Search results for "ganglio"

showing 10 items of 362 documents

The Embryonic Central Nervous System Lineages ofDrosophila melanogaster

1997

Abstract In Drosophila, central nervous system (CNS) formation starts with the delamination from the neuroectoderm of about 30 neuroblasts (NBs) per hemisegment. They give rise to approximately 350 neurons and 30 glial cells during embryonic development. Understanding the mechanisms leading to cell fate specification and differentiation in the CNS requires the identification of the NB lineages. The embryonic lineages derived from 17 NBs of the ventral part of the neuroectoderm have previously been described (Bossing et al., 1996). Here we present 13 lineages derived from the dorsal part of the neuroectoderm and we assign 12 of them to identified NBs. Together, the 13 lineages comprise appro…

NeuroectodermLineage (evolution)food and beveragesAnatomyCell BiologyBiologyCell fate determinationbiology.organism_classificationEmbryonic stem cellCell biologyNeuroblastnervous systemVentral nerve cordembryonic structuresMelanogasterGanglion mother cellMolecular BiologyDevelopmental BiologyDevelopmental Biology
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Fenotipo celular de las neuronas sensitivas afectadas en la ataxia de Friedreich

2016

Tesis Doctoral, 223 páginas, 64 figuras, 13 tablas.

Neurona sensitiva ganglio dorsalfallo mitocondrialfrataxinaataxia de Friedreichneurona sensitiva ganglio dorsalFallo mitocondrialReceptores acoplados a proteínas Greceptores acoplados a proteínas GDishomeostasis del calcioFrataxinaNeurodegeneración dying backneurodegeneración dying back240000dishomeostasis del calcioAtaxia de FriedreichModelo murino YG8Rmodelo murino YG8R320000
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COX-2 expression in the guinea pig cochlea is partly altered by moderate sound exposure.

2006

The cyclooxygenase-2 isoform (COX-2) was found recently to be constitutively expressed in the guinea pig inner ear. To gain knowledge about its role in sound perception, alterations in the COX-2 level of moderate noise-stimulated cochleae were determined. Staining intensities were quantified in different regions using an immunohistochemical staining procedure and computer-assisted system. After 70 dB and 90 dB noise exposure for 1 h at 8000 Hz, COX-2 downregulation was observed in the organ of Corti, which was most prominent in Deiters' cells near Hensen cells and outer hair cells. In pillar cells, COX-2 levels were only slightly reduced after 70 dB but strongly diminished after 90 dB expos…

NeuronsGeneral NeuroscienceGuinea PigsGene ExpressionStimulationDose-Response Relationship RadiationSound perceptionAnatomyBiologyImmunohistochemistryCell biologyCochleaSound exposuremedicine.anatomical_structureAcoustic StimulationOrgan of CortiCyclooxygenase 2Spiral ligamentotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineAnimalsInner earsense organsSpiral ganglionCochleaNeuroscience letters
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Co-expression of heat sensitive vanilloid receptor subtypes in rat dorsal root ganglion neurons

2003

Expression of the heat sensitive cation channels TRPV1 and TRPV2 was investigated by immunofluorescence in rat dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons. TRPV1-positive neurons were more frequent and had smaller diameters than TRPV2-positive neurons (35.7% vs 7.3%; 22.3 microm vs 27.6 microm), but size distributions overlapped and significant co-expression was seen in 20.7% of TRPV2-positive neurons (1.7% of all). Expression patterns did not differ between tissue sections typically used in immunocytochemistry and dissociated DRG neurons typically used in electrophysiology. Rectangular temperature pulses revealed two patterns of heat-evoked inward currents in small DRG neurons: low-threshold rapidl…

NeuronsHot TemperatureReceptors DrugGeneral NeuroscienceTRPV2ImmunocytochemistryCentral nervous systemTRPV1TRPV Cation ChannelsBiologySpinal cordRatsRats Sprague-DawleyElectrophysiologymedicine.anatomical_structureGene Expression Regulationnervous systemDorsal root ganglionGanglia SpinalmedicineBiophysicsAnimalsNeuronNeuroscienceNeuroReport
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Allosterically potentiating ligands of nicotinic receptors as a treatment strategy for Alzheimer's disease.

2000

Abstract One of the most prominent cholinergic deficit in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the reduced number of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR) in the hippocampus and cortex of AD patients, as compared to age-matched controls. This deficit results in reduced nicotinic cholinergic excitation which may not only impair postsynaptic depolarization but also presynaptic neurotransmitter release and Ca 2+ -dependent intracellular signaling, including transcriptional activity. Presently, the most common approach to correct the nicotinic cholinergic deficit in AD is the application of cholinesterase inhibitors. Due to the resulting increase in synaptic acetylcholine levels, both in concentrati…

NeuronsPatch-Clamp TechniquesBiologyNeurotransmissionReceptors NicotinicSynaptic TransmissionCell LineBehavioral NeuroscienceNicotinic acetylcholine receptorMiceGanglion type nicotinic receptorNicotinic agonistAllosteric RegulationAlzheimer DiseaseMuscarinic acetylcholine receptormedicineAnimalsHumansNicotinic AgonistsAlpha-4 beta-2 nicotinic receptorNeuroscienceAcetylcholine5-HT receptorAllosteric Sitemedicine.drugBehavioural brain research
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Normal Function of the mushroom body defect Gene of Drosophila Is Required for the Regulation of the Number and Proliferation of Neuroblasts

