为什么有人胆大,为什么有人胆小。



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送交者: Latino2 于 2005-4-08, 09:59:54:

要是过两年开发某种药把大伙儿的oxytocin水平都提高了,没有了胆小的银,世界会是什么样?

老中首先整一拨敢死队出来。
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Keeping Fear in Check

If you've ever stepped out on a 10-meter-high diving platform or wandered down a dark alley, you're probably familiar with the racing heart and sweaty palms that characterize the autonomic nervous system's response to fear. Now, researchers have clarified the molecular underpinning of the brain’s fear response. The findings may point the way to better drugs for people with phobias and other anxiety disorders.

Fear, in a nutshell. The balance of oxytocin-sensitive neurons (red) and vasopressin-sensitive neurons (green) in the central nucleus of the amygdala may calibrate fear responses.

Fear responses are controlled by an almond-shaped structure called the amygdala, located deep inside the brain. The amygdala weighs messages sent from many regions of the brain, and when things get sufficiently scary, it triggers the autonomic fear response via "output" neurons located in a subdivision called the central amygdala.

In the new study, neuroscientist Daniel Huber at the University of Lausanne, Switzerland, and colleagues used slices of rat brains to take a closer look at the chemical communication signals used by the central amygdala's neurons. They found that vasopressin, a peptide known to boost anxiety and stress, increased the electrical activity of output neurons in one part of the central amygdala, while oxytocin, a peptide with nearly opposite effects on mood, stimulated neurons in an adjacent region. Moreover, neurons stimulated by oxytocin released a neurotransmitter that inhibited the vasopressin-sensitive output neurons.

The findings suggest that vasopressin and oxytocin have contrasting influences on behavior because they have opposite effects on the output neurons of the central amygdala, the team reports in the 8 April issue of Science. The researchers speculate that natural variations in the balance of vasopressin and oxytocin receptors in the central amygdala could explain why some individuals are typically nervous, while others are seemingly immune to anxiety.

The region where the team found the oxytocin neurons acts as an off switch for fear, says Gregory Quirk of Ponce School of Medicine in Puerto Rico. Quirk and others have suggested that drugs that target this area might alleviate anxiety disorders, but so far there haven't been any good candidates. Now, says Quirk, oxytocin could be the "silver bullet" researchers have been looking for.

--GREG MILLER






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