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ScienceDaily (May 20, 2010) — Chicago and Montreal researchers studying the 
lowly lamprey eel have identified an overlooked nervous system pathway running 
parallel to known brainstem locomotor command circuitry in vertebrates such as 
birds, fishes and mammals. 



The finding is reported in Nature Neuroscience, online May 16.
Simon Alford, University of Illinois at Chicago professor of biological 
sciences and the article's corresponding author, said the role of a 
neurotransmitter associated with this parallel pathway may also suggest new 
research directions for treating Parkinson's disease.
Alford, along with his former graduate student and lead author Roy Smetana, 
now a University of Pittsburgh resident in psychiatry, worked with Université 
de Montréal and Université de Québec à Montréal neurobiologist Réjean Dubuc 
and his post-doctoral researcher Laurent Juvin in trying to sort out how the 
neurotransmitter analog muscarine modifies sensory information going to the 
brain.
Their work determined that muscarine stimulated neural activity, leading to 
locomotion in the laboratory lampreys.
The group focused its attention on a collection of brainstem neurons that tell 
the spinal cord to generate motor output that enables walking and other 
locomotion.
"We started looking at this group of neurons, which in the lamprey are 
conveniently very large, so they're easy to plant electrodes and record from," 
said Alford. "We discovered the muscarinic excitation was not working on these 
cells, but on a previously unknown group of cells within the brainstem."
What's more, these newly discovered brainstem neurons showed what Alford 
called a "very odd response" to the muscarine.
"Instead of just turning on -- like a synapse turns on a neuron and makes it 
fire -- when you put muscarine on these cells, they turn on and stay on" for a 
minute or longer which he said for a neurological reaction can be a very long 
time.
The researchers discovered the actual brain neurotransmitter that activates 
muscarine receptors -- another chemical, acetylcholine -- sends a signal to 
these newly discovered brainstem neurons, switching them on for the lengthy 
minute or so durations.
Alford said the finding opens up new insights into animal locomotion.
"It's a system for turning on your locomotor system and making you walk or run 
in a very coordinated, straight-line fashion sustaining locomotion for a 
considerable time," he said. "This simply was not known to exist before we 
discovered it."
The role of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine may ultimately suggest new 
Parkinson's disease treatments. While a key Parkinson's symptom is tremor, an 
advanced stage symptom is the inability to start a movement, such as walking. 
Symptoms associated with Parkinson's can be helped by reducing acetylcholine-
mediated neurotransmission in the brain, but little work has focused on 
brainstem muscarine receptors in this disease.
"This may be a backdoor finding into a secondary effect of Parkinson's disease 
that's not well studied because most research emphasis has been on dopamine 
and the basal ganglia, a different neurotransmitter and region of the brain," 
Alford said.
Major funding for the research came from the National Institute of 
Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and the Canadian Institutes of Health 
Research.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/05/100519131124.htm

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