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Featured researches published by Shuji Aou.


Brain Research Bulletin | 1991

Functional heterogeneity of the monkey lateral hypothalamus in the control of feeding

Shuji Aou; Atsusi Takaki; Zoltán Karádi; Tetsuro Hori; Hitoo Nishino; Yutaka Oomura

Regional differences in the effects of electrical (ES) and chemical stimulation on execution of a bar-press feeding task, and in neuronal activity related to feeding, glucose sensitivity, and odor responsiveness were examined in the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) of monkeys. In satiated animals, ES of the far lateral and ventral LHA induced bar-press feeding. In hungry animals, ES of the dorsal LHA suppressed the feeding task only during the stimulation period, but prolonged feeding suppression that occurred after ES of the ventromedial LHA. Microinjection of Na-glutamate into LHA sites where ES was effective in suppressing feeding had no effect, but it was effective in the medial hypothalamus. Glucose-sensitive (GS) neurons decreased in activity during bar pressing and/or during the ingestion period. Glucose-insensitive (GIS) neurons showed a cue-related excitation more often than GS neurons. Odor-responding GS and GIS cells were localized in ventromedial and lateral LHA sites, respectively. The present study suggests the regional heterogeneity of the LHA in feeding regulation, depending on both hunger and satiety states.


Physiology & Behavior | 1991

Electrical stimulation of male monkey's midbrain elicits components of sexual behavior

Eiichiro Okada; Shuji Aou; Atsushi Takaki; Yutaka Oomura; Tetsuro Hori

We electrically stimulated the midbrain of male rhesus monkeys seated in a restraint chair facing the female partners and examined whether sexual behavior could be induced. When the midbrain was stimulated (0.2 ms, 50-500 microA and 50 Hz for 2.5 s), the male monkey touched and held the waist of his partner (latency; 0.9 +/- 0.4 s, mean +/- SD, n = 225), and then mounted her when she responded with presenting her hip toward him. However, this mounting, unlike when the hypothalamus was stimulated, did not lead to thrusting or ejaculation even if the stimulation continued. The sites in the midbrain where the stimulation elicited touching and mounting were the ventral tegmental area, the substantia nigra, the nucleus reticularis mesencephali and the nucleus reticularis pontis oralis et caudalis. Touching and mounting were not elicited when the partner was put away from the male or replaced by submissive male monkeys or humans. The findings suggest that the stimulation-evoked touching and mounting are components of copulatory behavior and that the midbrain structures may be involved in the sexual behavior of male monkeys.


Brain Research Bulletin | 1994

Hypothalamic stimulation induces vagally mediated hypocalcemia in the rat

Jingyi Ma; Shuji Aou; Tetsuro Hori

To elucidate hypothalamic involvement in blood calcium homeostasis, the effects of unilateral electrical stimulation (0.1 mA, 0.5 ms, 30 Hz, 60 min) of the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA), the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), and the ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus (VMH) on the blood concentration of ionized calcium were examined in the anesthetized rats. LHA stimulation induced a sustained decrease (0.05-0.07 mM fall) in the blood calcium level during the period of 60 to 150 min (end of the measurements) after stimulation. In contrast, PVN stimulation elicited a transient hypocalcemia (0.07 mM decrease) 60 min after stimulation. The hypocalcemic effects of LHA and PVN stimulation were eliminated by vagotomy of the gastric branches and the thyroid/parathyroid branches, respectively. VMH stimulation, using the same parameters, did not induce any significant change in blood calcium. The results suggest that the LHA and the PVN have a hypocalcemic function that is mediated, at least in part, by the vagus nerve innervating the stomach and the thyroid/parathyroid glands, respectively.


Neuroscience Letters | 1993

Hypothalamic involvement in stress-induced hypocalcemia in rats

Shuji Aou; Jingyi Ma; Tetsuro Hori

Although hormonal regulation of blood calcium homeostasis has been intensively investigated in the peripheral organs, the involvement of the central nervous system in calcium regulation is still poorly understood. In the present study, we found that (1) bilateral lesions of the ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus (VMH), but not those of the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus or the lateral hypothalamic area, eliminated immobilization (IMB)-induced hypocalcemia, and (2) electrical stimulation of the VMH decreased the blood calcium level. The results suggest that the VMH has a hypocalcemic function and plays a role in IMB-induced hypocalcemia.


Physiology & Behavior | 1994

The effect of B-HT 920, a dopamine D2 agonist, on bar-press feeding in the monkey

Shuji Aou; Masaharu Mizuno; Tetsuro Hori; Katsushi Yamada

Although the dopamine (DA) system has been shown to regulate food intake, the function of the DA receptor subtypes on behavior still remains to be elucidated. In the present study, we examined the effect of B-HT 920, a selective agonist of DA D2 receptors that preferentially affect presynaptic autoreceptors, on both food consumption and execution of a high fixed-ratio bar-press task for food reward in monkeys. Two kinds of bar-press task were used: 1) a cue-triggered bar-press task during the first 40 trials, and 2) a self-paced bar-press task in which the monkeys freely performed bar-press trials until they were satiated. A SC injection of B-HT 920 (25 micrograms/kg) increased food consumption in the home cage. The same facilitatory effect on food consumption was also observed in the operant task condition. During the cue-triggered bar-press task, however, both the latency of the bar-press responses to a cue light and the time required to complete the bar-press trials were prolonged after the injection of B-HT 920. The results suggest that the activation of D2 autoreceptors suppresses the operant food acquisition behavior and increases food consumption through an inhibition of the satiety mechanism rather than an activation of any hunger-related drive.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 1993

Gustatory neural coding in the amygdala of the alert macaque monkey.

Thomas R. Scott; Zoltán Karádi; Yutaka Oomura; Hitoo Nishino; Carlos R. Plata-Salamán; László Lénárd; Barbara K. Giza; Shuji Aou


The Journal of Neuroscience | 1992

Changes in the activity of units of the cat motor cortex with rapid conditioning and extinction of a compound eye blink movement.

Shuji Aou; Charles D. Woody; Darwin Birt


Journal of Neurophysiology | 1992

Responses of lateral hypothalamic glucose-sensitive and glucose-insensitive neurons to chemical stimuli in behaving rhesus monkeys.

Zoltán Karádi; Y. Oomura; Hitoo Nishino; Thomas R. Scott; László Lénárd; Shuji Aou


Journal of Neurophysiology | 1987

Functional involvement of catecholamines in reward-related neuronal activity of the monkey amygdala

Y. Nakano; László Lénárd; Yutaka Oomura; Hitoo Nishino; Shuji Aou; T. Yamamoto


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 1995

Central actions of parathyroid hormone on blood calcium and hypothalamic neuronal activity in the rat

Hiroyasu Matsui; Shuji Aou; Jingyi Ma; Tetsuro Hori

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