Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.9.3.1 (cytochrome oxidase)
8,822 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The lateral magnocellular nucleus (LM) contains the largest neurons in the rabbit thalamus, yet its cortical connections have not been described. This study evaluates the architecture, cingulate cortical connections, and spontaneous rate of neuronal discharges in LM. At its maximal mediolateral extent in coronal sections, LM underlies the laterodorsal and lateroposterior nuclei. It has a short medial and long lateral limb, both of which have high levels of cytochrome oxidase activity. On the basis of horseradish peroxidase and fluorescent dye injections, LM projects primarily to area 29 and posterior area 24. Projections to area 29d are topographically organized so that the medial limb of LM projects to rostral area 29d, mid levels of LM where the limbs join project to midlevels of area 29d and lateral parts of the lateral limb project to posterior area 29d. It is mainly the midportion of the lateral and medial limbs that projects to areas 29b and 29c. The anterior parts of these areas receive input from dorsal parts of LM, whereas posterior levels of these areas receive input from ventral LM. The midregion of LM also projects to caudal area 24. Injections of 3H-amino acids into area 29d anterogradely label neuronal processes in LM. Finally, single unit electrophysiological recordings from LM in halothane-anesthetized rabbits showed a unique pattern of spontaneous discharges. Over 70% of the LM neurons cycled through a number of different phases with a mean +/- S.E.M. peak discharge rate of 31 +/- 4.7 Hz. This high rate contrasts with the 17.6 +/- 3.2 Hz rate for neurons that maintained a constant rate of discharge and the 7.5 +/- 1.3 Hz rate of discharges for neurons in nuclei dorsal and ventral to LM. LM neurons are large, have high levels of cytochrome oxidase and spontaneous activity, and project extensively to the posterior cingulate cortex. These features suggest that LM neurons are highly active metabolically and may be fast conducting efferents to cingulate cortex.
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PMID:Lateral magnocellular thalamic nucleus in rabbits: architecture and projections to cingulate cortex. 169 39

The ventral posteromedial nucleus (VPM) of the monkey thalamus was investigated with combined immunocytochemical, histochemical, and connection-tracing techniques. Injections of anterogradely transported tracers were placed selectively in the caudal nucleus of the spinal trigeminal nuclear complex, and retrogradely transported horseradish peroxidase (HRP) or fluorescent dyes were placed on the surface or into the depths of defined parts of the trigeminal representation in the first somatic sensory area (SI) of the cerebral cortex. The results are correlated with those of the preceding paper (Rausell and Jones, 1991), which demonstrated the presence of 2 domains in the nucleus on the basis of different patterns of cytochrome oxidase (CO) staining and calcium-binding protein immunoreactivity. The cells of the CO-defined rod and matrix domains receive inputs from different components of the trigeminal afferent system and project to different layers of SI. The large- and medium-sized relay cells of the CO-rich rods, which are immunoreactive for parvalbumin, all project to middle layers of SI. The small relay cells of the weakly-stained CO-matrix, surrounding and intervening between the rods, are immunoreactive for 28-kDa calbindin and project to superficial layers (I and II) of SI. Anterograde tracing studies reveal that the rod domain in VPM is innervated by fibers arising in the contra- and ipsilateral principal trigeminal nucleus, while the matrix domain (and calbindin-positive domains in adjacent nuclei) are innervated by fibers arising in the caudal nucleus of the spinal trigeminal complex. These results demonstrate the modularity and parallel streaming of the functional components of the trigeminal part of the somatic sensory system and suggest that lemniscal and nonlemniscal elements of the system gain access by separate routes to different layers of the SI cortex.
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PMID:Chemically distinct compartments of the thalamic VPM nucleus in monkeys relay principal and spinal trigeminal pathways to different layers of the somatosensory cortex. 170 64

