The effects of Beta-Endorphin: state change modification
Publication year
2015Source
Fluids and Barriers of the Cns, 12, 1, (2015), pp. 3ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Anatomy
Journal title
Fluids and Barriers of the Cns
Volume
vol. 12
Issue
iss. 1
Page start
p. 3
Subject
Radboudumc 0: Other Research DCMN: Donders Center for Medical NeuroscienceAbstract
Beta-endorphin (beta-END) is an opioid neuropeptide which has an important role in the development of hypotheses concerning the non-synaptic or paracrine communication of brain messages. This kind of communication between neurons has been designated volume transmission (VT) to differentiate it clearly from synaptic communication. VT occurs over short as well as long distances via the extracellular space in the brain, as well as via the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flowing through the ventricular spaces inside the brain and the arachnoid space surrounding the central nervous system (CNS). To understand how beta-END can have specific behavioral effects, we use the notion behavioral state, inspired by the concept of machine state, coming from Turing (Proc London Math Soc, Series 2,42:230-265, 1937). In section 1.4 the sequential organization of male rat behavior is explained showing that an animal is not free to switch into another state at any given moment. Funneling-constraints restrict the number of possible behavioral transitions in specific phases while at other moments in the sequence the transition to other behavioral states is almost completely open. The effects of beta-END on behaviors like food intake and sexual behavior, and the mechanisms involved in reward, meditation and pain control are discussed in detail. The effects on the sequential organization of behavior and on state transitions dominate the description of these effects.
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- Academic publications [244084]
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- Faculty of Medical Sciences [92872]
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