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Neuroscience 1991: Vol 45 Table of Contents PDF

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NEUROSCIENCE An International Journal under the editorial direction of IBRO Volume 45, 1991 TITLE SECTION LIST OF CONTENTS AND AUTHOR INDEX : os PERGAMON PRESS ' OXFORD - NEW YORK - SEOUL -: TOKYO NEUROSCIENCE Chief Editors P. G. KOSTYUK: Department of General Physiology, A. A. Bogomoletz Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences, Ukrainian SSR, 4 Bogomoletz Street, Kiev 24, 252601 GSP, U.S... R. LLINAS: Department of Physiology and Biophysics, New York University School of Medicine, 550 First Avenue, New York 10016, U.S.A. A. D. SMITH: Department of Pharmacology, University of Oxford, Mansfield Road, Oxford OX1 3QT, U.K. Editorial Board R. G. BAKER (New York, NY) R. W. GUILLERY (Oxford) S. &L . PALAY (Concord, MA) P. BANKS (Sheffield) G. HAEUSLER (Darmstadt) R. E. PASSINGHAM (Oxford) K. J. BERKLEY (Tallahassee, FL) J. HAMoRI (Budapest ) V. H. Perry (Oxford ) A. BJORKLUND (Lund) L. HEIMER (Charlottesville, VA) 4. M. PoLak (London) J.P. BOLAM (Oxford ) M. HERKENHAM (Bethesda, MD) P. Rakic (New Haven, CA) P. BRODAL (Oslo) D. E. HILLMAN (New York, NY) H. J. RALSTON (San Francisco, CA) A. G. BROWN (Edinburgh) T. HOKFELT (Stockholm) ¥ S. REESE (Bethesda, MD) M. C. BROWN (Oxford) E. HOLTZMAN (New York, NY) F. REINOSO-SUAREZ (Madrid) G. TEN BRUGGENCATE (Munich) P. HOLZER (Graz) M. REE THELYI (Budapest ) J. BURES (Prague ) O. HORNYKIEWICZ (Vienna) P. N. RUDOMIN (Mexico ) R. E. BURKE (Bethesda, MD) J. HOUNSGAARD (Copenhagen) M. ae SHELANSKI (New York, NY) G. BuZSAKI (Newark, NJ) S. P. HUNT (Cambridge ) % M. SHERMAN (Stony Brook, NY) A. L. Bysov (Moscow ) M. Ito (Saitama) M. = SHIK (Moscow ) F. CLEMENTI (Milan ) H. JAHNSEN (Copenhagen) M. V. SOFRONIEW (Cambridge ) B. COLLIER (Montreal!) G. JAIM-ETCHEVERRY (Buenos Aires) P. SoMoGYI (Oxford) A. CONSTANTI (London) B. E. JONES (Montreal ) .. SOTELO (Paris ) M. Costa (Adelaide) G. Ju (Xian) K. STARKE (Freiburg) A. C. CUELLO (Montreal) J.S. KELLY (Edinburgh) M. S. STARR (London) W. J. Davis (Santa Cruz, CA) B. I. KHODOROV (Moscow ) M . STERIADE (Québec ) A. C. DOLPHIN (London) G. W. KREUTZBERG (Munich) C. F. STEVENS (La Jolla, CA) I. . L.D ONALDSON (Edinburgh ) O. A. KRISHTAL (Kiev) L. STJARNE (Stockholm) Dn.a e DGAR (Liverpool ) K. KRNJEVIC (Montreal) C. SrumPF (Vienna) c: ~ ~) WARDS (Tampa, FL) L. MAFFEI (Pisa) K . SUZUKI (Chapel Hill, NC) M. M. Esir1 (Oxford) C. A. MARSDEN (Nottingham) R . F. THOMPSON (Irvine, CA ) R. H. EVANS (Bristol) M. R. MATTHEWS (Oxford) A . M. THOMSON (London) D. 2S. FABER (Buffalo, NY) ; B. C. MATTHEWS (Oxford) E .S. Vizi (Budapest) D. M. FAMBROUGH (Baltimore, MD) A. 1I.. Matus (Basle) J . VooGD (Rotterdam) V. V. FANARDI(J YIerAevNan ) R. E. McCCaMAN (Duarte, CA) L . VYKLICKY (Prague) R. L. M. FAULL (Auckland) R. Y. Moore (Pittsburgh, PA) X .S. T. WAN (Beijing) as F. FREUND (Budapest) D. K. Morest (Farmington, CT ) R. WERMAN (Jerusalem) G. G ABELLA (London) :: G. MORGAN (Canberra) W. D. WILLIS (Galveston, TX) W. F. GANONG (San Francisco, CA) J. F. Morris (Oxford) H. WINKLER (/nnsbruck) H. M. GERSCHENFELD (Paris ) E. M UGNAINI (Storrs, CT) L. R. YOUNG (Cambridge, MA ) J. GLOWINSKI (Paris ) W. J. H. Nauta (Cambridge, MA)_ S. ZEK1 (London) ‘ A. GRAY (London) F. ORREGO (Santiago ) H. ZIMMERMANN (Frankfurt) A. M. GRAYBIEL (Cambridge, MA) J.M. PA.acios (Barcelona) IBRO Publications Committee Chairman, A. D. SMITH; R. LLINAS, D. G. R. OtToson, D. P. PURPURA, P. G. STRATA. Aims and Scope: Neuroscience publishes papers describing the results of original research on any aspect of the scientific study of the nervous system. Since one of the chief aims of the Journal is to promote communication between neuroscientists, the