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Dive into the research topics where Manuel Miranda-Anaya is active.

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Featured researches published by Manuel Miranda-Anaya.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Deletion of TASK1 and TASK3 channels disrupts intrinsic excitability but does not abolish glucose or pH responses of orexin/hypocretin neurons.

J. A. González; Lise T. Jensen; Susan E. Doyle; Manuel Miranda-Anaya; Michael Menaker; Lars Fugger; Douglas A. Bayliss; Denis Burdakov

The firing of hypothalamic hypocretin/orexin neurons is vital for normal sleep–wake transitions, but its molecular determinants are not well understood. It was recently proposed that TASK (TWIK‐related acid‐sensitive potassium) channels [TASK1 (K2P3.1) and/or TASK3 (K2P9.1)] regulate neuronal firing and may contribute to the specialized responses of orexin neurons to glucose and pH. Here we tested these theories by performing patch‐clamp recordings from orexin neurons directly identified by targeted green fluorescent protein labelling in brain slices from TASK1/3 double‐knockout mice. The deletion of TASK1/3 channels significantly reduced the ability of orexin cells to generate high‐frequency firing. Consistent with reduced excitability, individual action potentials from knockout cells had lower rates of rise, higher thresholds and more depolarized after‐hyperpolarizations. However, orexin neurons from TASK1/3 knockout mice retained typical responses to glucose and pH, and the knockout animals showed normal food‐anticipatory locomotor activity. Our results support a novel role for TASK genes in enhancing neuronal excitability and promoting high‐frequency firing, but suggest that TASK1/3 subunits are not essential for orexin cell responses to glucose and pH.


Journal of Biological Rhythms | 2002

Circadian Rhythm of Iguana Electroretinogram: The Role of Dopamine and Melatonin

Manuel Miranda-Anaya; Paul A. Bartell; Michael Menaker

The amplitude of the b-wave of the electroretinogram (ERG) varies with a circadian rhythm in the green iguana; the amplitude is high during the day (or subjective day) and low during the night (or subjective night). Dopamine and melatonin contents in the eye are robustly rhythmic under constant conditions; dopamine levels are high during the subjective day, and melatonin levels are high during the subjective night. Dopamine and melatonin affect the amplitude of the b-wave in an antagonistic and phase-dependent manner: dopamine D2-receptor agonists injected intraocularly during the subjective night produce high-amplitude b-waves characteristic of the subjective day, whereas melatonin injected intraocularly during the subjective day reduces b-wave amplitude. Sectioning the optic nerve abolishes the circadian rhythms of b-wave amplitude and of dopamine content. The results of this study suggest that in iguana, a negative feedback loop involving dopamine and melatonin regulates the circadian rhythm of the ERG b-wave amplitude that is at least in part generated in the brain.


Chronobiology International | 1996

Circadian Locomotor Activity Rhythm During Ontogeny in Crayfish Procambarus Clarkii

Mariaa Luisa Fanjul-moles; Manuel Miranda-Anaya; Julio Prieto

The characteristics of the circadian rhythm of locomotor activity in the crayfish Procambarus clarkii during ontogeny under constant darkness and light-dark (LD 12:12) conditions were studied in 132 juvenile crayfish, aged 10-140 days, divided in four groups. All animals were individually monitored with a motor activity recording system. Activity was quantitatively and qualitatively analyzed. All ages showed a circadian rhythm, although the probability of its appearance increased with age. Period values oscillated between 25.0 h in group I (2-4-week-old animals) and 24.3 h in group IV (16-20-week-old animals with more than 6 molts), but always with a high standard deviation. Groups II (5-10-week-old animals) and IV showed a statistically significant bimodal nonrandom synchrony of phases. The activity/ rest relationship diminishes as development progresses and is most uniform in group IV. We discuss the possibility that the pacemaker system responsible for this rhythm might be present from the moment of eclosion, but the coupling strength of this system with the effectors might change along development. The results presented in this work seem to indicate that the central pacemakers responsible for the activity and the ERG rhythm are not the same.


Physiology & Behavior | 2012

Obesity alters circadian behavior and metabolism in sex dependent manner in the volcano mouse Neotomodon alstoni.