1994

In the developing central nervous system of Drosophila, proliferation follows a reproducible and well-described spatial and temporal pattern. This pattern involves a defined number and distribution of neural stem cells (neuroblasts), as well as a precisely regulated time course of division of these neuroblasts. We show that mutations in the mushroom body defect (mud) gene interfere with the regulation of this pattern in a rather specific manner. In the abdominal neuromeres a subset of neuroblasts prolongs the period of proliferation. Additional daughter cells persist into the imago. Similar defects are expressed in the anterior ventral nerve cord and in the lateral central brain region. In …

Neuronsanimal structuresCell divisionStem CellsfungiBrainCell CountCell BiologyAnatomyBiologyNeuromereNeural stem cellCell biologynervous systemNeuroblastVentral nerve cordMutationMushroom bodiesAnimalsDrosophilaStem cellMolecular BiologyGanglion mother cellCell DivisionDevelopmental BiologyDevelopmental Biology
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Neuroblast formation and patterning during early brain development in Drosophila.

2004

The Drosophila embryo provides a useful model system to study the mechanisms that lead to pattern and cell diversity in the central nervous system (CNS). The Drosophila CNS, which encompasses the brain and the ventral nerve cord, develops from a bilaterally symmetrical neuroectoderm, which gives rise to neural stem cells, called neuroblasts. The structure of the embryonic ventral nerve cord is relatively simple, consisting of a sequence of repeated segmental units (neuromeres), and the mechanisms controlling the formation and specification of the neuroblasts that form these neuromeres are quite well understood. Owing to the much higher complexity and hidden segmental organization of the bra…

Neuronsanimal structuresNeuroectodermfungiCentral nervous systemBrainProneural genesCell DifferentiationAnatomyBiologyNeuromereGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyNeural stem cellmedicine.anatomical_structureNeuroblastVentral nerve cordVertebratesmedicineAnimalsDrosophilaGanglion mother cellNeuroscienceBody PatterningBioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology
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Desensitization is a property of the cholinergic binding region of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, not of the receptor-integral ion channel

1991

AbstractThe reversible acetylcholine esterase inhibitor (−)-physostigmine (eserine) is the prototype of a new class of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) activating ligands: it induces cation fluxes into nAChR-rich membrane vesicles from Torpedo marmorala electric tissue even under conditions of antagonist blocked acetylcholine binding sites (Okonjo, Kuhlmann, Maclicke, Neuron, in press). This suggests that eserine exerts its channel-activating property via binding sites at the nAChR separate from those of the natural transmitter. We now report that eserine can activate the channel even when the receptor has been preincubated (desensitized) with elevated concentrations of acetylcholin…

Nicotinic acetylcholine receptorStereochemistryAcetylcholine-gated cation channelPhysostigmineBiophysicsCesiumIon fluxDesensitizationIn Vitro TechniquesReceptors NicotinicTorpedoBiochemistryIon ChannelsAnticholinesteraseAcetylcholine bindingGanglion type nicotinic receptorStructural BiologyMuscarinic acetylcholine receptor M5GeneticsmedicineAnimalsMolecular BiologyAcetylcholine receptorBinding SitesChemistryCell BiologyBungarotoxinsAcetylcholineNicotinic acetylcholine receptorNicotinic agonistCarbamateBiophysicsCholinergicAcetylcholineEserinemedicine.drugFEBS Letters
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MeV ion beam lithography of biocompatible halogenated Parylenes using aperture masks

2015

Parylenes are poly(p-xylylene) polymers that are widely used as moisture barriers and in biomedicine because of their good biocompatibility. We have investigated MeV ion beam lithography using 16O+ ions for writing defined patterns in Parylene-C, which is evaluated as a coating material for the Cochlear Implant (CI) electrode array, a neuroprosthesis to treat some forms of deafness. Parylene-C and -F on silicon and glass substrates as well as 50 μm thick PTFE were irradiated to different fluences (1×1013-1×10161×1013-1×1016 1 MeV 16O+ ions cm−2) through aperture masks under high vacuum and a low pressure (<10−3 mbar) oxygen atmosphere. Biocompatibility of the irradiated and unirradiated …

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsMaterials scienceBiocompatibilitySiliconParylene-CUltra-high vacuumchemistry.chemical_elementParylene-FNanotechnologyengineering.materialIon beam lithographyIonchemistry.chemical_compoundCoatingParyleneIrradiation610 Medicine & healthInstrumentationta217ta114business.industryMurine spiral ganglion cellsMeV ion beam lithographyddc:616.8chemistryengineeringOptoelectronicsBiocompatibilitybusiness
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Membrane gangliosides and immuno-mediated cytolysis in drug sensitive and treatment-induced multidrug resistant human ovarian cancer cells

1991

The pattern of cytoplasmic membrane gangliosides and two cellular features which have been reported to be related to the expression of different membrane gangliosides, namely adhesion to solid substrates and susceptibility to the lytic activity of immune effector cells, have been investigated in drug sensitive A2780 human ovarian cancer cells and in two treatment-induced multidrug resistant sublines (A2780-DX1 and A2780-DX3). The total membrane gangliosides content of A2780 sensitive cells was comparable to that of the two multidrug resistant (MDR) sublines, but the acquisition of the MDR phenotype was characterized by an increased expression of the polysialylated gangliosides (particularly…

Ovarian NeoplasmsDrug ResistanceMembrane ProteinsAntineoplastic AgentsMembrane gangliosides immunotherapyNeoplasm ProteinsPhenotypeDoxorubicinGangliosidesMultidrug resistance.Cell AdhesionTumor Cells CulturedHumansFemaleLymphocytesKiller Cells Lymphokine-Activated
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