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Seasonal changes in methionine-enkephalin immunoreactivity in the brain of a hibernator, Spermophilus columbianus
Authors:F Nurnberger  T F Lee  M L Jourdan  L C Wang
Institution:Department of Anatomy and Cytobiology, Justus Liebig University, Giessen, F.R.G.
Abstract:To identify the actual location of central endogenous opioid systems which may be involved in regulating the hibernation cycle, differences in the pattern of central methionine-enkephalin (Met-EK) immunoreactivity were compared between hibernating (body temperature, Tb = 7 degrees C) and non-hibernating (Tb = 37 degrees C) Columbian ground squirrels using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique. In non-hibernating animals, Met-EK-immunoreactive perikarya were observed in telencephalic (putamen, caudate nucleus, medial septum-diagonal band complex, amygdala) and diencephalic (periventricular hypothalamic nucleus, lateral hypothalamic area) regions, whereas immunoreactive fibers were found in the lateral septum, stria terminalis nucleus, various hypothalamic areas, arcuate nucleus, median eminence, thalamic intralaminar, periventricular nucleus and lateral habenular nucleus. Compared to the non-hibernating animal, a marked increase in the number of Met-EK-immunoreactive fibers was found in the lateral septal nucleus, the periventricular nucleus, the intralaminar thalamus and the paraventricular hypothalamus of hibernating ground squirrels. Since these changes in immunoreactivity were not observed in the artificially induced hypothermic ground squirrels (Tb = 7 degrees C), it is unlikely that the dissimilarity in immunoreactivity between animals from different hibernating phases is due to differences in their Tb. In combination with our previous studies, these results tend to suggest that hibernation may be brought about by an increase in endogenous opioid activity, especially in the lateral septal region.
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