Vania Carmona-Alcocer; Citlalli Fuentes-Granados; Agustín Carmona-Castro; Ivette Aguilar-González; René Cárdenas-Vázquez; Manuel Miranda-Anaya

The aim of the present study is to evaluate whether circadian locomotor activity, and the daily profile of plasma parameters related to metabolic syndrome (nutrients: glucose and triacylglycerides, and hormones: insulin and leptin), differ between male and female Neotomodon alstoni mice, both lean and obese. Young adult animals were captured in the field and kept at the laboratory animal facility. After 6 to 7 months feeding the animals ad libitum with a regular diet for laboratory rodents, 50-60% of mice became obese. Comparisons between sexes indicated that lean females were more active than males; however obese females reduced their nocturnal activity either in LD or DD, and advanced the phase of their activity-onset with respect to lights off. No differences in food intake between lean and obese mice, either during the day or night, were observed. Daily profiles of metabolic syndrome-related plasma parameters showed differences between sexes, and obesity was associated with increased values, especially leptin (500% in females and 273% in males) and insulin (150% in both females and males), as compared with lean mice. Our results indicate that lean mice display behavioral and endocrine differences between sexes, and obesity affects the parameters tested in a sex-dependent manner. The aforementioned leads us to propose N. alstoni, studied in captivity, could be an interesting model for the study of sex differences in the effects of obesity.


Journal of Biological Rhythms | 2000

Circadian rhythm of ERG in Iguana iguana: role of the pineal.

Manuel Miranda-Anaya; Paul A. Bartell; Shin Yamazaki; Michael Menaker

In green iguanas, the pineal controls the circadian rhythm of body temperature but not the rhythm of locomotor activity. As part of a program to investigate the characteristics of this multioscillator circadian system, the authors studied the circadian rhythms of the electroretinographic response (ERG) and asked whether the pineal gland is necessary for the expression of this rhythm. ERGs from a total of 24 anesthetized juvenile iguanas were recorded under four different conditions: (a) complete darkness (DD), (b) dim light-dark cycles (dLD), (c) constant dim light (dLL), and (d) pinealectomized in DD. Results demonstrate that the b-wave component of the ERG shows a very clear circadian rhythm in DD and that this rhythm persists in dLL and entrains to dLD cycles. The ERG response is maximally sensitive during the subjective day. Pinealectomy does not abolish the circadian rhythm in ERG, demonstrating that the oscillator responsible for the ERG rhythm is located elsewhere.


Chronobiology International | 1997

Nonparametric Effects of Monochromatic Light on the Activity Rhythm of Juvenile Crayfish

Manuel Miranda-Anaya; María Luisa Fanjul-Moles

The current study was carried out to test the influence of blue and red monochromatic light upon the motor activity rhythm of juvenile crayfish as well as determine whether this effect involves extraretinal photoreception. Two groups of 46 juvenile instars were used: (1) intact control animals and (2) animals lacking retina and lamina ganglionaris. All animals were individually monitored with a motor activity recording system for 30 days. For the first 10 days the animals were maintained and kept in constant darkness (DD) and then submitted to 24-h skeleton photoperiod cycles (SP) consisting of 30 min red or blue light signals calibrated to the same irradiance (25 Wm-2) during the next 10 days. Afterwards, they were left in DD for the last 10 days of the experiment. Activity was quantitatively and qualitatively analyzed. Results show that all control intact animals synchronized to blue or red light exhibited shift advances or delays. These results indicate that both circadian responses to monochromatic light investigated in this study are mediated by extraretinal photoreceptors.


Journal of Biological Rhythms | 2004

Period and Phase Control in a Multioscillatory Circadian System (Iguana Iguana)

Paul A. Bartell; Manuel Miranda-Anaya; Michael Menaker

The circadian system of the lizard Iguana iguana is composed of several independent pacemakers that work in concert: the pineal gland, retinae of the lateral eyes, and a fourth oscillator presumed to be located in the hypothalamus. These pacemakers govern the circadian expression of multiple behaviors and physiological processes, including rhythms in locomotor activity, endogenous body temperature, electroretinogram, and melatonin synthesis. The numerous, easily measurable rhythmic outputs make the iguana an ideal organism for examining the contributions of individual oscillators and their interactions in governing the expression of overt circadian rhythms. The authors have examined the effects of pinealectomy and enucleation on the endogenous body temperature rhythm (BTR) and locomotor activity rhythm (LAR) of juvenile iguanas at constant temperature both in LD cycles and in constant darkness (DD). They measured the periods (τ) of the circadian rhythms of LAR and BTR, the phase relationships between them in DD (ΨAT), and the phase relationship between each rhythm and the light cycle (ΨRL). Pinealectomy lengthened τ of locomotor activity in all animals tested and abolished the BTR in two-thirds of the animals. In those animals in which the BTR did persist following pinealectomy, τ lengthened to the same extent as that of locomotor activity. Pinealectomy also delayed the onset of activity with respect to its normal phase relationship with body temperature in DD. Enucleation alone had no significant effect on τ of LAR or BTR; however, after enucleation, BTR became 180 ° out of phase from LAR in DD. After both pinealectomy and enucleation, 4 of 16 animals became arrhythmic in both activity and body temperature. Their data suggest that rhythmicity, period, and phase of overt circadian behaviors are regulated through the combined output of multiple endogenous circadian oscillators.


