Search results for "Neuropeptide"

showing 10 items of 194 documents

Neuropeptides in Primary Afferent Neurons

1990

Traditionally, the primary sensory neurons, having their perikarya in the spinal or cranial sensory ganglia with processes directed towards the periphery and the central nervous system, have been regarded to function as receptive and afferent systems which reflexly activate central effector systems.1 This, however, does not apply to the small diameter primary afferents as suggested by the observation made about a century ago that antidromic stimulation of transected dorsal roots or sensory nerves caused vasodilatation and inflammatory signs in the skin.2,3 The novel concept which has been confirmed by many investigators ascribes to small diameter (particularly unmyelinated C) primary sensor…

Trigeminal ganglionmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemDorsal root ganglionCentral nervous systemmedicineNeuropeptideSensory systemStimulationBiologyNeuroscienceSensory neuronAntidromic
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The "olfactostriatum" of snakes: a basal ganglia vomeronasal structure in tetrapods.

2005

The olfactostriatum is a portion of the basal ganglia of snakes situated ventromedially to the nucleus accumbens proper. It receives a major vomeronasal input from the nucleus sphericus, the primary target of accessory olfactory bulb efferents. Recently, the ophidian olfactostriatum has been characterized on the basis of chemoarchitecture (distribution of serotonin, neuropeptide Y and tyrosine hydroxylase) and hodology (afferent and efferent connections). In contrast to the nucleus accumbens proper, the olfactostriatum is densely immunoreactive for serotonin and neuropeptide Y and sparsely immunoreactive for tyrosine hydroxylase. The nucleus accumbens proper and the olfactostriatum share mo…

Vomeronasal organTyrosine hydroxylaseGeneral NeuroscienceEfferentSnakesNucleus accumbensBiologyNeuropeptide Y receptorOlfactory BulbBasal GangliaCorpus StriatumVentral pallidummedicine.anatomical_structureBasal gangliaNeural PathwaysmedicineAnimalsVomeronasal OrganNeuroscienceNucleusBrain research bulletin
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Terminal tendon cell differentiation requires the glide/gcm complex.

2004

International audience; Locomotion relies on stable attachment of muscle fibres to their target sites, a process that allows for muscle contraction to generate movement. Here, we show that glide/gcm and glide2/gcm2, the fly glial cell determinants, are expressed in a subpopulation of embryonic tendon cells and required for their terminal differentiation. By using loss-of-function approaches, we show that in the absence of both genes, muscle attachment to tendon cells is altered, even though the molecular cascade induced by stripe, the tendon cell determinant, is normal. Moreover, we show that glide/gcm activates a new tendon cell gene independently of stripe. Finally, we show that segment p…

[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Cellglide/gcmBiologyMotor ActivityTendonsglide2/gcm203 medical and health sciencesTendon cellMuscle attachmentmedicineMuscle attachmentAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyIn Situ Hybridization030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesMuscles030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyNeuropeptidesTendon cell differentiationGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell DifferentiationEpistasis GeneticAnatomyTendon cell differentiationEmbryonic stem cellCell biologyTendonDNA-Binding ProteinsMicroscopy ElectronDrosophila melanogasterSegment polarity genemedicine.anatomical_structureEpidermal CellsOrgan SpecificityTrans-ActivatorsDrosophilamedicine.symptomEpidermisLocomotionDevelopmental BiologyMuscle contractionProtein BindingSignal TransductionTranscription FactorsDevelopment (Cambridge, England)
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Neuropeptidome regulation after baculovirus infection. A focus on proctolin and its relevance in locomotion and digestion

2020

AbstractBaculoviruses constitute a large group of invertebrate DNA viruses, predominantly infecting larvae of the insect order Lepidoptera. During a baculovirus infection, the virus spreads throughout the insect body producing a systemic infection in multiple larval tissues. Some behavioral and physiological changes in lepidopteran larvae have been described following a baculovirus infection and those changes could be connected with alterations in the host’s central nervous system (CNS). As a main component of the CNS, neuropeptides are small protein-like molecules functioning as neurohormones, neurotransmitters or neuromodulators. These peptides are involved in regulating animal physiology…

animal structuresbiologyvirusesmedia_common.quotation_subjectfungiNeuropeptideInsectSpodopterabiology.organism_classificationProctolinMicrobiologyAutographa californicaGene expressionExiguaGenemedia_common
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A proctolin-like peptide is regulated after baculovirus infection and mediates in caterpillar locomotion and digestion

2022

Baculoviruses constitute a large group of invertebrate DNA viruses, predominantly infecting larvae of the insect order Lepidoptera. During a baculovirus infection, the virus spreads throughout the insect body producing a systemic infection in multiple larval tissues, included the central nervous system (CNS). As a main component of the CNS, neuropeptides are small protein-like molecules functioning as neurohormones, neurotransmitters, or neuromodulators. These peptides are involved in regulating animal physiology and behavior and could be altered after baculovirus infection. In this study, we have investigated the effect of Spodoptera exigua multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus (SeMNPV) infection …

animal structuresmedia_common.quotation_subjectvirusesLaboratory of VirologyNeuropeptideInsectneuromodulator; neuropeptideSpodopteraSpodopteraReceptors for Activated C KinaseProctolinGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologySeMNPVLaboratorium voor VirologieExiguaAnimalsEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonbiologyEffectorbehaviorNeuropeptidesfungiWild typebiology.organism_classificationPE&RCCell biologyAutographa californicabeet armywormLarvaInsect SciencephysiologyDigestionPeptidesBaculoviridaeOligopeptidesAgronomy and Crop ScienceLocomotionInsect Science
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Peripheral innervation of the heart

