Cannabinoids have been shown to exert anti-inflammatory activities in various in vivo and in vitro experimental models as well as ameliorate various inflammatory degenerative diseases. However, the mechanisms of these effects are not completely understood. Using the BV-2 mouse microglial cell line and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to induce an inflammatory response, we studied the signaling pathways engaged in the anti-inflammatory effects of cannabinoids as well as their influence on the expression of several genes known to be involved in inflammation. We found that the two major cannabinoids present in marijuana, ⌬ 9 -Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) 3 is a major constituent of Cannabis and serves as an agonist of the cannabinoid receptors CB1 (located mainly in neural cells) and CB2 (located mainly on immune cells). The second major constituent of Cannabis extract is cannabidiol (CBD), which is virtually inactive at the CB1 and CB2 receptors (1). Thus, because of its negligible activity at the CB1 receptor, CBD lacks the psychoactive effects that accompany the use of THC. Moreover, CBD was demonstrated to antagonize some undesirable effects of THC, including intoxication, sedation, and tachycardia, while sharing neuroprotective, anti-oxidative, anti-emetic, and anti-carcinogenic properties (2-4). Both THC and CBD have been shown to exert anti-inflammatory properties and to modulate the function of immune cells, including suppression of humoral response, immune cell proliferation, maturation, and migration, and antigen presentation (5-9). Despite increasing amounts of such observations, the molecular mechanisms involved in these cannabinoid-mediated effects are not yet fully understood.Microglial cells are resident macrophages of the central nervous system and serve as early host defense against pathogens. Activation of microglial cells leads to the release of proinflammatory and neurotoxic factors and serves as part of the neuroinflammatory process (10). The BV-2 murine microglial cell line is known to retain morphological, phenotypic, and functional properties associated with freshly isolated microglia such as expression of nonspecific esterase activity, phagocytic ability, and the absence of peroxidase activity (11,12). Furthermore, these cells release lysozyme and, when stimulated, interleukin (IL)-1 and tumor necrosis factor ␣ (11, 12). Close similarities between BV-2 and primary microglia in mechanisms mediating microglial stimulations, e.g. by lipopolysaccharide (LPS), S100B, or -amyloid, were reported (13). These properties make BV-2 cells an appropriate model for studying the activation of microglia in vitro. It has recently been shown that BV-2 cells express elements of the cannabinoid signaling systems, including the presence of endocannabinoids, i.e. anandamide and 2-arachidonoylglycerol, and cannabinoid or cannabinoid- 3 The abbreviations used are: THC, ⌬ 9 -tetrahydrocannabinol; CBD, cannabidiol; abn-CBD, abnormal cannabidiol; STAT, signal transducers and activators of transcription; IL, interleukin; IFN, ...
Using their large mystacial vibrissas, rats perform a variety of tasks, including localization and identification of objects. We report on the discriminatory thresholds and behavior of rats trained in a horizontal object localization task. Using an adaptive training procedure, rats learned to discriminate offsets in horizontal (anteroposterior) location with all, one row, or one arc of whiskers intact, but not when only a single whisker (C2) was intact on each cheek. However, rats initially trained with multiple whiskers typically improved when retested later with a single whisker intact. Individual rats reached localization thresholds as low as 0.24 mm (ϳ1°). Among the tested groups, localization acuity was finest (Ͻ1.5 mm) with rats that were initially trained with all whiskers and then trimmed to one arc of whiskers intact. Horizontal acuity was finer than the typical inter-vibrissal spacing (ϳ4.8 mm at contact points). Performance correlated with the net whisking spectral power in the range of 5-25 Hz but not in nonwhisking range of 30 -50 Hz. Lesioning the facial motor nerves reduced performance to chance level. We conclude that horizontal object localization in the rat vibrissal system can reach hyperacuity level and is an active sensing process: whisker movements are both required and beneficiary, in a graded manner, for making accurate positional judgments.
a b s t r a c tWe examined how lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and interferon gamma (IFN-c), known to differentially activate microglia, affect the expression of G protein-coupled receptor 55 (GPR55), a novel cannabinoid receptor. We found that GPR55 mRNA is significantly expressed in both primary mouse microglia and the BV-2 mouse microglial cell line, and that LPS down-regulates this message. Conversely, IFN-c slightly decreases GPR55 mRNA in primary microglia, while it upregulates this message in BV-2 cells. Moreover, the GPR55 agonist, lysophosphatidylinositol, increases ERK phosphorylation in BV-2 stimulated with IFN-c, in correlation with the increased amount of GPR55 mRNA. Remarkably, these stimuli-induced changes in GPR55 expression are similar to those observed with CB 2 -R, suggesting that both receptors might be involved in neuroinflammation and that their expression is concomitantly controlled by the state of microglial activation.
Whisking mediated touch is an active sense whereby whisker movements are modulated by sensory input and behavioral context. Here we studied the effects of touching an object on whisking in head-fixed rats. Simultaneous movements of whiskers C1, C2, and D1 were tracked bilaterally and their movements compared. During free-air whisking, whisker protractions were typically characterized by a single acceleration-deceleration event, whisking amplitude and velocity were correlated, and whisk duration correlated with neither amplitude nor velocity. Upon contact with an object, a second acceleration-deceleration event occurred in about 25% of whisk cycles, involving both contacting (C2) and non-contacting (C1, D1) whiskers ipsilateral to the object. In these cases, the rostral whisker (C2) remained in contact with the object throughout the double-peak phase, which effectively prolonged the duration of C2 contact. These “touch-induced pumps” (TIPs) were detected, on average, 17.9 ms after contact. On a slower time scale, starting at the cycle following first touch, contralateral amplitude increased while ipsilateral amplitude decreased. Our results demonstrate that sensory-induced motor modulations occur at various timescales, and directly affect object palpation.
In the vibrissal system, touch information is conveyed by a receptorless whisker hair to follicle mechanoreceptors, which then provide input to the brain. We examined whether any processing, that is, meaningful transformation, occurs in the whisker itself. Using high-speed videography and tracking the movements of whiskers in anesthetized and behaving rats, we found that whisker-related morphological phase planes, based on angular and curvature variables, can represent the coordinates of object position after contact in a reliable manner, consistent with theoretical predictions. By tracking exposed follicles, we found that the follicle-whisker junction is rigid, which enables direct readout of whisker morphological coding by mechanoreceptors. Finally, we found that our behaving rats pushed their whiskers against objects during localization in a way that induced meaningful morphological coding and, in parallel, improved their localization performance, which suggests a role for pre-neuronal morphological computation in active vibrissal touch.
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