Behavioural Pharmacology | 2009

Lithium and genetic inhibition of GSK3β enhance the effect of methamphetamine on circadian rhythms in the mouse

Jennifer A. Mohawk; Manuel Miranda-Anaya; Özgür Tataroglu; Michael Menaker

Lithium, a drug commonly used to treat mood disorders, and the psychostimulant methamphetamine are both capable of altering circadian rhythmicity. Although the actions of lithium on the circadian system are thought to occur through inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase-3&bgr; (GSK3&bgr;), the mechanism by which methamphetamine alters circadian rhythms is unknown. We tested the effects of concurrent methamphetamine and lithium treatment on the circadian wheel-running behavior of mice. Methamphetamine alone lengthened both the active duration and the free-running period of locomotor activity in animals housed in constant conditions. Administering lithium enhanced the period-lengthening effects of methamphetamine in animals housed in constant darkness. This effect was even more pronounced when animals were housed in constant light. Lithium increased both methamphetamine intake and serum levels of methamphetamine, possibly contributing to the effects on circadian behavior. We also tested the effect of methamphetamine in mutant mice possessing only one allele for Gsk3&bgr;. These animals, when treated with methamphetamine, responded like wild-type mice treated with a combination of methamphetamine and lithium, displaying long, free-running rhythms. These data, together with many others in the literature, point to a complicated interaction between the circadian system and the development and possible treatment of psychopathologies such as bipolar disorder and drug addiction.


Journal of Biological Rhythms | 2007

Interactions between dopamine and melatonin organize circadian rhythmicity in the retina of the green iguana

Paul A. Bartell; Manuel Miranda-Anaya; Wilson McIvor; Michael Menaker

Circadian physiology in the vertebrate retina is regulated by several neurotransmitters. In the lateral eyes of the green iguana the circadian rhythm of melatonin content peaks during the night while the rhythm of dopamine peaks during the day. In the present work, the authors explore the interaction of these 2 neurotransmitters during the circadian cycle. They depleted retinal dopamine with intravitreal injections of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) and measured ocular melatonin content in vivo throughout 1 circadian cycle. The circadian rhythm of ocular melatonin not only persisted but increased 10-fold in amplitude. This increase was substantially reduced by the intraocular administration of dopamine. 6-OHDA-treated retinas, unlike those from untreated animals, did not express a circadian rhythm of melatonin synthesis in vitro. To deplete retinal melatonin, the authors pinealectomized iguanas and blocked retinal melatonin synthesis by depleting serotonin with intraocular injections of 5,6-dihydroxytryptamine. In animals so treated, they found that the circadian rhythm of retinal dopamine content was abolished, the levels of dopamine were lowered, and the levels of dopamine metabolites were greatly increased. The data suggest that in iguanas, the amplitude of the circadian rhythm of melatonin synthesis in the eye is suppressed by dopamine while the rhythm of dopamine depends, at least in part, on the presence of melatonin.


Biological Rhythm Research | 2003

Circadian Locomotor Activity Under Artificial Light in the Freshwater Crab Pseudothelphusa americana

Manuel Miranda-Anaya; Elisa Ramírez-Lomelí; Vania Carmona-Alcocer; Baltazar Barrera-Mera

Long-term recordings of locomotor activity were obtained from intact freshwater crabs, Pseudothelphusa americana in constant darkness (DD), constant light (LL) and different light-dark (LD) protocols. Bimodal rhythms were typically observed in this crab when subjected to DD or LD, with bouts of activity anticipating lights-on and lights-off, respectively. Freerunning circadian rhythms were expressed in both DD and LL for longer than 30 days. In DD, we observed that some animals presented different period lengths for each activity component. During LL, activity was primarily unimodal, however spontaneous splitting of the rhythms were observed in some animals. When activity was recorded under artificial long days, the morning bouts maintained their phase relationship but the evening bouts changed their phase relationship with the Zeitgeber. Our results indicate that, bimodal locomotor activity rhythm in the crab Pseudothelphusa americana is variable among organisms. The characteristics of phase relationship with LD and responses to LL for morning and evening bouts, suggest that, locomotor activity could be driven by multiple oscillators, and that coupling between these oscillators may be regulated by light.

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Dive into the Manuel Miranda-Anaya's collaboration.

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Agustín Carmona-Castro

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Mauricio Díaz-Muñoz

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Moisés Pérez-Mendoza

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Paul A. Bartell

Pennsylvania State University

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Baltazar Barrera-Mera

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Dalia Luna-Moreno

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Pilar Durán

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Vania Carmona-Alcocer

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Cinthia R. Juárez-Tapia

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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