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Acute Impact of Selected Pyridoindole Derivatives on Fos Expression in Different Structures of the Rat Brain.

The impacts of three pyridoindole derivatives (PDs), designated as PD144, PD143, and PD104, which have previously been shown to have antidepressant (PD144) and anxiolytic (PD143, PD104) properties, were investigated on the Fos expressions in 11 different rat brain areas, including the medial prefrontal cortex, striatum, septum, accumbens nucleus (shell, core), bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus, central amygdala, locus coeruleus, dorsal raphe nucleus, and the solitary tract nucleus. Control rats received vehicle, while the other three groups the PDs in a dose of 25 mg/kg/b.w. The animals were transcardially perfused with a fixative 90 min after the treatments. Coronal sections of 40-µm thickness were processed for Fos-immunostaining by avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex and visualized by nickel-intensified diaminobenzidine complex. Fos-labeled sections were counterstained with neuropeptides including corticoliberine (CRH), oxytocin (OXY), vasopressin (AVP), and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) and processed for immunofluorescence staining using Alexa Fluor 555 dye. In all the three groups of animals, the upregulation of PDs-induced Fos expression only in 2 of 11 brain areas was investigated, namely, in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and the central amygdaloid nucleus (CeA). The other brain structures studied were devoid of Fos expression. Counterstaining of the Fos-labeled CeA-containing sections with VIP antibody revealed that the Fos expression stimulated by the PDs was upregulated in all the CeA subdivisions (lateral, ventral, capsular), except the medial one. Dual immunoprocessings showed Fos/CRH-labeling in both the PVN and the amygdala and Fos/OXY in the PVN. No Fos/AVP colocalizations were seen in the PVN. The obtained data provide the first view on the intracerebral effects of three new PDs derivatives, which effects were restricted only to the PVN and CeA areas. The present data may help to improve our understanding of the impact of the selected PDs on the brain and to anticipate possible behavioral and neuroendocrine consequences.

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