Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Francisco R. Morales is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Francisco R. Morales.


Brain Research | 2001

Effects on sleep and wakefulness of the injection of hypocretin-1 (orexin-A) into the laterodorsal tegmental nucleus of the cat

Ming-Chu Xi; Francisco R. Morales; Michael H. Chase

Anatomical data demonstrate a dense projection, in the cat, from hypocretin (orexin) neurons in the hypothalamus to the laterodorsal tegmental nucleus (LDT), which is a critical pontine site that is involved in the regulation of the behavioral states of sleep and wakefulness. The present study was therefore undertaken to explore the hypocretinergic control of neurons in the LDT vis-à-vis these behavioral states. Accordingly, hypocretin-1 was microinjected into the LDT of chronic, unanesthetized cats and its effects on the percentage, latency, frequency and duration of wakefulness, quiet (non-REM) sleep and active (REM) sleep were determined. There was a significant increase in the time spent in wakefulness following the microinjection of hypocretin-1 into the LDT and a significant decrease in the time spent in active sleep. The increase in the percentage of wakefulness was due to an increase in the duration of episodes of wakefulness; the reduction in active sleep was due to a decrease in the frequency of active sleep episodes, but not in their duration. These data indicate that hypocretinergic processes in the LDT play an important role in both of the promotion of wakefulness and the suppression of active sleep.


Neuroscience | 1999

Hypoglossal motoneurons are postsynaptically inhibited during carbachol-induced rapid eye movement sleep.

Jack Yamuy; Simon J. Fung; Ming-Chu Xi; Francisco R. Morales; Michael H. Chase

The obstructive sleep apnea syndrome is characterized by the occurrence of cyclic snoring and frequent apneic episodes during sleep, with consequent hypoxia and hypercapnia. Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome is associated with excess daytime sleepiness, depression, and an increased incidence of ischemic cardiopathy, cardiac arrhythmias, systemic hypertension and brain infarction. Hypoglossal motoneurons, which innervate extrinsic and intrinsic muscles of the tongue, play a key role in maintaining the patency of the upper airway and in the pathophysiology of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. Based on data obtained by using extracellular recording techniques, there is a consensus that hypoglossal motoneurons cease to discharge during rapid eye movement sleep, because they are disfacilitated. Since other somatic motoneurons are known to be postsynaptically inhibited during rapid eye movement sleep, we sought to determine, by the use of intracellular recording techniques during cholinergically induced rapid eye movement sleep, whether postsynaptic inhibitory mechanisms act on hypoglossal motoneurons. We found that, during this state, a powerful glycinergic premotor inhibitory system acts to suppress hypoglossal motoneurons. This finding opens new avenues for the treatment of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, and provides a foundation to explore the neural and pharmacological control of respiration-related motoneurons during rapid eye movement sleep.


Brain Research | 2001

Hypocretin (orexin) input to trigeminal and hypoglossal motoneurons in the cat: a double-labeling immunohistochemical study

Simon J. Fung; Jack Yamuy; Sharon Sampogna; Francisco R. Morales; Michael H. Chase

In trigeminal and hypoglossal motor nuclei of adult cats, hypocretin immunoreactive fiber varicosities were observed in apposition to retrogradely labeled motoneuron somata and dendrites. Among those lateral hypothalamus neurons that project to the hypoglossal nucleus some were determined to be hypocretin immunoreactive and were located amongst the single-labeled hypocretinergic neurons. These data suggest that hypocretin may play a role in the synaptic control of these motoneurons.


Brain Research | 1982

Hyperpolarizing membrane responses induced in lumbar motoneurons by stimulation of the nucleus reticularis pontis oralis during active sleep

Simon J. Fung; Peter A. Boxer; Francisco R. Morales; Michael H. Chase

Intracellular recordings were obtained from lumbar motoneurons in unanesthetized, undrugged, normally respiring cats during the states of wakefulness, quiet sleep and active sleep. The objective was to examine the state-dependent control of spinal cord motoneurons exerted by the pontomesencephalic reticular formation. Accordingly, electrical stimulation was applied to the nucleus reticularis pontis oralis while the membrane potential of lumbar motoneurons was recorded. Short latency depolarizing and/or hyperpolarizing potentials were observed throughout sleep and wakefulness; no state-dependent pattern was found in the direction of polarization or amplitude for these early potentials. However, a long latency hyperpolarizing potential emerged exclusively during active sleep; it was characterized by a peak latency of 45 +/- 1 (S.E.M.) ms, a duration of 40 +/- 2 ms, and an amplitude of 3 +/- 0.5 mV. This active sleep-selective potential was capable of inhibiting spontaneous motoneuron activity. These and previously obtained data support the notion that excitation of the nucleus reticularis pontis oralis results in somatomotor inhibition at the level of the spinal cord and brainstem selectively during the state of active sleep.