type of paper most suitable for publication is that in which new observations are clearly and succinctly reported and in which the purpose of the study is made meaningful to scientists of other disciplines. Any paper, however short, will be considered for publication provided that it reports significant, new and carefully confirmed findings with full experimental details. For Instructions to Authors see Vol. 40, No. 1, pp. iii-v. Picton Editor: A. P. CULLIS. Editorial Assistants: S. J. RUSSELL (U.K.), S. A. WILLIAMS (U.S.). Publishing, Subscription and Advertising Offices: Headington Hill Hall, Oxford OX 3 0BW (Oxford 794141). Published 24 per annum (six volumes 1992). Annuai institutional subscription rate (1992): £1595.00 (U.S. $2550.00). Two-year institutional rate (1992/93): £3030.50 (U.S. $4845.00). Sterling prices are definitive. U.S. dollar prices are quoted for convenience only, and are subject to exchange rate fluctuation. Personal subscription rate for those whose library subscribes at the regular rate is available on request from any Pergamon office. Prices include postage and insurance and are subject to change without notice. Subscription rates for Japan are available on request. Members of the International Brain Research Organization may order personal subscriptions at a concessional rate and details of these rates are available on request. Airmail Subscription extra. Subscription enquiries from customers in North America should be sent to: Pergamon Press Inc., 395 Saw Mill River Road, Elmsford, NY 10523, U.S.A., and for the remainder of the world to: Pergamon Press plc, Headington Hill Hall, Oxford OX3 OBW, U.K. Back issues of all previously published volumes, in both hard copy and on microform, are available direct from Pergamon offices. Whilst every effort is made by the Publishers and Editorial Board to see that no inaccurate or misleading data, opinion or statement appear in this Journal, they wish to make it clear that the data and opinions appearing in the articles and advertisements herein are the sole responsibility of the contributor or advertiser concerned. Accordingly, the Publishers, the Editorial Board and Editors and their respective employees, officers and agents accept no responsibility or liability whatsoever for the consequences of any such inaccurate or misleading data, opinion or statement. Copyright © 1992 IBRO For Copyright details see Back Cover LIST OF CONTENTS VOLUME 45 NUMBER |! 1991 S. S. Jossan, P. G. Gillberg, Monoamine oxidase B in brains from patients with C. G. Gottfries, I. Karlsson Alzheimer’s disease: a biochemical and autoradiograph- and L. Oreland ical study H. C. Kinney and W. F. White Opioid receptors localize to the external granular cell 13 layer of the developing human cerebellum . T. Yew, K. M. Pang and Immunohistochemical and ultrastructural studies of the 23 . C. Mok various nuclei of the trigeminal complex in the human newborn M. L. Simmons, C. G. Frondoza Immunocytochemical localization of N-acetyl-aspartate 37 and J. T. Coyle with monoclonal antibodies B. G. Border and G. A. Mihailoff Glutamate immunoreactivity in the rat basilar pons: 47 light and electron microscopy reveals labeled boutons and cells of origin of afferent projections J.-L. Puel, R. Pujol, S. Ladrech a-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid 63 and M. Eybalin electrophysiological and neurotoxic effects in the guinea- pig cochlea N. Lindefors, K. Brodin, C.