SummaryDecreased platelet aggregation to collagen is a cause for bleeding diathesis of Chediak-Higashi syndrome (CHS). We investigated whether the collagen receptor-Ca2+ signaling system was impaired in platelets from cattle affected with CHS. A collagen-induced increase in cytosolic Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) was depressed in CHS platelets, which was accompanied by a decrease in the production of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate. When the influences of endogenous arachidonic acid metabolites and ADP were excluded, convulxin or collagen-related peptide, which are specific agonists for the collagen receptor GPVI, increased [Ca2+]i in both normal and CHS platelets. In contrast, rhodocytin, which was thought to activate another collagen receptor GPIa/IIa, increased [Ca2+]i in CHS platelets to a lesser extent than in normal ones. Cytochalasin D, an actin polymerization inhibitor, depressed the response to collagen or rhodocytin but not the response to convulxin. Adhesion of CHS platelets to acid soluble type I collagen, which was mediated by GPIa/IIa, was similar to that of normal platelets. These results suggest that a defect in the rhodocytin-sensitive pathway is responsible for decreasing the response to collagen in CHS platelets. It remains to be determined which receptor is associated with the mechanism.
Serotonin is a neurotransmitter that is synthesized and released from the brainstem raphe nuclei to affect many brain functions. It is well known that the activity of raphe serotonergic neurons is changed in response to the changes in feeding status to regulate appetite via the serotonin receptors. Likewise, changes in volume status are known to alter the activity of raphe serotonergic neurons and drugs targeting serotonin receptors were shown to affect sodium appetite. Therefore, the central serotonin system appears to regulate ingestion of both food and salt, although neural mechanisms that induce appetite in response to hunger and sodium appetite in response to volume depletion are largely distinct from each other. In this review, we discuss our current knowledge regarding the regulation of ingestion – appetite and sodium appetite – by the central serotonin system.
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