Central termination patterns of afferents from the hands of squirrel monkeys were studied after subdermal injections of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) or cholera toxin subunit B conjugated to HRP (BHRP). WGA-HRP more effectively labeled axons terminating in the superficial dorsal horn of the spinal cord, while BHRP more effectively labeled axons terminating in the deeper layers. Injections of both tracers, when restricted to parts of glabrous digits, palm, or dorsal hand, revealed somatotopic patterns in the spinal cord and pars rotunda of the cuneate nucleus that were, in some respects, similar and, in other respects, quite different from those previously reported for macaque monkey (Florence et al., J. Comp. Neurol. 286:48-70, '89). As in macaques, injections in digits 1-5 produced a rostrocaudal sequence of foci of terminations in the cervical spinal cord. However, inputs from the palm were located medial to those from the digits, whereas the palm is represented lateral to the digits in macaque monkeys. Since inputs from the palm is also medial in the dorsal horn in cats (Nyberg and Blomqvist, J. Comp. Neurol. 242:28-39, '85), the condition in squirrel monkeys may be similar to the generalized state. In the cuneate nucleus, single injections in the hand produced dense label in the pars rotunda, and sparse label in the rostral and caudal poles. As in macaque monkeys, inputs from specific parts of the hand related to rostrocaudal clusters of cells that are cytochrome oxidase dense. The representation of the digits differed from macaques in that the digits were represented dorsal to the palm, rather that ventral to the palm as in macaques. Again, comparisons with cats suggest that squirrel monkeys have the more generalized pattern. Finally, inputs from the hair, dorsal surfaces of the digits terminated on the same clusters as the inputs from the glabrous, ventral surfaces, apparently overlapping somewhat. The proximity of these terminations from dorsal and ventral surfaces of the digits may be related to observations that cortical representations of the glabrous surfaces of digits become responsive to dorsal surfaces of the same digits when inputs from glabrous skin are chronically deactivated (e.g., Merzenich et al., Neuroscience 3:33-55, '83).
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PMID:Central projections from the skin of the hand in squirrel monkeys. 172 25

Early postnatal lesions of the primary somatosensory cortex alter the vibrissa-related cytochrome oxidase (CO) pattern in nucleus principalis (PrV) of the rat's trigeminal (V) brainstem complex (Erzurumlu and Ebner, '88: Dev. Brain Res. 44:302-308). At present, the reason for this change is not clear. It may be that the corticotrigeminal projection is necessary for the maintenance of vibrissa-related patterns in PrV. However, it is also possible that the loss of the normal pattern of CO activity reflects a change in the organization of brainstem cells resulting from transneuronal retrograde degeneration. In order to address this question, we made lesions of either the primary somatosensory cortex (S-I) or ventrobasal thalamus (VB) in newborn rats and directly assayed distribution of V primary afferents by transganglionic transport of horseradish peroxidase and V-thalamic neurons by retrograde transport of either fluorogold or true blue. Neonatal cortical and thalamic lesions produced no qualitative change in the distribution of primary afferent terminals in either PrV or V subnucleus interpolaris (SpI) beyond that which could be attributed to shrinkage of the brainstem resulting from retrograde degeneration. Most importantly, the "patchy" pattern of terminations observed in normal rats remained apparent in the brain-damaged animals. The normal distribution of V-thalamic neurons in PrV was disrupted by both cortical and thalamic lesions. These cells are normally patterned in a way that matches the distribution of primary afferent terminals and thus that of the mystacial vibrissae. This was not the case in the neonatally brain-damaged rats. Taken together, these results are consistent with the conclusion that neonatal cortical and thalamic lesions disrupt the normal CO pattern in PrV primarily because of their effects upon the patterning of brainstem cells. The present findings demonstrate further that clustering of primary afferents does not require a normal complement of postsynaptic neurons.
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PMID:Effects of cortical and thalamic lesions upon primary afferent terminations, distributions of projection neurons, and the cytochrome oxidase pattern in the trigeminal brainstem complex. 184 19

Morphometric, histological and histochemical studies were carried out on the sublingual salivary glands of the Arabian camel (Camelus dromedarius). The glands are of the tubulo-acinar type and consist of many lobules that are composed of two types of cells, mucoserous and seromucous. The mucoserous cells form the main secretory units of the gland but seromucous cells are much more seldom and form associated acini. The former cells secrete and elaborate large quantities of neutral mucosubstances, sialomucins and little sulphomucins while only the apical portion of the latter cells shows weak to moderate activity for neutral and acid mucosubstances. The histoenzymological tests employed here detected a considerable activity of alkaline phosphatase, succinic dehydrogenase, aminopeptidase and non-specific esterases, but weak activities of cytochrome oxidase, peroxidase and no activities of triacylglycerol lipase, beta-glucoronidase and amylase. The functional significance of these findings is discussed.
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PMID:Structure and histochemistry of the sublingual salivary glands of the one-humped camel (Camelus dromedarius). 213 94