-O. Stiller, Repeated electroconvulsive shock increases tachykinin 73 H. Persson and E. Brodin ‘and cholecystokinin mRNA expression in ventral peri- aqueductal gray N. T. Maidment, B. J. Siddall, Dual determination of extracellular cholecystokinin and 81 V. R. Rudolph, E. Erdelyi and neurotensin fragments in rat forebrain: microdialysis C. J. Evans combined with a sequential multiple antigen radio- immunoassay R. J. W. Pentney and A. Gratton Effects of local delta and mu opioid receptor activation 95 on basal and stimulated dopamine release in striatum and nucleus accumbens of rat: an in vivo electrochemical study M. Dubach Distribution of intracerebrally injected dopamine as 103 studied by a punch-scintillation modeling technique V. Bernard, C. Le Moine and B. Bloch Striatal neurons express increased level of dopamine D, 117 receptor mRNA in response to haloperidol treatment: a quantitative in situ hybridization study S. Demirgéren, M. D. Majewska, Receptor binding and electrophysiological effects of 127 C. E. Spivak and E. D. London dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, an antagonist of the GABA, receptor D. Lima, J. A. Mendes-Ribeiro and The spino-latero-reticular system of the rat: projections 137 A. Coimbra from the superficial dorsal horn and structural charac- terization of marginal neurons involved G. J. Ter Horst, G. J. Toes and Locus coeruleus projections to the dorsal motor vagus 153 J. D. Van Willigen nucleus in the rat rY C. A. Doyle and D. J. Maxwell Catecholaminergic innervation of the spinal dorsal horn: a correlated light and electron microscopic analysis of tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive fibres in the cat G. Roy, E. Philippe, F. Gaulin and Peripheral projections of the chick primary sensory G. Guay neurons expressing y-aminobutyric acid immuno- reactivity U. Hanesch, B. Heppelmann and Substance P- and calcitonin gene-related peptide R. F. Schmidt immunoreactivity in primary afferent neurons of the cat’s knee joint I. E. Mazzoni and R. L. Kenigsberg Thrombin indirectly affects cholinergic cell expression in primary septal cell cultures in a manner distinct from nerve growth factor P. F. M. Teunis, W. Vredevoogd, The emergence of electroreceptor organs in regenerating C. Weterings, F. Bretschneider and fish skin and concurrent changes in their transduction R. C. Peters properties T. Sommervaille, M. L. Reynolds Time-dependent differences in the increase in GAP-43 and C. J. Woolf expression in dorsal root ganglion cells after peripheral axotomy A. Bar-Ilan, N. Naveh, C. Weissman, Prostaglandin E, changes in the retina and optic nerve M. Belkin and M. Schwartz of an eye with injured optic nerve P. A. Steele, S. J. H. Brookes and Immunohistochemical identification of cholinergic M. Costa neurons in the myenteric plexus of guinea-pig small intestine T. W. McKeon and R. L. Parsons Microtubule-associated protein-2 and neurofilament immunoreactivity in neurons and small, intensely fluor- escent cells of an amphibian cardiac ganglion VOLUME 45 NUMBER 2 Ww. J. Smith, L. T. Diemel, Central hypoxaemia in rats provokes neurological R. M. Leach and D. R. Tomlinson defects similar to those seen in experimental diabetes mellitus: evidence for a partial role of endoneurial hypoxia in diabetic neuropathy H. Ho6rtnagl, M. L. Berger, G. Sperk Regional heterogeneity in the distribution of neurotrans- and Ch. Pifi mitter markers in the rat hippocampus T. C. Pellmar Fatty acids modulate excitability in guinea-pig hippo- campal slices M. T. Bardo and R. P. Hammer Jr Autoradiographic localization of dopamine D, and D, receptors in rat nucleus accumbens: resistance to differ- ential rearing conditions M. Ya. Voloshin, V. S. Zelenskaya, Influence of N-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropy- E. P. Lukhanina, L. F. Burchinskaya, ridine-induced injury of dopaminergic nigrostriatal B. P. Kolomietz and N. D. Nosenko system on movement components of the instrumental reflex and motor thalamic neurons’ reactions in the cat D. J. Maxwell and G. A. Foster Immunoelectron microscopic analysis of the synaptic