Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.14.16.2 (tyrosine hydroxylase)
14,760 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Converging evidence indicates that white adipose tissue (WAT) is innervated by the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) based on immunohistochemical labeling of a SNS marker (tyrosine hydroxylase [TH]), tract tracing of WAT sympathetic postganglionic innervation, pseudorabies virus (PRV) transneuronal labeling of WAT SNS outflow neurons, and functional evidence from denervation studies. Recently, WAT para-SNS (PSNS) innervation was suggested because local surgical WAT sympathectomy (sparing hypothesized parasympathetic innervation) followed by PRV injection yielded infected cells in the vagal dorsomotor nucleus (DMV), a traditionally-recognized PSNS brain stem site. In addition, local surgical PSNS WAT denervation triggered WAT catabolic responses. We tested histologically whether WAT was parasympathetically innervated by searching for PSNS markers in rat, and normal (C57BL) and obese (ob/ob) mouse WAT. Vesicular acetylcholine transporter, vasoactive intestinal peptide and neuronal nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivities were absent in WAT pads (retroperitoneal, epididymal, inguinal subcutaneous) from all animals. Nearly all nerves innervating WAT vasculature and parenchyma that were labeled with protein gene product 9.5 (PGP9.5; pan-nerve marker) also contained TH, attesting to pervasive SNS innervation. When Siberian hamster inguinal WAT was sympathetically denervated via local injections of catecholaminergic toxin 6-hydroxydopamine (sparing putative parasympathetic nerves), subsequent PRV injection resulted in no central nervous system (CNS) or sympathetic chain infections suggesting no PSNS innervation. By contrast, vehicle-injected WAT subsequently inoculated with PRV had typical CNS/sympathetic chain viral infection patterns. Collectively, these data indicate no parasympathetic nerve markers in WAT of several species, with sparse DMV innervation and question the claim of PSNS WAT innervation as well as its functional significance.
...
PMID:White adipose tissue lacks significant vagal innervation and immunohistochemical evidence of parasympathetic innervation. 1760 16

The aim of this study was to investigate the ability of aminoguanidine (AG) to prevent diabetes-induced changes in nitric oxide synthase- (nNOS), vasoactive intestinal polypeptide- (VIP) and noradrenaline- (NA) containing nerves of the rat ileum using immunohistochemical and biochemical techniques. Diabetes was induced in adult male Wistar rats by a single intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin (65 mg/kg). AG was administered in the drinking water to control (1.8 g/l) and diabetic (0.9 g/l) rats over a period of 8 weeks. Diabetes caused a significant increase in the thickness of nNOS-containing nerve fibres (p<0.001) in the circular muscle, in nNOS activity (p<0.05) and in the size distribution of nNOS-containing myenteric neurons (p<0.001). The thickness of VIP-containing nerve fibres was significantly greater (p<0.01) and there was a significant increase in varicosity size (p<0.01) and proportion of VIP-positive myenteric neurons (p<0.01) in diabetes. NA levels were significantly reduced (p<0.01) and the size of varicosities containing tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) was significantly increased (p<0.001) in diabetes. AG treatment completely or partially prevented the diabetes-induced increase in nNOS activity, in VIP-containing varicosity size, and in fibre width of both VIP- and nNOS-containing fibres in the circular muscle but had no effect on the diabetes-induced increase in nNOS-containing neuronal size or proportion of VIP-containing myenteric neurons. In contrast to VIP, AG treatment had no effect on the increase in TH-containing varicosity size in diabetes and also failed to prevent the decrease in NA levels induced by diabetes. These results indicate that AG treatment for neuropathy is not equally effective for all autonomic nerves supplying the ileum and that diabetes-induced changes in NA-containing nerves are particularly difficult to treat.
...
PMID:Effect of aminoguanidine treatment on diabetes-induced changes in the myenteric plexus of rat ileum. 1698 13

