Dendritic peptide release and peptide-dependent behaviours
M Ludwig, G Leng - Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2006 - nature.com
M Ludwig, G Leng
Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2006•nature.comNeuropeptides that are released from dendrites, such as oxytocin and vasopressin, function
as autocrine or paracrine signals at their site of origin, but can also act at distant brain
targets to evoke long-lasting changes in behaviour. Oxytocin, for instance, has profound
effects on social bonding that are exerted at sites that richly express oxytocin receptors, but
which are innervated by few, if any, oxytocin-containing projections. How can a prolonged,
diffuse signal have coherent behavioural consequences? The recently demonstrated ability …
as autocrine or paracrine signals at their site of origin, but can also act at distant brain
targets to evoke long-lasting changes in behaviour. Oxytocin, for instance, has profound
effects on social bonding that are exerted at sites that richly express oxytocin receptors, but
which are innervated by few, if any, oxytocin-containing projections. How can a prolonged,
diffuse signal have coherent behavioural consequences? The recently demonstrated ability …
Abstract
Neuropeptides that are released from dendrites, such as oxytocin and vasopressin, function as autocrine or paracrine signals at their site of origin, but can also act at distant brain targets to evoke long-lasting changes in behaviour. Oxytocin, for instance, has profound effects on social bonding that are exerted at sites that richly express oxytocin receptors, but which are innervated by few, if any, oxytocin-containing projections. How can a prolonged, diffuse signal have coherent behavioural consequences? The recently demonstrated ability of neuropeptides to prime vesicle stores for activity-dependent release could lead to a temporary functional reorganization of neuronal networks harbouring specific peptide receptors, providing a substrate for long-lasting effects.
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