connectivity of serotoninergic neurons grafted to the 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine-lesioned rat spinal cord M. Sakuma, K. Yoshioka, H. Suzuki, Substance P-evoked release of GABA from isolated M. Yanagisawa, Y. Onishi, N. Kobayashi spinal cord of the newborn rat and M. Otsuka N. Kobayashi, M. Sakuma, K. Yoshioka, Substance P-evoked release of acetylcholine from Y. Onishi, M. Yanagisawa, isolated spinal cord of the newborn rat K. Kawashima and M. Otsuka J. Franck, E. Brodin, K. Fried, The effect of selective serotonergic neurotoxin treatment A. Rosén, Y. Yamamoto and G. Fried on tachykinin levels in the rat ventral spinal cord M. Schlumpf, J. M. Palacios, Regional development of muscarinic cholinergic binding R. Cortes and W. Lichtensteiger sites in the prenatal rat brain A. Mansour, J. H. Meador-Woodruff, A comparison of D, receptor binding and mRNA in rat Q.-Y. Zhou, O. Civelli, H. Akil and brain using receptor autoradiographic and in situ S. J. Watson hybridization techniques R. C. Pierce, J. K. Rowlett, Chronic ascorbate potentiates the effects of chronic M. T. Bardo and G. V. Rebec haloperidol on behavioral supersensitivity but not D, dopamine receptor binding M. P. Clements, T. V. P. Bliss and Increase in arachidonic acid concentration in a post- M. A. Lynch synaptic membrane fraction following the induction of long-term potentiation in the dentate gyrus . A. Bayer and J. Altman Development of the endopiriform nucleus and the claus- trum in the rat brain T. Herdegen, W. Kummer, Expression of c-JUN, JUN B and JUN D proteins in rat C. E. Fiallos, J. Leah and R. Bravo nervous system following transection of vagus nerve and cervical sympathetic trunk C. Gambarana, C. E. Beattie, Region-specific expression of messenger RNAs encoding Z. R. Rodriguez and R. E. Siegel GABA, receptor subunits in the developing rat brain V. McM. Carr, A. I. Farbman, Identification of a new non-neuronal cell type in rat L. M. Colletti and J. I. Morgan olfactory epithelium P. Saransaari and S. S. Oja Excitatory amino acids evoke taurine release from cerebral cortex slices from adult and developing mice M. Zhou, T. Ma and M. T. Tseng Effects of taurine and ketamine on bovine retinal membrane lipid peroxidation D. M. D. Landis, E. Welter and A novel epitope expressed on the surface of developing C. Skordeles and mature astrocytes J. Marsala, I. Sulla, M. Santa, Mapping of the canine lumbosacral spinal cord neurons M. Marsala, L. Zacharias and by Nauta method at the end of the early phase of J. Radonak ‘paraplegia induced by ischemia and reperfusion G. Fenelon, C. Francois, Topographic distribution of the neurons of the central G. Percheron and J. Yelnik complex (centre médian-parafascicular complex) and of other thalamic neurons projecting to the striatum in macaques BOOK REVIEW B. E. Leonard Behavioural Models in Psychopharmacology: Theoretical, Industrial and Clinical Perspectives. Edited by P. Willner. VOLUME 45 NUMBER 3 V. Bigl and H. Bachelard Obituary: Dietmar Biesold 1925-1991 RESEARCH PAPERS B. Chamak and M. Mallat Fibronectin and laminin regulate the in vitro differen- tiation of microglial cells S. Marty, I. Dusart and M. Peschanski Glial changes following an excitotoxic lesion in the CNS—I. Microglia/macrophages I. Dusart, S. Marty and M. Peschanski Glial changes following an excitotoxic lesion in the CNS— II. Astrocytes R. Kiefer, C. A. Haas and Gamma interferon-like immunoreactive material in rat G. W. Kreutzberg neurons: evidence against a close relationship to gamma interferon J. M. Schumacher, M. P. Short, Intracerebral implantation of nerve growth factor- B. T. Hyman, X. O. Breakefield and producing fibroblasts protects striatum against neuro- QO. Isacson toxic levels of excitatory amino acids J. C. Cassel, C. Kelche, Graft-induced