The potential neuroprotection of nicotinamide on the consequences of perinatal asphyxia was investigated with triple organotypic cultures. Perinatal asphyxia was induced in vivo by immersing foetuses-containing uterine horns removed from ready-to-deliver rats into a water bath for 20 min. Sibling caesarean-delivered pups were used as controls. Three days later tissue from substantia nigra, neostriatum and neocortex was dissected and placed on a coverslip. After a month, the cultures were processed for immunocytochemistry and phenotyped with markers against the NMDA receptor subunit NR1, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), or neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS). Some cultures were analysed for cell viability. Nicotinamide (0.8 mmol/kg, i.p.) or saline was administered to asphyxia-exposed and caesarean-delivered control pups 24, 48 and 72 h after birth. Perinatal asphyxia produced a decrease of cell viability in substantia nigra, but not in neostriatum or neocortex. Immunocytochemistry confirmed the vulnerability of the substantia nigra, demonstrating that there was a significant decrease in the number of NR1 and TH-positive (+) cells/mm2, as well as a decrease in the length of TH+ processes, suggesting neurite atrophy. In control cultures, many nNOS+ cells were seen, with different features, regional distribution and cell body sizes. Following perinatal asphyxia, there was an increase in the number of nNOS+ cells/mm2 in substantia nigra, versus a decrease in neostriatum including reduced neurite length, and no apparent changes in neocortex. The main effect of nicotinamide was seen in the neostriatum, preventing the asphyxia-induced decrease in the number of nNOS+ cells and neurite length. Nicotinamide also prevented the effect of perinatal asphyxia on TH-positive neurite length. The present results support the idea that nicotinamide can prevent the effects produced by a sustained energy-failure condition, as occurring during perinatal asphyxia.
...
PMID:Plasticity of basal ganglia neurocircuitries following perinatal asphyxia: effect of nicotinamide. 1731 Mar 78

In non-human primates, striatal tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive (TH-ir) cells are increased in number after dopamine depletion and in response to trophic factor delivery. As carotid body cells contain the dopaminotrophic glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), we evaluated the number, morphology and neurochemistry of these TH-ir cells, in the anterior and posterior striatum of five monkeys treated with 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) which received a graft of carotid body cell aggregates (CBCA) (n = 3) or sham surgery (n = 2), and six MPTP-monkeys that were sacrificed 6 months and 3 years after the last MPTP dose [MPTP I (n = 3) and MPTP II (n = 3), respectively]. Three intact monkeys served as controls. A disability rating scale was used for the assessment of parkinsonism in all lesioned animals, both before and after surgery. For the neurochemical examination, tissue sections were double-labelled with antibodies to TH, dopamine transporter, dopa decarboxylase-67, vesicular monoamine transporter 2, glutamic acid decarboxylase -67, calbindin, parvalbumin, calretinin, neuronal nitric oxide synthase and GDNF. Only animals receiving CBCA graft showed a moderate but significant recovery of parkinsonism that persisted 12 months after the graft. The grafted striatum contained the greatest TH-ir cell density (120.4 +/- 10.3 cells/100 mm2), while the control striatum displayed the lowest (15.4 +/- 6.8 cells/100 mm2), and MPTP I, MPTP II and sham-operated monkeys showed a similar intermediate value (66.1 +/- 6.2, 58.3 +/- 17.2 and 57.7 +/- 7.0 cells/100 mm2, respectively). In addition, in the post-commissural striatum, only CBCA graft induced a significant increase in the TH-ir cell density compared to control animals (47.9 +/- 15.9 and 7.9 +/- 3.2, respectively). Phenotypically, TH-ir cells were striatal dopaminergic interneurons. However, in the grafted animals, the phenotype was different from that in control, MPTP and sham-operated monkeys, with the appearance of TH/GDNF-ir cells and the emergence of two TH-ir subpopulations of different size as the two main differentiating features. Our data confirm and extend previous studies demonstrating that striatal CBCA grafts produce a long-lasting motor recovery of MPTP-monkeys along with an increase in the number and phenotype changes of the striatal TH-ir interneurons, probably by the action of the trophic factors contained in carotid body cells. The increased number of striatal TH-ir cells observed in the grafted striatum may contribute to the improvement of parkinsonism observed after the graft.
...
PMID:Modification of the number and phenotype of striatal dopaminergic cells by carotid body graft. 1743 84

It has been postulated that alcoholism is associated with abnormalities in glutamatergic neurotransmission. This study examined the density of glutamate NMDA receptor subunits and its associated proteins in the noradrenergic locus coeruleus (LC) in deceased alcoholic subjects. Our previous research indicated that the NMDA receptor in the human LC is composed of obligatory NR1 and regulatory NR2C subunits. At synapses, NMDA receptors are stabilized through interactions with postsynaptic density protein (PSD-95). PSD-95 provides structural and functional coupling of the NMDA receptor with neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS), an intracellular mediator of NMDA receptor activation. LC tissue was obtained from 10 alcohol-dependent subjects and eight psychiatrically healthy controls. Concentrations of NR1 and NR2C subunits, as well as PSD-95 and nNOS, were measured using Western blotting. In addition, we have examined tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the rate-limiting enzyme in the synthesis of norepinephrine. The amount of NR1 was lower in the rostral (-30%) and middle (-41%) portions of the LC of alcoholics as compared to control subjects. No differences in the amounts of NR2C, PSD-95, nNOS and TH were detected comparing alcoholic to control subjects. Lower levels of NR1 subunit of the NMDA receptor in the LC implicates altered glutamate-norepinephrine interactions in alcoholism.
...
PMID:Glutamate signaling proteins and tyrosine hydroxylase in the locus coeruleus of alcoholics. 1748 61

