Abstract: | In Rat, neonatal lesion of the locus coeruleus induces modifications of beta-adrenergic regulations at the level of raphe dorsalis neurons. In normal conditions, the firing of serotoninergic raphe cells is not beta-adrenergic dependent. On the contrary in the lesioned animal, iontophoresis of a beta-blocking agent (DL-propranolol) produces a marked inhibition of the serotoninergic unit firing. Various mechanisms may account for this pharmacological response in the lesioned group: a classical hypersensitivity phenomenon, or the persistence of an immature regulation. |