Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.1.7 (acetylcholinesterase)
28,390 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Using a semihorizontal section plane tangential to the ventral surface of the cerebral peduncle, the authors re-examined cyto-, myelo- and dendroarchitecture, acetylcholinesterase activity, afferent fibers, and efferent projection neurons of the substantia nigra pars reticulata. In the semihorizontal section plane, the substantia nigra pars reticulata was a disc-shaped nucleus and contained two to three myelinated fiber bundles running from anteromedial to posterolateral. Bands of high acetylcholinesterase activity existed parallel to the anteromedial-posterolateral direction. The Golgi silver impregnation study revealed that many nigral neurons extended their varicose dendrites anteromedially and posterolaterally. In cases with injections of wheat germ agglutinated horseradish peroxidase into the neostriatum or injections of tritiated leucine into the subthalamic nucleus, anterogradely labeled afferent fibers and axon terminals in the substantia nigra pars reticulata were organized into bands in the same anteromedial-posterolateral direction. In cases with injections of wheat germ agglutinated horseradish peroxidase into either the superior colliculus, the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus or the ventromedial nucleus of the thalamus, retrogradely labeled neurons were also clustered along the anteromedial-posterolateral direction with their dendrites extending anteromedially and posterolaterally. The present findings strongly suggest that the substantia nigra pars reticulata has a laminar organization.
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PMID:Laminar organization of the substantia nigra pars reticulata in the cat. 217 20

The presence of nerve fibers in the testicle of the rat has been investigated both in light (silver and osmium-iodide impregnations, and histochemistry for acetylcholinesterase) and electron microscope. Nerve fibers were found in the albuginea and close to the intertubular blood vessels. However, these were not observed at ultrastructural level. On the other hand, the Leydig cells do not have a direct innervation but nerve fibers containing large and small granular synaptic vesicles were observed in the vicinity (3,000 A). The authors discuss the possible control of the testicular function by the peripheral nervous system.
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PMID:[Microscopic innervation of the spermatic ducts and testicle. IV. Testis]. 220 62

The innervation of the tensor tympani muscle and the stapedius muscle in the rat was studied. This was done by acetylcholinesterase in toto staining of the tympanic bullae and of muscles dissected separately, acetylcholinesterase staining of serial cross-sections of the muscles, silver impregnation of serial sections of complete tympanic bullae, serial semithin sections stained according to Laczko & Levai and electron microscopy of both muscles. The gross innervation of the muscles and the relation to other nerves in the bulla are described. It is shown that both muscles are innervated by very thin nerve fibres which form a well-organised elaborate network in the muscles, with very short branches that connect with motor endplates. Electron microscopically there are indications that the endplates in the stapedius muscle seem to enable faster activation of the muscle fibres than those of tensor tympani muscle. No morphological evidence for any sensory innervation of the muscles could be detected in the muscles themselves, in the connective tissue related to the muscles, or in the contents of the bulla tympanica. It is postulated that the afferent input of the acoustic middle ear muscle reflex is sound alone and that sensory information from the muscles themselves or from other structures in the tympanic bulla do not contribute to the reflex.
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PMID:The innervation of the middle ear muscles of the rat. 225 73

Purified human serum butyrylcholinesterase (approximately 90-kDa subunit) is known to exhibit aryl acylamidase and peptidase activity. Limited alpha-chymotrypsin digestion of the purified butyrylcholinesterase gave three major protein fragments of approximately 50 kDa, approximately 21 kDa and approximately 20 kDa. In our earlier studies [Rao and Balasubramanian (1989) Eur. J. Biochem. 179, 639-644] we characterized the approximately 20-kDa fragment and showed that it exhibited both butyrylcholinesterase and aryl acylamidase activities. In the present studies the approximately 50-kDa fragment is characterized. This fragment, after isolation by Sephadex G-75 chromatography from a chymotryptic digest of purified butyrylcholinesterase, exhibited only peptidase activity and was devoid of cholinesterase and aryl acylamidase activities. It could bind to a column of Ricinus communis agglutinin bound to Sepharose, indicating its glycosylated nature and the presence of galactose. The peptidase activity in the approximately 50-kDa fragment could be immuno-precipitated by a polyclonal antibody raised against purified butyrylcholinesterase. SDS-gel electrophoresis of this fragment isolated by R. communis agglutinin-Sepharose and Sephadex G-75 chromatography showed a protein band of approximately 50 kDa by silver staining. Amino-terminal sequence analysis of the approximately 50-kDa fragment gave the sequence of Gly-Pro-Thr-Val-Asp which corresponded to amino acid residues 291-295 in the butyrylcholinesterase sequence [Lockridge et al. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 549-557]. The combined results suggested that alpha-chymotrypsin digestion of human serum butyrylcholinesterase resulted in the formation of a approximately 20-kDa fragment exhibiting both cholinesterase and aryl acylamidase activities and a approximately 50-kDa fragment exhibiting only peptidase activity.
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PMID:Localization of the peptidase activity of human serum butyrylcholinesterase in a approximately 50-kDa fragment obtained by limited alpha-chymotrypsin digestion. 233 89