The impact of a lifelong absence of the neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) in the neuroendocrine stress response was investigated in nNOS knockout (KO) and wild type (WT) mice under basal conditions and in response to forced swimming. In the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus oxytocin and corticotropin-releasing-hormone mRNA levels did not differ between these genotypes under resting conditions, whereas vasopressin mRNA levels were significantly lower in nNOS KO than in WT animals. Also, in the adrenal glands basal levels of tyrosine hydroxylase protein, the rate-limiting enzyme for catecholamine biosynthesis, and of phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase, which converts norepinephrine to epinephrine, were significantly reduced in nNOS KO mice. Plasma adrenocorticotropin, corticosterone, norepinephrine and epinephrine levels were similar in the KO and WT genotypes under resting conditions. In response to forced swimming, a similar increase in plasma adrenocorticotropin and corticosterone was observed in KO and WT animals. Stressor exposure triggered also an increased epinephrine release in WT animals, but did not significantly alter plasma epinephrine levels in KO mice. These data suggest that the chronic absence of nNOS reduces the capacity of epinephrine synthesising enzymes in the adrenal gland to respond to acute stressor exposure with an adequate epinephrine release.
...
PMID:Neuronal nitric oxide synthase gene inactivation reduces the expression of vasopressin in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus and of catecholamine biosynthetic enzymes in the adrenal gland of the mouse. 1785 69

Inhibition of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) in cardiac postganglionic sympathetic neurons leads to enhanced cardiac sympathetic responsiveness in normal animals, as well as in animal models of cardiovascular diseases. We used isolated atria from mice with selective genetic disruption of nNOS (nNOS(-/-)) and their wild-type littermates (WT) to investigate whether sympathetic heart rate (HR) responses were dependent on nNOS. Immunohistochemistry was initially used to determine the presence of nNOS in sympathetic [tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunoreactive] nerve terminals in the mouse sinoatrial node (SAN). After this, the effects of postganglionic sympathetic nerve stimulation (1-10 Hz) and bath-applied norepinephrine (NE; 10(-8)-10(-4) mol/l) on HR were examined in atria from nNOS(-/-) and WT mice. In the SAN region of WT mice, TH and nNOS immunoreactivity was virtually never colocalized in nerve fibers. nNOS(-/-) atria showed significantly reduced HR responses to sympathetic nerve activation and NE (P < 0.05). Similarly, the positive chronotropic response to the adenylate cyclase activator forskolin (10(-7)-10(-5) mol/l) was attenuated in nNOS(-/-) atria (P < 0.05). Constitutive NOS inhibition with L-nitroarginine (0.1 mmol/l) did not affect the sympathetic HR responses in nNOS(-/-) and WT atria. The paucity of nNOS in the sympathetic innervation of the mouse SAN, in addition to the attenuated HR responses to neuronal and applied NE, indicates that presynaptic sympathetic neuronal NO does not modulate neuronal NE release and SAN pacemaking in this species. It appears that genetic deletion of nNOS results in the inhibition of adrenergic-adenylate cyclase signaling within SAN myocytes.
...
PMID:Sympathetic control of heart rate in nNOS knockout mice. 1795 72

We examined the effects of 7-nitroindazole on the dopaminergic system in mice after 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) treatment. The mice received four intraperitoneal injections of MPTP (20 mg/kg) at 2 h-intervals. Administration of 7-nitroindazole showed dose-dependent neuroprotective effects against striatal dopamine, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) and homovanillic acid (HVA) depletion 7 days after MPTP treatment. Behavioral testing showed that MPTP-treated mice exhibited motor deficits in the catalepsy test after 7 days, but 7-nitroindazole prevented the appearance of motor abnormalities in this test. The MPTP-treated mice exhibited the loss of tyrosine hydroxylase-containing dopaminergic neurons in mice after 1, 3 and 7 days, but 7-nitroindazole-treated mice showed a protective effect. GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic protein)-positive astrocytes were accumulated in the striatum 3 and 7 days and in the substantia nigra 1, 3 and 7 days after MPTP treatment. In contrast, 7-nitroindazole prevented a significant increase in the number of GFAP-positive astrocytes in the striatum and substantia nigra after MPTP treatment. The reactive astrocytes in the striatum and substantia nigra after MPTP treatment increased the production of S100beta protein, which is thought to promote neuronal damage, but 7-nitoindazole suppressed the expression of S100 beta protein. Activation of microglia, with an increase in staining intensity and morphological changes, was observed in the striatum and substantia nigra 1 and 3 days after MPTP treatment, but 7-nitroindazole prevented a significant increase in the number of isolectin B(4) positive microglia in the striatum and substantia nigra. On the other hand, nestin-immunoreactive cells were increased significantly in the striatum 3 and 7 days after MPTP treatment. 7-Nitroindazole treatment facilitated nestin expression in the striatum 7 days after MPTP treatment. Thus, nNOS inhibitor 7-nitroindazole protected dopaminergic neurons against MPTP neurotoxicity in mice and ameliorated neurological deficits. The results suggest that the neuroprotection is mediated though the modulation of glial activation, including the inhibition of S100beta synthesis and the prevention of microglial activation. These results suggest the therapeutic strategy targeted to glial modulation with 7-nitoindazole offers a great potential for the development of new neuroprotective therapies for Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:Protective action of neuronal nitric oxide synthase inhibitor in the MPTP mouse model of Parkinson's disease. 1803 Jun 9

