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J Physiol Volume 568, Number 3, 1003-1020, November 1, 2005 DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2005.085829
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Orexinergic projections to the cat midbrain mediate alternation of emotional behavioural states from locomotion to cataplexy

Kaoru Takakusaki1, Kazumi Takahashi2, Kazuya Saitoh1, Hirofumi Harada1, Toshikatsu Okumura3, Yukihiko Kayama2 and Yoshimasa Koyama2,4

1 Department of Physiology, Asahikawa Medical College, Midorigaoka-higashi 2-1, Asahikawa 078-8510, Japan
2 Department of Physiology, Fukushima Medical University School of Medicine, 1 Hikari-ga-oka, Fukushima 960-1295, Japan
3 Department of General Medicine, Asahikawa Medical College, Midorigaoka-higashi 2-1, Asahikawa 078-8510, Japan
4 Department of Science and Technology, Fukushima University, 1 Kanayagawa, Fukushima 960-1296, Japan

Orexinergic neurones in the perifornical lateral hypothalamus project to structures of the midbrain, including the substantia nigra and the mesopontine tegmentum. These areas contain the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR), and the pedunculopontine and laterodorsal tegmental nuclei (PPN/LDT), which regulate atonia during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Deficiencies of the orexinergic system result in narcolepsy, suggesting that these projections are concerned with switching between locomotor movements and muscular atonia. The present study characterizes the role of these orexinergic projections to the midbrain. In decerebrate cats, injecting orexin-A (60 µM to 1.0 mM, 0.20–0.25 µl) into the MLR reduced the intensity of the electrical stimulation required to induce locomotion on a treadmill (4 cats) or even elicit locomotor movements without electrical stimulation (2 cats). On the other hand, when orexin was injected into either the PPN (8 cats) or the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr, 4 cats), an increased stimulus intensity at the PPN was required to induce muscle atonia. The effects of orexin on the PPN and the SNr were reversed by subsequently injecting bicuculline (5 mM, 0.20–0.25 µl), a GABAA receptor antagonist, into the PPN. These findings indicate that excitatory orexinergic drive could maintain a higher level of locomotor activity by increasing the excitability of neurones in the MLR, while enhancing GABAergic effects on presumably cholinergic PPN neurones, to suppress muscle atonia. We conclude that orexinergic projections from the hypothalamus to the midbrain play an important role in regulating motor behaviour and controlling postural muscle tone and locomotor movements when awake and during sleep. Furthermore, as the excitability is attenuated in the absence of orexin, signals to the midbrain may induce locomotor behaviour when the orexinergic system functions normally but elicit atonia or narcolepsy when the orexinergic function is disturbed.

(Received 25 February 2005; accepted after revision 8 August 2005; first published online 25 August 2005)
Corresponding author Y. Koyama: Department of Science and Technology, Fukushima University, 1 Kanayagawa, Fukushima 960-1296, Japan. Email: koyamay{at}sss.fukushima-u.ac.jp




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J. W. Lu, V. B. Fenik, J. L. Branconi, G. L. Mann, I. Rukhadze, and L. Kubin
Disinhibition of perifornical hypothalamic neurones activates noradrenergic neurones and blocks pontine carbachol-induced REM sleep-like episodes in rats
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