Resonance Raman and visible absorption spectra were simultaneously observed for cytochrome oxidase reaction intermediates at 5 degrees C by using the artificial cardiovascular system (Ogura, T., Yoshikawa, S., and Kitagawa, T. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 8022-8027) and a device for Raman/absorption simultaneous measurements (Ogura, T., and Kitagawa, T. (1988) Rev. Sci. Instrum. 59, 1316-1320). The Fe4+ = O stretching (nu FeO) Raman band was observed at 788 cm-1 for compound B for the first time. This band showed the 16O/18O isotopic frequency shift (delta nu FeO) by 40 cm-1, in agreement with that for horseradish peroxidase compound II (nu FeO = 787 cm-1 and delta nu FeO = 34 cm-1). In the time region when the FeII-O2 stretching band for compound A and the nu FeO band for compound B were coexistent, a Raman band assignable to the Fe3+-O-O-Cu2+ linkage was not recognized.
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PMID:Observation of the Fe4+ = O stretching Raman band for cytochrome oxidase compound B at ambient temperature. 216 89

The present study examines patterns of connectivity between the primary somatosensory cortex of the rat (SI) and surrounding cortical areas also implicated in the processing of somatosensory information. The impetus for the study was the recent reports of major differences in the organization of cortex lateral and caudal to the SI in two other rodent species; the mouse (Carvell and Simons, '86: Somatosens. Res. 3:213-237; '87: J. Comp. Neurol. 265:409-427) and the grey squirrel (Krubitzer et al., '86: J. Comp. Neurol 250: 403-430). Corticocortical connections between the somatosensory areas of the rat parietal cortex were examined by using the combined retrograde and anterograde transport of horseradish peroxidase as well as the retrograde transport of fluorescent tracers. Tracer injections were made into different locations within SI and dysgranular cortex as well as into more lateral regions of parietal cortex. The tangential patterns of distribution both of callosal connections and of cytochrome oxidase activity together provided points of reference in determining the relation between injection sites and the resultant patterns of label. The results indicate that two distinct somatosensory areas, SI and the dysgranular cortex, are interconnected with a further lateral somatosensory area referred to as the second somatosensory area (SII). These projections are organized in a topographic fashion, which we interpret as evidence for a single representation of the body surface in SII. The three somatosensory areas each exhibit unique laminar patterns of ipsilateral corticocortical projection neurons and terminations. In SI, projection neurons are found mainly in layers II, III, and Va, and terminations are largely restricted to the infragranular layers. In the dysgranular cortex, projection neurons and terminations are found in all layers except layer I in which only terminal label is detectable and layer Vb in which notably fewer neurons are labelled. In SII, projection neurons and terminations are found in all layers except layer I and are particularly dense in lower layer III and layer IV. Further, whereas the laminar and areal distributions of ipsilateral and contralateral corticocortical projections largely overlap in both SI and the dysgranular cortex, in SII they tend to be areally segregated. Neurons projecting bilaterally to both ipsilateral and contralateral somatosensory cortex were equally rare in all three somatosensory areas. These results are discussed in relation to the organization of SII in other rodent species, and it is concluded that in the rat, like the mouse, cortex lateral and caudal to SI contains a single representation of the body surface.
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PMID:Areal and laminar organization of corticocortical projections in the rat somatosensory cortex. 217 24

Distributions of corticospinal and corticobulbar neurons were revealed by tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) processing after injections of wheatgerm agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA:HRP) into the cervical or lumbar enlargements of the spinal cord, or medullary or pontine levels of the brain stem. Sections reacted for cytochrome oxidase (CO) allowed patterns of labeled neurons to be related to the details of the body surface map in the first somatosensory cortical area (SI). The results indicate that a number of cortical areas project to these subcortical levels: (1) Projection neurons in granular SI formed a clear somatotopic pattern. The hindpaw region projected to the lumbar enlargement, the forepaw region to the cervical enlargement, the whisker pad field to the lower medulla, and the more rostral face region to more rostral brain stem levels. (2) Each zone of labeled neurons in SI extended into adjacent dysgranular somatosensory cortex, forming a second somatotopic pattern of projection neurons. (3) A somatotopic pattern of projection neurons in primary motor cortex (MI) paralleled SI in mediolateral sequence corresponding to the hindlimb, forelimb, and face. (4) A weak somatotopic pattern of projection neurons was suggested in medial agranular cortex (Agm), indicating a premotor field with a rostromedial-to-caudolateral representation of hindlimb, forelimb, and face. (5) A somatotopic pattern of projection neurons representing the foot to face in a mediolateral sequence was observed in medial parietal cortex (PM) located between SI and area 17. (6) In the second somatosensory cortical area (SII), neurons projecting to the brain stem were immediately adjacent caudolaterally to the barrel field of SI, whereas neurons projecting to the upper spinal cord were more lateral. No projection neurons in this region were labeled by the injections in the lower spinal cord. (7) Other foci of projection neurons for the face and forelimb were located rostral to SII, providing evidence for a parietal ventral area (PV) in perirhinal cortex (PR) lateral to SI, and in cortex between SII and PM. None of these regions, which may be higher-order somatosensory areas, contained labeled neurons after injections in the lower spinal cord. Thus, more cortical fields directly influence brain stem and spinal cord levels related to sensory and motor functions of the face and forepaw than the hindlimb. The termination patterns of corticospinal and corticobulbar projections were studied in other rats with injections of WGA:HRP in SI.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Areal distributions of cortical neurons projecting to different levels of the caudal brain stem and spinal cord in rats. 224 4

