Invited Symposium: Role of the Basal Forebrain Neurons in Cortical Activation and Behavioural State Regulation Cholinergic projections as EEG activator Basal forebrain as activation-mediator Non-essential role of the thalamus Non-cholinergic EEG activation |
Abstract Neurons in the basal forebrain provide the extensive cholinergic innervation of the cerebral cortex of mammals. Evidence suggests that excitation of these cells and the resulting intracortical release of acetylcholine (ACh) blocks low frequency membrane oscillations and inhibitory after-hyperpolarization in cortical pyramidal cells, resulting in the appearance of activated, desynchronized electrocorticographic activity. Thus, the cholinergic basal forebrain-cortical projection system produces activation by a direct, local action in cortex. In addition to ACh, many other brain systems are thought to play important roles in cortical activation (e.g., thalamus, brainstem, amygdala, noradrenaline, dopamine, histamine). Rather than by a direct action on cortical neurons, however, these systems modulate activation largely by an indirect action on cholinergic cells, thus altering the release of ACh from cortical terminals. Thus, in addition to its direct activating functions, the cholinergic-cortical projection system also acts as a ŒŒfinal common pathway11 through which other brain systems affect activation indirectly. To date, only one pathway has been identified that can maintain activation independent of cholinergic projections: serotonergic cortical afferents originating in the midbrain raphe nuclei produce cortical activation even after cholinergic cortical inputs have been eliminated pharmacologically or by lesioning the basal forebrain region.
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Dringenberg, H.C.; (1998). The basal forebrain cholinergic system: direct cortical activator and mediator of activation induced by excitation of secondary brain systems. Presented at INABIS '98 - 5th Internet World Congress on Biomedical Sciences at McMaster University, Canada, Dec 7-16th. Invited Symposium. Available at URL http://www.mcmaster.ca/inabis98/semba/dringenberg0136/index.html | ||||||||
© 1998 Author(s) Hold Copyright |