behavioral recovery from subcallosal G. M. Peterson, G. P. Ballough, septohippocampal damage in rats depends on maturity I. Goepp and B. Will stage of donor tissue H. Hodges, Y. Allen, T. Kershaw, Effects of cholinergic-rich neural grafts on radial maze P. L. Lantos, J. A. Gray and performance of rats after excitotoxic lesions of the J. Sinden forebrain cholinergic projection system—I. Ameliora- tion of cognitive deficits by transplants into cortex and hippocampus but not into basal forebrain H. Hodges, Y. Allen, J. Sinden, Effects of cholinergic-rich neural grafts on radial maze P. L. Lantos and J. A. Gray performance of rats after excitotoxic lesions of the forebrain cholinergic projection system—II. Cholinergic drugs as probes to investigate lesion-induced deficits and transplant-induced functional recovery J. M. Clark, A. J. M. Clark, Neuroendocrine and behavioural responses to hyperos- D. Warne, E. L. Rugg, molality in rats with lesions of the lateral hypothalamus Ss. L. Lightman and P. Winn made by N-methyl-D-aspartate J. M. Clark, A. J. M. Clark, The regulation of feeding and drinking in rats with A. Bartle and P. Winn lesions of the lateral hypothalamus made by N-methy!l- D-aspartate M. F. Suaud-Chagny, J. Ponec Presynaptic autoinhibition of the electrically evoked and F. Gonon dopamine release studied in the rat olfactory tubercle by in vivo electrochemistry A. Elaagouby, N. Ravel and R. Gervais Cholinergic modulation of excitability in the rat olfac- tory bulb: effect of local application of cholinergic agents on evoked field potentials A. A. Caminero, S. Segovia and ~ Sexual dimorphism-in accessory olfactory bulb mitral A. Guillamoén cells: a quantitative Golgi study M. Ikeda, T. Houtani, T. Ueyama Choline acetyltransferase immunoreactivity in the cat and T. Sugimoto cerebellum S.-I. Kyuhou and R. Matsuzaki Topographical organization of climbing fiber pathway from the superior colliculus to cerebellar vermal lobules VI-VII in the cat J. A. Neubauer, S. F. Gonsalves, Chemosensitivity of medullary neurons in explant tissue W. Chou, H. M. Geller and cultures N. H. Edelman P. C. Goldsmith, J. E. Boggan Opioid synapses on vasopressin neurons in the paraven- and K. K. Thind tricular and supraoptic nuclei of juvenile monkeys P. J. Meberg and A. Routtenberg Selective expression of protein Fl (GAP-43) mRNA in pyramidal but not granule cells of the hippocampus S. Saito, Y. Komiya and M. Igarashi Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors are expressed and enriched in growth cone membranes isolated from fetal and neonatal rat forebrain: pharmacological demon- stration and characterization L. Amini-Sereshki Effect of ambient temperature on sleep—waking cycle in cats with electrolytic dorsolateral pontine tegmental lesions V. V. Marlinsky and L. P. Voitenko The effect of procaine injection into the medullary reticular formation on forelimb muscle activity evoked by mesencephalic locomotor region and vestibular stimulation in the decerebrated guinea-pig J. Donnerer, R. Amann and F. Lembeck Neurogenic and non-neurogenic inflammation in the rat paw following chemical sympathectomy BOOK REVIEWS S. P. Watson Methods in Inositide Research. Edited by R. F. Irvine S. P. Watson Advances in Second Messengers and Phosphoprotein Research. Series edited by P. Greenguard and G. A. Robinson. Vol. 24: The Biology and Medicine of Signal Transduction. Volume Editors: Y. Nishizuka, M. Endo and C. Tanaka J.-C. Lacaille and T. A. Ferron Neurobiologie cellulaire —canaux ioniques et transmission synaptique. C.H ammond et D. Tritsch S. P. Watson Adenylyl Cyclase, G Proteins and Guanylyl Cyclase. Series: Methods in Enzymology, Vol. 195. Edited by R. A. Johnson and J. D. Corbin

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