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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Mast Cells In Kainate Receptor Knockout Mice

Elkovich, Andrea J 01 January 2015 (has links)
Kainate receptor knockout mice have unique differences within their immune system. They exhibit an attenuated TH2 branch, while maintaining a robust TH1 response. Specifically, blocking the formation of functional kainate receptors affects mast cells and their related pathologies. While they seem to develop and activate normally in vivo and in vitro, KAR KO mast cells release more inflammatory mediators upon degranulation. These mice experience severe anaphylactic shock due to two compounding abnormalities. First, KAR KO mast cells release significantly more histamine in vivo upon IgE-mediated activation. Second, the animals over-respond to exogenous histamine with drastic temperature drops compared to WT. This report shows that the kainate receptor plays an important role in mast cell-mediated immune responses.
2

Rôle des récepteurs Kaïnate dans la physiopathologie de l'épilepsie du lobe temporal / Role of kainate receptors in the pathophysiology of temporal lobe epilepsy.

Peret, Angelique 27 November 2014 (has links)
Le kaïnate, est une puissante neurotoxine connue pour induire des convulsions qui rappellent celles trouvées chez les patients atteints d'épilepsie du lobe temporal (ELT). Cependant, le rôle des récepteurs kaïnate activés par le glutamate endogène dans l'ELT n'est pas encore connu. Chez les patients atteints d'ELT et dans les modèles animaux, le tissu neuronal subit une réorganisation majeure. Ce phénomène est particulièrement bien documenté dans le gyrus denté où les axones des cellules granulaires, bourgeonnent pour former un circuit récurrent excitateur aberrant. L'équipe a montré que ces synapses récurrentes moussues nouvellement formées sont aberrantes dans leurs modes de fonctionnement. En effet, en plus des synapses opérant via des récepteurs glutamatergiques de type AMPA présentes en conditions physiologiques, la moitié des synapses aberrantes fonctionnent via des récepteurs de type kaïnate. Les évènements générés par les récepteurs kaïnate ont une cinétique lente, leur permettant de s'intégrer dans une fenêtre temporelle anormalement étendue engendrant un taux de décharge soutenu et fortement rythmique des cellules du gyrus denté de rats épileptiques. L'objectif de mon travail de thèse a été d'étudier l'implication des récepteurs kaïnate dans les activités épileptiques de l'hippocampe. En utilisant différents modèles d'ELT nous avons pu observer que l'absence de ces récepteurs induit une forte diminution de la fréquence des activités épileptiformes dans le gyrus denté in vitro mais également in vivo. Cette étude démontre que les récepteurs kaïnate contenant la sous-unité GluK2 contribuent à la genèse des crises. / Kainate is a potent neurotoxin known to induce acute seizures. However, whether kainate receptors play any role in the pathophysiology of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is not yet known. In animal models of chronic epilepsy, as in human TLE, the hippocampus displays major network reorganization. In particular, sprouting of hippocampal mossy fibers leads to the formation of powerful recurrent excitatory circuits among dentate granule cells, which partly accounts for the enhanced ability of the hippocampus to generate epileptiform activity in human patients and animal models of TLE. At the aberrant recurrent excitatory synapses, mossy fiber inputs impinging on dentate granule cells operate mostly via ectopic kainate receptors and drive synaptic events with abnormal long lasting kinetics not present in naïve conditions. The goal of this work was to explore the pathophysiological implications of kainate receptors in generation of recurrent seizure in TLE through the use of kainate receptors subunit deficient mice and selected pharmacological agents. In an animal model of TLE, we observed a strong reduction of both interictal and ictal activities in the dentate gyrus in vitro and in vivo, in mice lacking the GluK2 subunit, and through the application of a pharmacological agent inhibiting GluK2/GluK5 receptors. Therefore, we demonstrate that aberrant GluK2-containing kainate receptors contribute to chronic seizures in TLE, urging for the development of antiepileptic strategies targeting these receptors.
3

Interakce glutamátových receptorů kainátového typu se steroidními látkami / The interaction of kainate subtypes of glutamate receptors with steroid compounds.

Fraňková, Denisa January 2017 (has links)
Kainate receptors belong to the family of glutamate receptors, which include NMDA, AMPA and δ receptors. Glutamate receptors are widely found in the brain and therefore they are very dynamically investigated, especially from view of pharmacology, because there is great potential for finding new and more specific modulators which could be used in the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases. The aim of this work was to extend the knowledge about the influence of neurosteroids on homomeric kainate receptors (GluK1, GluK2, GluK3) in which is the study of modulation by neurosteroids still at the beginning. We have investigated interactions of homomeric kainate receptors with selected neurosteroids (pregnenolone sulfate, pregnanolone sulfate, dehydroepiandrosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate) by using patch clamp method in the configuration of whole-cell recording and also by using microfluorometry. We have found out that the biggest modulating effect on homomeric kainate receptors is caused by pregnenolone sulfate, which inhibits glutamate responses of these receptors. Keywords kainate receptor, glutamate, neurosteroids, steroids, patch-clamp technique

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