Wistar rats (body wt. 200 g) were subjected to a fractionated course of radiation similar to that used in prophylactic brain irradiation for small cell carcinoma of the lung (2000 cGy in 5 fractions over 5 days with 60Co). Effects of this regimen were assessed by histologic examination of brain sections at 1 week, 1 month and 6 months post-irradiation. With conventional stains there were no apparent differences between control and irradiated brains at any of the post-irradiation intervals. Immunohistochemistry for neurotransmitter synthetic enzymes tyrosine hydroxylase and glutamate decarboxylase, as well as histochemistry for acetylcholinesterase, failed to uncover any changes in the irradiated animals. Immunohistochemistry for glial fibrillary acidic protein, an astrocyte marker, also showed no differences in the irradiated groups. However, an antibody against a major histocompatibility complex, class II antigen (OX-6) revealed a microglial response in grey and white matter beginning at 1 month and increasing up to the 6 month post-irradiation interval. The neuroanatomical basis for this microglial response was suggested by the results of silver stains for nerve axons, which revealed axonal loss in striatal white matter bundles in a pattern implicating vascular insufficiency.
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PMID:An animal model of prophylactic cranial irradiation: histologic effects at acute, early and delayed stages. 234 14

Hippocampal CA3 neurons from fetal rats were grafted to excitotoxic lesions in the CA3 subfield of the adult rat hippocampus and the formation of graft-host brain nerve connections examined. The excitotoxic lesions were induced by localized, stereotaxic injection of ibotenic acid (IA), a glutamic acid agonist, into CA3 of the dorsal hippocampus. The result was a so-called axon-sparing lesion with localized degeneration of nerve cells, but preservation of the extrinsic afferent fibers, now deprived of their targets. One week after the lesion a suspension of embryonic (E18-20) CA3 cells was grafted to the lesion site. Six weeks or more later the recipient brains were processed and analyzed by ordinary cell stains, histochemistry for acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and heavy metals (Timm staining), immunohistochemistry for the neuropeptides cholecystokinin and somatostatin and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) for astroglia, electron microscopy, and axonal tracing with retrogradely axonal transported fluorescent dyes or lesion-induced, anterograde degeneration combined with silver staining or electron microscopy. More than 90% of the grafts survived. They contained the normal types of CA3 neurons, which are mainly pyramidal cells, in addition to some normal, peptidergic, cholecystokinin- and somatostatin-reactive neurons. The grafts were innervated by AChE-positive, host cholinergic fibers, Timm-positive mossy fiber terminals from the host fascia dentata, and host commissural fibers traced by axonal degeneration. Efferent transplant projections were traced to the ipsilateral host CA1 (Schaffer collaterals) and the contralateral host hippocampus by retrograde axonal transport of fluorochromes injected into these host brain areas. All grafts analyzed by electron microscopy contained axonal varicosities resembling axonal growth cones even after long survival times. The results demonstrate that fetal rat hippocampal neurons, grafted to excitotoxic, axon-sparing lesions in the adult brain, can become both structurally and connectively well incorporated in the mature host central nervous system.
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PMID:Grafting of fetal CA3 neurons to excitotoxic, axon-sparing lesions of the hippocampal CA3 area in adult rats. 239 68

The morphology and projections of neurons in the paraventricular organ (PVO) were studied by means of silver impregnation after intraocular application of cobaltous lysine in the lungfish Protopterus dolloi. Cobalt-labeled neurons were found exclusively in the PVO in the dorsal and infundibular hypothalamus. These bipolar neurons possess one CSF-contacting process that protrudes into the ventricular lumen with a club-shape ending and a thick, ramifying process directed into the hypothalamic neuropil; the ependymofugal processes form intra- and extrahypothalamic projections. Impregnated fibers from paraventricular neurons cross in infundibular and hypothalamic commissures, the commissure of the posterior tuberculum, the postoptic, the habenular, and the anterior commissures. Projections to the infundibulum and the median eminence are relatively sparse; no fibers are labeled in the pituitary gland. Ascending projections to the forebrain are extensive. Major targets include the dorsal hypothalamus, the periventricular preoptic nuclei, the habenula, the subhabenular region, the anterodorsal thalamus, and the medial telencephalic hemisphere (septum). Most ascending fibers follow the medial forebrain bundle; others course in the fasciculus retroflexus and terminate in rostral parts of the ipsilateral habenula. Descending fibers run caudally along the ventral floor of the brainstem. They terminate in the neuropil of the mesencephalic tegmentum, ventral tectum, isthmic region, ventral portions of the reticular formation throughout the rhombencephalon, and extend into the spinal cord. Intraocular application of cobaltous lysine results in selective impregnation of neurons in the PVO and their ascending and descending projections, presumably via uptake of tracer from vascular circulation. These projections do not represent retinofugal or retinopetal projections. We provide conclusive evidence for the existence of a PVO in Protopterus. On the basis of PVO location and acetylcholinesterase histochemistry, we propose subdivisions of the infundibular hypothalamus corresponding to those in amphibians. Ascending PVO projections appear to be particularly well developed in lungfish compared with other species and may be related to specialized endocrine mechanisms in this group of vertebrates.
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PMID:Paraventricular organ of the lungfish Protopterus dolloi: morphology and projections of CSF-contacting neurons. 239 40