The cytochemical expression of epidermal peroxidase and cytochrome oxidase activity was recently well documented in normal human skin. We report here its expression in basal and squamous cell carcinomas, actinic keratoses, psoriasis, allergic contact dermatitis, seborrheic keratoses, and autosomal dominant ichthyosis vulgaris. The two enzyme activities were evaluated using the diaminobenzidine method. If present, the two enzymes were always localized in the same organelles as in normal epidermis: endogenous peroxidase in the nuclear envelope and endoplasmic reticulum, and cytochrome oxidase in mitochondria. In basal and squamous carcinomas, actinic keratoses and psoriasis, the keratinocytes lost their peroxidase activity, but maintained their cytochrome oxidase activity. In seborrheic keratoses, allergic contact dermatitis and ichthyosis vulgaris, the cytochrome oxidase activity was greatly reduced or abolished in keratinocytes, Langerhans' cells, and melanocytes, whereas the peroxidase activity was present as in normal epidermis. These results indicate that the two peroxidatic enzymes studied are not interrelated and alternatively suppressed by different cellular dysfunctions.
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PMID:Cytochemical expression of epidermal peroxidase and cytochrome oxidase activities in pathological skin conditions of man. 243 58

Somatotopic arrangements of axon terminals of primary afferent fibers innervating follicles of the mystacial vibrissae were examined in the cat by the transganglionic horseradish peroxidase (HRP) method. Forty to 60 hours after injecting HRP into a single or a group of vibrissal follicles, transported HRP was visualized by the tetramethylbenzidine technique. HRP-labeled axon terminals were distributed in the ventral subnucleus of the principal sensory trigeminal nucleus (ventral Vp), in the oral and interpolar spinal trigeminal nuclei (Vo and Vi), and in the caudal spinal trigeminal nucleus (Vc) (layer I, deep part of layer II, layers III-V) with its spinal extension into the dorsal horn of the first cervical cord segment (rostral C1). In cross sections through the caudal parts of the ventral Vp, Vi, and layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1, a single mystacial vibrissa was represented in a one-to-one fashion by a patch of dense terminal arbors of primary afferent fibers. The more dorsally a horizontal row of the mystacial vibrissae was located, the more ventrally was it represented in the ventral Vp, the more ventrolaterally in the Vi, and the more ventrally in layer IV of the Vc and the rostral C1. In addition, the more anteriorly a vibrissa was located in a horizontal row of the mystacial vibrissae, the more medially was it represented in the ventral Vp, the more ventromedially in the Vi, and the more laterally in layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1; the most posteriorly located vibrissae in the horizontal rows of the mystacial vibrissae were represented along the lateral border of the ventral Vp and Vi, and most medially in layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1. Thus, the representation pattern in the ventral Vp was rotated clockwise at about 45 degrees angle in the Vi, and projected as a mirror image in layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1. It was also indicated that the anterior-posterior arrangement of the mystacial vibrissae was represented in a rostral-caudal organization within layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1. It was also indicated that the anterior-posterior arrangement of the mystacial vibrissae was represented in a rostral-caudal organization within layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1. Patchy patterns probably replicating the distribution of the vibrissae on the face of the cat were also revealed by the cytochrome oxidase histochemical staining in cross sections through the caudal parts of the ventral Vp, Vi, and layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1.
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PMID:Mystacial vibrissae representation within the trigeminal sensory nuclei of the cat. 243 98


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