19 Papers
273 Citations
M. Sallanon is an academic researcher from French Institute of Health and Medical Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Slow-wave sleep & Hypothalamus. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 19 publications. Previous affiliations of M. Sallanon include University of Grenoble.
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Papers
Long-lasting insomnia induced by preoptic neuron lesions and its transient reversal by muscimol injection into the posterior hypothalamus in the cat.
TL;DR: Findings indicate that neuronal cell loss in the mediobasal preoptic area induced a long lasting insomnia in cats, and it may be hypothesized that the integrity of this structure is necessary for sleep appearance.
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Ultraviolet–visible–near-infrared optical properties of amyloid fibrils shed light on amyloidogenesis
Jonathan Pansieri,Jonathan Pansieri,Véronique Josserand,Sun-Jae Lee,Anaëlle Rongier,Daniel Imbert,M. Sallanon,M. Sallanon,Eniko Veronika Kovari,Thomas G. Dane,Charlotte Vendrely,Charlotte Vendrely,Odette Chaix-Pluchery,Mélanie Guidetti,Julien Vollaire,Arnold Fertin,Yves Usson,Patrice Rannou,Jean-Luc Coll,C. Marquette,Vincent Forge +20 more
TL;DR: Two optical signatures of amyloid fibres—luminescence in the blue and a near-infrared signal, which can be observed in in vitro and in vivo tissues—are reported and could open the door to innovative diagnostic strategies for neurodegenerative diseases.
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Reversibility of Para-chlorophenylalanine-induced insomnia by intrahypothalamic microinjection of l-5-hydroxytryptophan
TL;DR: It is suggested that the reversible hypersomnia after L-5-hydroxytryptophan microinjection in the anterior hypothalamus in para-chlorophenylalanine-pretreated cat is due to a neurohormonal action of serotonin: serotonin could act upon the anterior leptinamus which secondarily inhibits a waking system located in the ventrolateral hypothalamus leading to the appearance of paradoxical sleep.
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Serotonergic mechanisms and sleep rebound
TL;DR: The administration of p-chlorophenylalanine at the end of a 48 h sleep deprivation does not impair the subsequent rebound of deep slow wave sleep (SWS2) and paradoxical sleep (PS) while some rebound of PS still occurs in narcoleptic-like attacks.
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Increase of paradoxical sleep induced by microinjections of ibotenic acid into the ventrolateral part of the posterior hypothalamus in the cat.
TL;DR: In order to study putative hypothalamic mechanisms of sleep-waking cycle regulation, a neural cell body toxin was injected into the ventrolateral part of the posterior hypothalamus of cats and induced a dramatic biphasic and transient hypersomnia.
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