Prolonged acrylamide administration produces motor nerve-terminal branch degeneration and impairs axonal outgrowth following nerve crush. It is unclear how early terminal branch degeneration is initiated and whether there is a compensatory regenerative response at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ). A modified Pestronk and Drachman silver-acetylcholinesterase strain was used to carry out a detailed morphometric analysis of the NMJ in soleus and lumbrical muscles. Rats were given 3, 5, or 10 doses of acrylamide, 35 mg/kg/day, by intraperitoneal injection, 5 days/week, and killed 4, 7, or 14 days after the first dose, respectively. Degenerating terminal branches were evident in soleus NMJ after only three doses of acrylamide. Diminished synaptic vesicle content, neurofilament accumulations and tubulo-vesicular profiles were evident after three doses. At later time points, degenerating terminals contained few synaptic vesicles and were engorged with neurofilaments. Endplate lengthening, indicative of denervation supersensitivity, accompanied degeneration. Terminal sprouting proliferated after 3 and 5 doses but was less prominent after 10 doses. Although similar changes occurred in the lumbrical muscle, they were not initiated until after 5 doses. These experiments reveal that pathological changes in terminal branches commence earlier and after a lower cumulative dose of acrylamide than previously reported and suggest that acrylamide exerts a primary effect at motor nerve-terminal branches. Early, vigorous terminal sprouting indicates that acrylamide does not prevent the initiation of regeneration, but with prolonged treatment does cause degeneration of maturing sprouts.
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PMID:Early degeneration and sprouting at the rat neuromuscular junction following acrylamide administration. 240 31

The original method combining Karnovsky's cholinesterase stain and Bodian silver impregnation has been modified to stain both myelinated and unmyelinated axons and to reduce background staining. The improvements were obtained by adding nitric acid to a paraformaldehyde-acetone fixative and by carrying out the silver impregnation of axons in an alcoholic solution. The method is especially suitable for quantitative estimation of the different kinds of nerve sprouting as well as for study of the remodeling of neuromuscular junctions in normal and experimental frog muscles.
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PMID:An improved combined cholinesterase stain and silver impregnation method for quantitative analysis of innervation patterns in frog muscle. 244 92

To study the polymorphism of human cholinesterases (ChEs) at the levels of primary sequence and three-dimensional structure, a fragment of human butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) cDNA was subcloned into the pEX bacterial expression vector and its polypeptide product analyzed. Immunoblot analysis revealed that the clone-produced BuChE peptides interact specifically with antibodies against human and Torpedo acetylcholinesterase (AChE). Rabbit polyclonal antibodies prepared against the purified clone-produced BuChE polypeptides interacted in immunoblots with denatured serum BuChE as well as with purified and denatured erythrocyte AChE. In contrast, native BuChE tetramers from human serum, but not AChE dimers from erythrocytes, interacted with these antibodies in solution to produce antibody-enzyme complexes that could be precipitated by second antibodies and that sedimented faster than the native enzyme in sucrose gradient centrifugation. Furthermore, both AChE and BuChE dimers from muscle extracts, but not BuChE tetramers from muscle, interacted with these antibodies. To reveal further whether the anti-cloned BuChE antibodies would interact in situ with ChEs in the neuromuscular junction, bundles of muscle fibers were microscopically dissected from the region in fetal human diaphragm that is innervated by the phrenic nerve. Muscle fibers incubated with the antibodies and with 125I-Protein A were subjected to emulsion autoradiography, followed by cytochemical ChE staining. The anti-cloned BuChE antibodies, as well as anti-Torpedo AChE antibodies, created patches of silver grains in the muscle endplate region stained for ChE, under conditions where control sera did not. These findings demonstrate that the various forms of human AChE and BuChE in blood and in neuromuscular junctions share sequence homologies, but also display structural differences between distinct molecular forms within particular tissues, as well as between similarly sedimenting molecular forms from different tissues.
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PMID:Cross-homologies and structural differences between human cholinesterases revealed by antibodies against cDNA-produced human butyrylcholinesterase peptides. 246 May 89


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