1987

The present immunohistochemical study demonstrates the multiplicity, histotopography and origin of peptidergic innervation in the mammalian heart. Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is the major representative of peptides in cardiac sympathetic efferents. Sympathetic afferents are characterized by the presence of tachykinins, calcitonin gene-related peptide and apparently also some opioid peptides. Predominant peptides of the vagal system are tachykinins. The intrinsic peptidergic system predominantly consists of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide/peptide histidine isoleucine. Paracrine systems are merely opioid-ergic. Target relations of extrinsic and intrinsic peptidergic nerves were found to be more di…

chemistry.chemical_classificationParacrine signallingchemistryCalcitoninVasoactive intestinal peptideImmunohistochemistryPeptideBiologyNeuropeptide Y receptorOpioid peptideNeurosciencePhenotype
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The septal complex of the telencephalon of the lizardPodarcis hispanica. I. chemoarchitectonical organization

1995

In this paper we study the septal complex architecture in the lizard Podarcis hispanica (Lacertidae). Histochemical and immunohistochemical techniques were used to define the distribution of zinc (Timm stain), acetyl cholinesterase (AChase), gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), dopamine (DA), serotonin (5-HT), and two neuropeptides: leu-enkephalin (L-ENK) and substance P (SP). These reactions delineate a coherent map of nine septal nuclei that are named with a topographical nomenclature: anterior, lateral, ventromedial, medial, dorsolateral, ventrolateral, and dorsal septal nuclei, nucleus septalis impar, and nucleus of the posterior pallial commissure. The anterior se…

education.field_of_studyMedial septal nucleusbiologyGeneral NeurosciencePopulationNeuropeptideSeptal nucleiAnatomyCommissurebiology.organism_classificationPodarcis hispanicamedicine.anatomical_structureLimbic systemmedicineeducationNucleusJournal of Comparative Neurology
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Parvalbumin-containing neurons in the cerebral cortex of the lizardPodarcis hispanica: Morphology, ultrastructure, and coexistence with GABA, somatos…

1993

The morphology, fine structure, and degree of colocalization with GABA, somatostatin, and neuropeptide Y of parvalbumin-containing cells were studied with immunocytochemistry in the cerebral cortex of the lizard Podarcis hispanica. Parvalbumin-containing cells make up a morphologically heterogeneous population of spine-free neurons, displaying the morphological features of nonprincipal cells previously described in Golgi studies. Electron microscopically, parvalbumin-immunoreactive cell bodies are similar in all cortical areas and layers. The perisomatic input is moderate in number, and boutons with either round clear vesicles or flattened vesicles were observed making asymmetric or symmetr…

education.field_of_studybiologyGeneral NeurosciencePopulationColocalizationNeuropeptide Y receptorbiology.organism_classificationAxon initial segmentPodarcis hispanicaCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemCerebral cortexmedicinebiology.proteinGABAergiceducationNeuroscienceParvalbuminJournal of Comparative Neurology
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Immunohistochemical localization of the pro-peptide processing enzymes PC1/PC3 and PC2 in the human anal canal.

1997

Abstract HORsch, D., R. Day, N. G. Seidah, E. Weihe and M. K.-H. SchAFer. Immunohistochemical localization of the pro-peptide processing enzymes PC1/PC3 and PC2 in the human anal canal. Peptides 18(5) 755–760, 1997.—The distribution of prohormone/pro-peptide convertases PC1/PC3 and PC2 was investigated in the human anal canal by immunohistochemistry. Both prohormone convertases exhibited region-specific distribution patterns and were observed in neural and neuroendocrine cells and in nonneuroendocrine cellular elements. PC1/PC3 immunoreactivity was present in enteric neurons, subsets of nerve fibers, and neuroendocrine cells, and also in epithelial cells like intestinal stem cells, and a su…

endocrine systemPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyPhysiologyProhormoneNeuropeptideRectumAnal CanalBiologyBiochemistryImmunoenzyme TechniquesCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceEndocrinologymedicineChromograninsAspartic Acid EndopeptidasesHumansSubtilisinsAnal Transitional ZoneNeuronsNeuropeptidesAnal canalNeurosecretory SystemsEpitheliumNeoplasm Proteinsmedicine.anatomical_structureProprotein Convertase 2Fluorescent Antibody Technique DirectChromogranin AProprotein ConvertasesStem cellImmunostainingmedicine.drugPeptides
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Heterogeneous responses of nucleus incertus neurons to corticotrophin-releasing factor and coherent activity with hippocampal theta rhythm in the rat

2013

The nucleus incertus (NI) of the rat hindbrain is a putative node in the ascending control of the septohippocampal system and hippocampal theta rhythm and is stress and arousal responsive. NI contains GABA neurons that express multiple neuropeptides, including relaxin-3 (RLN3) and neuropeptide receptors, including corticotrophin-releasing factor receptor-1 (CRF-R1), but the precise anatomical and physiological characteristics of NI neurons are unclear. Therefore, we examined the firing properties of NI neurons and their responses to CRF, the correlation of these responses with occurrence of relaxin-3, and NI neuron morphology in the rat. Most NI neurons excited by intracerebroventricular CR…

endocrine systemPhysiologyNeuropeptideBiologyHippocampal formationStria terminalismedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemPostsynaptic potentialHypothalamusmedicinebiology.proteinExcitatory postsynaptic potentialNeuNNeuroscienceNucleushormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsThe Journal of Physiology
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