complex (MSDB) were recorded in the control and during the kindling stimulation of the perforant path in waking guinea pigs. Changes in the correlation of activities of these structures during stimulation-evoked seizures (model of acute epilepsy) and during epileptogenesis elicited by the kindling (model of chronic epilepsy) were analysed. In the control, a high correlation between the background activities of the hippocampus and MSDB was observed. In the first days of stimulation at the parameters that evoked seizure discharges in the hippocampus, the MSDB did not show the epileptiform activity; however, repeated daily stimulation gave rise to epileptiform discharges, which increased with time. As a result of kindling, the MSDB became capable of generating seizure activity irrespective of the hippocampus. The degree of correlation between the activities of the two structures sharply decreased during "acute" and "chronic" seizures. In the process of kindling, a progressive disintegration of activities of the hippocampus and MSDB was revealed, indicating the disturbance of the functioning of septohippocampal network during epileptogenesis. The data obtained add to the knowledge about the mechanisms of temporal lobe epilepsy and may help to develop new approaches to the therapy of this disease.