Immunohistochemical localisation of neurotransmitters was used to determine the distribution of unipolar neurons and neuroepithelial cells (NECs) in the respiratory tract of the bichir, Polypterus bichir bichir. NECs were commonly encountered in the mucociliated epithelium of the lung. Unipolar neurons were located in the submucosal and muscle layers of the glottis. The results suggest the presence of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and nNOS immunoreactivities in NECs. In addition, ACh-E/nNOS and TH/nNOS nerve fibers were also found associated with these cells. Unipolar neuronal cells showed a chemical code including the presence of 5-HT, ACh-E, peptides and P2x2 receptors. The present findings indicate that nitric oxide (NO) is a primitive transmitter of neuroepithelial oxygen-sensitive chemoreceptor cells together with acetylcholine. The coexistence of ACh-E with other substances in the unipolar neurons, but not with NO, may be a property of vagal postganglionic neurons since the emergence of the cranial autonomic pathways in the earliest vertebrates. It would be interesting to know about the provenance of the nerves in contact with NECs, which appear to have a complex innervation pattern.
...
PMID:Neurotransmitter localization in the neuroepithelial cells and unipolar neurons of the respiratory tract in the bichir, Polypterus bichir bichir G. ST-HIL. 1822 32

There is growing evidence indicating that reactive nitrogen species (RNS) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) are a major contributor to the pathogenesis and progression of Parkinson's disease. Here we investigated whether edaravone (free radical scavenger), minocycline (inducible nitric oxide synthase, iNOS inhibitor), 7-nitroindazole (neuronal NOS, nNOS inhibitor), fluvastatin (endothelial NOS, eNOS activator) and pitavastatin (eNOS activator) can protect against MPTP neurotoxicity in mice under the same condition. The present study showed that 7-nitroindazole could protect dose-dependently against the striatal dopamine depletions in mice 5 days after MPTP treatment. In contrast, edaravone, minocycline, fluvastatin and pitavastatin did not show the neuroprotective effect on MPTP-induced striatal dopamine depletion. Our immunohistochemical study showed that TH (tyrosine hydroxylase) and DAT (dopamine transporter) immunoreactivity was decreased significantly in the striatum and substantia nigra 5 days after MPTP treatment. The administration of 7-nitroindazole showed a protective effect against the severe reductions in levels of TH and DAT immunoreactivity in the striatum and substantia nigra 5 days after MPTP treatment. Furthermore, our Western blot analyses study showed the remarkable loss of TH protein levels in the striatum 5 days after MPTP treatment. In contrast, 7-nitroindazole prevented a significant loss in TH protein levels in the striatum 5 days after MPTP treatment. On the other hand, GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic protein) immunoreactivity increased significantly in the striatum and substantia nigra, 5 days after MPTP treatment. 7-Nitroindazole ameliorated severe increases in number of GFAP immunoreactive astrocytes in the striatum and substantia nigra 5 days after MPTP treatment. Furthermore, our Western blot analyses study showed the increase of GFAP protein levels in the striatum 5 days after MPTP treatment. 7-Nitroindazole prevented a significant increase in the GFAP protein levels in the striatum 5 days after MPTP treatment. The present results indicate that 7-nitroindazole can protect dose-dependently against the striatal dopamine depletions in mice 5 days after MPTP treatment. In contrast, edaravone, minocycline, fluvastatin and pitavastatin did not show the neuroprotective effect on MPTP-induced striatal dopamine depletions. These findings demonstrate that the overexpression of nNOS may play a major role in the neurotoxic processes of MPTP, as compared to the production of ROS, the overexpression of iNOS and the modulation of eNOS. Thus, our findings provide strong evidence for neuroprotective properties of nNOS inhibitor in this animal model of Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:Role of reactive nitrogen and reactive oxygen species against MPTP neurotoxicity in mice. 1823 88


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>