Brain Research | 1981

Postsynaptic control of lumbar motoneuron excitability during active sleep in the chronic cat

Francisco R. Morales; Michael H. Chase

A correlated intracellular and extracellular study of lumbar motoneuron excitability during sleep and wakefulness was performed in the chronic, unanesthetized, undrugged, normally respiring cat. Experiments were designed to reveal the extent to which hypotonia during active sleep in mammals is dependent on postsynaptic inhibition of somatic motoneurons. Variations in the antidromic field potential, antidromic and orthodromic spike, EPSP, membrane input resistance and rheobasic current were studied. No change in motoneuron excitability occurred when quiet wakefulness was compared to quiet sleep. A decrease in excitability was present, due to postsynaptic inhibition, during active sleep. Further phasic decreases in excitability, also due to postsynaptic inhibition, occurred during active sleep in conjunction with clusters of rapid eye movements.


Brain Research | 1986

Effect of stimulation of the nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis on the membrane potential of cat lumbar motoneurons during sleep and wakefulness

Michael H. Chase; Francisco R. Morales; Peter A. Boxer; Simon J. Fung; Peter J. Soja

The present study was performed in order to determine the effect of electrical stimulation of the medullary nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis (NRGc) on the membrane potential of spinal cord motoneurons during sleep and wakefulness. Accordingly, intracellular recordings were obtained from lumbar motoneurons in unanesthetized normally respiring cats during naturally occurring states of wakefulness, quiet sleep and active sleep. Electrical stimuli applied to the NRGc evoked synaptic potentials which occurred at short latency (less than 10 ms) and did not exhibit consistent changes in their waveforms during any states of sleep or wakefulness. During wakefulness and quiet sleep, longer latency (greater than 20 ms) low-amplitude hyperpolarizing potentials occasionally followed NRGc stimulation. However, during active sleep, NRGc stimulation produced, in all motoneurons, relatively large hyperpolarizing potentials that were characterized by a mean amplitude of 3.5 +/- 0.4 mV (mean +/- S.E.M.), a mean latency-to-peak of 43.0 +/- 0.8 ms, and an average duration of 34.4 +/- 1.7 ms. These potentials were capable of blocking the generation of orthodromic spikes elicited by sciatic nerve stimulation. When anodal current or chloride was passed through the recording electrode, the hyperpolarizing potentials decreased in amplitude, and in some cases their polarity was reversed. These results indicate that the active sleep-specific hyperpolarizing potentials were inhibitory postsynaptic potentials. Thus, the NRGc possesses the capability of providing a postsynaptic inhibitory drive that is directed toward lumbar motoneurons which is dependent on the occurrence of the behavioral state of active sleep.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Brain Research | 2003

Colocalization of γ-aminobutyric acid and acetylcholine in neurons in the laterodorsal and pedunculopontine tegmental nuclei in the cat: a light and electron microscopic study

Hong-ge Jia; Jack Yamuy; Sharon Sampogna; Francisco R. Morales; Michael H. Chase

Cholinergic and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) mechanisms in the dorsolateral pontomesencephalic tegmentum have been implicated in the control of active (REM) sleep and wakefulness. To determine the relationships between neurons that contain these neurotransmitters in this region of the brainstem in adult cats, combined light and electron microscopic immunocytochemical procedures were employed. Light microscopic analyses revealed that choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and GABA immunoreactive neurons were distributed throughout the laterodorsal and pedunculopontine tegmental nuclei (LDT and PPT). Surprisingly, approximately 50% of the ChAT immunoreactive neurons in these nuclei also contained GABA. Using electron microscopic pre-embedding immunocytochemistry, GABA immunoreactivity was observed in somas, dendrites and axon terminals in both the LDT and PPT. Most of the GABA immunoreactive terminals formed symmetrical synapses with non-immunolabeled dendrites. Electron microscopic double-immunolabeling techniques revealed that ChAT and GABA were colocalized in axon terminals in the LDT/PPT. Approximately 30% of the ChAT immunoreactive terminals were also GABA immunoreactive, whereas only 6-8% of the GABA immunoreactive terminals were ChAT immunoreactive. Most of the ChAT/GABA immunoreactive terminals formed symmetrical synapses with non-immunolabeled dendrites; however, ChAT/GABA immunoreactive terminals were also observed that contacted ChAT immunoreactive dendrites. With respect to ChAT immunoreactive postsynaptic profiles, approximately 40% of the somas and 50% of the dendrites received synaptic contact from GABA immunoreactive terminals in both the LDT and PPT. These findings (a) indicate that there are fundamental interactions between cholinergic and GABAergic neurons within the LDT/PPT that play an important role in the control of active sleep and wakefulness and (b) provide an anatomical basis for the intriguing possibility that a mechanism of acetylcholine and GABA co-release from the terminals of LDT/PPT neurons is involved in the regulation of behavioral states.


Neurobiology of Aging | 1991

Segmental demyelination in peripheral nerves of old cats

A.M. Adinolfi; Jack Yamuy; Francisco R. Morales; Michael H. Chase

This study of the fine structure of sciatic nerve branches in normal old cats provides evidence indicating that segmental demyelination may account, in part, for the significant decrease with age in the mean axonal conduction velocity in these hindlimb nerves. Fibers of different diameters exhibited focal abnormalities of their myelin sheath. Lipid-like droplets and granulo-vacuolar debris were present in distended portions of the inner adaxonal rim and in the outer cytoplasmic compartment of the Schwann cell. These inclusions extended into the cytoplasm of the paranodal myelin loops and clefts of Schmidt-Lantermann. There also occurred disruption of the axoglial junctions and separation of the myelin loops from the paranodal axolemma which widens the nodes of Ranvier. Complete disruption of one or more contiguous segments of the myelin sheath was produced by interlamellar splitting and ballooning along the major dense and intraperiod lines. Axonal degeneration occurred less frequently and was not present in all hindlimb nerves.


Brain Research | 2006

MCH-containing neurons in the hypothalamus of the cat: Searching for a role in the control of sleep and wakefulness

Pablo Torterolo; Sharon Sampogna; Francisco R. Morales; Michael H. Chase

Neurons that utilize melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) and others that employ hypocretin as neurotransmitter are located in the hypothalamus and project diffusely throughout the CNS, including areas that participate in the generation and maintenance of the states of sleep and wakefulness. In the present report, immunohistochemical methods were employed to examine the distribution of MCHergic and hypocretinergic neurons. In order to test the hypothesis that the MCHergic system is capable of influencing specific behavioral states, we studied Fos immunoreactivity in MCH-containing neurons during (1) quiet wakefulness, (2) active wakefulness with motor activity, (3) active wakefulness without motor activity, (4) quiet sleep and (5) active sleep induced by carbachol (AS-carbachol). We determined that MCHergic neuronal somata in the cat are intermingled with hypocretinergic neurons in the dorsal and lateral hypothalamus, principally in the tuberal and tuberomammillary regions; however, hypocretinergic neurons extended more in the anterior-posterior axis than MCHergic neurons. Axosomatic and axodendritic contacts were common between these neurons. In contrast to hypocretinergic neurons, which are known to be active during motor activity and AS-carbachol, Fos immunoreactivity was not observed in MCH-containing neurons in conjunction with any of the preceding behavioral conditions. Non-MCHergic, non-hypocretinergic neurons that expressed c-fos during active wakefulness with motor activity were intermingled with MCH and hypocretin-containing neurons, suggesting that these neurons are related to some aspect of motor function. Further studies are required to elucidate the functional sequela of the interactions between MCHergic and hypocretinergic neurons and the phenotype of the other neurons that were active during motor activity.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Interactions between GABAergic and Cholinergic Processes in the Nucleus Pontis Oralis: Neuronal Mechanisms Controlling Active (Rapid Eye Movement) Sleep and Wakefulness

Ming-Chu Xi; Francisco R. Morales; Michael H. Chase

The cholinergic system within the nucleus pontis oralis (NPO) of the pontine tegmentum is critically involved in the generation of active (rapid eye movement) sleep. Previously, we demonstrated that a GABAergic system in the NPO also plays an important role in the control of the behavioral states of wakefulness as well as active sleep. The present study examined interactions between these two neuronal systems vis-à-vis the occurrence of these behavioral states. Accordingly, cholinergic and GABAergic agonists and antagonists were injected into the NPO, and their combined effects on sleep and waking states of chronic, unanesthetized cats were examined. Microinjections of carbachol into the NPO elicited active sleep with a short latency. However, a preinjection of muscimol (a GABAA agonist) completely blocked the active sleep-inducing effects of carbachol. The induction of active sleep by carbachol was also suppressed by a subsequent injection of muscimol. On the other hand, the microinjection of scopolamine (a muscarinic receptor antagonist) did not block the induction of active sleep by bicuculline (a GABAA antagonist). We conclude that the excitatory cholinergic control of NPO neurons that are involved in the generation of active sleep is gated by a pontine GABAergic system that exerts its effects postsynaptically by inhibiting NPO neurons, resulting in the suppression of active sleep and the generation of wakefulness. In the absence of the activation of this GABAergic gating mechanism, active sleep occurs. These results reveal that specific interactions between cholinergic and GABAergic processes in the NPO play a critical role in the generation of active sleep and wakefulness.

Collaboration


Dive into the Francisco R. Morales's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jack Yamuy

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ming-Chu Xi

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jian-Hua Zhang

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge