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

The exocrine and endocrine pancreas was investigated according to the fluorescence histochemical method of Flack and Hillarp. 1) Green fluorescent adrenergic fibers were regularly seen associated with arteries and arterioles in the exocrine pancreas. 2) Cholinergic fibers as shown by cholinesterase activity, were also found in the parenchyma of pancreas. 3) Yellow fluorescent cells scattered in the exocrine parenchyma and localized to a population of pancreatic islet cells with a characteristic distribution at the islet periphery was found. 4) By the fluorescence microscopic observation, inter-or intralobular pancreatic ducts, involving the zymogen granules, can also be seen after treatment with HCL vapor. 5) Yellow fluorescent cells, beta-cells containing insulin, remained at the Islet periphery. At present, the above mentioned yellow fluorescent cells are identified as containing HPP (Human pancreatic polypeptide) according to the immunofluorescence technique. With the use of the Falck and Hillarp histochemical technique ethionine induced pancreatitis in cats has been investigated. 1) After seven days of ethionine (5 mg/kg BW oral ad.) treatment, pancreas showed histochemical changes such as hemorrhage, fat necrosis, destruction of acinar cells and degranulation of zymogen from the parenchyma of pancreas. 2) Oral administration of ethionine for ten days induced severe degranulation, rupture of vessels, especially of veins and venules and later influenced arteries or arterioles. 3) Necrosis and fibrosis began to appear in the spaces between the cellular debris and marked pancreatic atrophy could be found. 4) The destruction of Islets of Langerhans can be found in the ethionine induced pancreatic parenchyma. On the other hand, an increased number of Islets of Langerhans was also observed in the site of lobule. 5) The presented findings may also suggest that the duration of administration of ethionine is more important factor than graded doses of ethionine in the production of ethionine is more important factor than graded doses of ethionine in the production of ethionine induced pancreatitis in cats.
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PMID:Fluorescence histochemical study of the pancreas in the cat. 79 42

1. A sensitive and specific neuropeptide Y (NPY) radio-immunoassay has been developed. This radio-immunoassay does not detect the NPY-related peptides pancreatic polypeptide or peptide YY. NPY extracted from rat plasma using sequential C18 sorbent and affinity chromatography co-eluted with synthetic rat NPY when applied to high pressure liquid chromatography. 2. The procedure of stabilization of platelets followed by high speed centrifugation reduced basal values of NPY by 60%, and this may be consistent with removal of platelets that release NPY. Administration of the cholinesterase inhibitor physostigmine (0.3 mg/kg), intravenously, produced a small but significant increase (39%) from basal concentrations of NPY. 3. NPY concentrations in young (2-3-month-old) Sprague-Dawley and Fisher 944 rats were similar; however, NPY concentrations were significantly increased (55%) in 2-year-old Fisher 944 rats. Similar to plasma concentrations of noradrenaline, NPY levels increase with age.
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PMID:Neuropeptide Y radio-immunoassay: characterization and application. 179 47

Morphological changes in 21-day-old embryonic and 2-day-old postnatal rat pancreatic tissue fragments transplanted into the anterior eye chamber of homologous animals for 74, 77, 180, and 534 days were investigated using light and electron microscopic, acetylcholinesterase enzyme, and immunohistochemical methods. The pancreatic acinar cells degenerated and were not observed at this stage of transplantation. The ductal system proliferated and partly differentiated into endocrine cells that subsequently formed many new islets of Langerhans as well. The structures of beta-, alpha-, delta-, and pancreatic polypeptide cells were found to be intact even 1.5 years after transplantation. In addition to this, the organization of these cells inside the islets is similar to that of normal pancreatic tissue. The transplanted tissue fragments were well vascularized with blood vessels and innervated also by serotonergic cells and acetylcholinesterase-positive neurons. It is concluded that pancreatic tissue fragments, with the exception of the acinar component, can grow and survive with intact structure in the anterior eye chamber of homologous rats for up to 1.5 years.
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PMID:Morphological findings in long-term pancreatic tissue transplants in the anterior eye chamber of rats. 218 55

Confocal scanning laser microscopy has been employed with immunocytochemical techniques to map the distribution of serotoninergic and peptidergic components in the nervous system of the monogenean gill-parasite, Diclidophora merlangi; results are compared with the distribution of cholinergic components, following histochemical staining for cholinesterase activity. While all three neurochemical elements are present in the central and peripheral nervous systems, the cholinergic and peptidergic systems dominate the CNS, whereas the PNS has a majority of serotoninergic nerve fibres. The cholinergic and peptidergic neuronal pathways overlap extensively in staining patterns, suggesting possible co-localization of acetylcholine and neuropeptides. Within the peptidergic nervous system, immunoreactivity to the pancreatic polypeptide family of peptides and FMRFamide were the most prevalent. Gastrin/cholecystokinin (CCK)-, neuropeptide Y-, substance P-, neurokinin A- and eledoisin-like immunoreactivities have been demonstrated for the first time in a monogenean parasite. The gastrin/CCK- and tachykinin-like immunoreactivities had an apparently restricted distribution in the worm.
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PMID:The serotoninergic, cholinergic and peptidergic components of the nervous system in the monogenean parasite, Diclidophora merlangi: a cytochemical study. 234 60

The localization and distribution of neuropeptide Y-like immunoreactivity in the guinea-pig heart were studied by use of immunohistochemical methods. A widespread distribution of immunoreactive processes was observed in all regions of the heart. They occur either singly or together with several other immunoreactive processes and are most often aligned parallel to the myocardial bundles. A dense network of processes is present in the region of both the sinuatrial and atrioventricular nodes and single fibers are occasionally observed to be closely associated with nodal ganglion cells. Positive cell bodies were not seen within the heart. All small, medium and large coronary vessels are surrounded by a dense network of immunoreactive processes. A rich innervation at the media-adventitia junction of the aorta, pulmonary trunk, superior and inferior vena cava was also observed. Comparison of adjacent sections stained with antisera directed to avian pancreatic polypeptide, carboxyl-terminal hexapeptide of pancreatic polypeptide or neuropeptide Y demonstrated a very similar immunoreactive pattern, suggesting that these antisera are reacting with the same or a closely related substance. Likewise, the same immunoreactive patterns were observed in adjacent sections incubated in antiserum to neuropeptide Y or tyrosine hydroxylase, and analysis of elution-restained sections demonstrated that the same processes contain both neuropeptide Y- and tyrosine hydroxylase-like immunoreactivity. Neuropeptide Y- and tyrosine hydroxylase-like immunoreactivity was reduced by the same magnitude after treatment with the sympathetic neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopamine, but it was not affected by the primary sensory neurotoxin capsaicin. Furthermore, the pattern of neuropeptide Y- and tyrosine hydroxylase-like immunoreactivity did not match the staining patterns observed with antisera to vasoactive intestinal polypeptide or substance P or with the acetylcholinesterase staining pattern. In conclusion, neuropeptide Y-like immunoreactivity in the heart and great vessels coexists with that for catecholamines and is likely to originate from sympathetic ganglia.
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PMID:Distribution and colocalization of neuropeptide Y- and tyrosine hydroxylase-like immunoreactivity in the guinea-pig heart. 241 9

The distribution of dihydronicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate diaphorase (NADPH diaphorase) was studied by enzyme histochemistry in the striatum of the adult cat. Neurons and neuropil expressing NADPH diaphorase activity were found throughout the striatum. The diaphorase-positive neurons formed a sparse population of medium-sized cells. In the caudate nucleus they were recognized by antisera against somatostatin 14, somatostatin 28(1-12), neuropeptide Y and avian pancreatic polypeptide. The diaphorase activity of the striatal neuropil was characterized by a modular organization that was particularly distinct in the caudate nucleus. This organization was analyzed by comparing the patterns of diaphorase staining with the distribution of acetylcholinesterase activity in adjacent sections. The NADPH diaphorase activity was found to be dense in the acetylcholinesterase-rich matrix of the caudate nucleus, but weak in the acetylcholinesterase-poor compartments known as striosomes. Because of the colocalization of perikaryal NADPH diaphorase activity and somatostatinlike immunoreactivity, a comparison was also made between the distribution of diaphorase staining and immunostaining for somatostatinlike peptide in the striatal neuropil. Both observed striosomal ordering, so that the acetylcholinesterase-poor zones detected in adjoining sections corresponded to regions of low somatostatinlike immunoreactivity as well as low NADPH diaphorase staining. In some regions striosomes were more clearly delineated in the stains for diaphorase and somatostatinlike suggest that NADPH diaphorase may be a sensitive marker for the somatostatinergic neuropil as well as the somatostatinergic perikarya of the striatum, and that this enzyme could prove valuable in attempts to differentiate the processes of intrinsic somatostatin-containing fibers from any extrinsic somatostatin afferents that may exist.
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PMID:A new enzyme marker for striatal compartmentalization: NADPH diaphorase activity in the caudate nucleus and putamen of the cat. 241 68

The organization of the interpeduncular nucleus (IPN) in the adult rat was analyzed using cytoarchitectonic, histochemical and immunohistochemical methods. Four paired and four unpaired subnuclei can be distinguished in the IPN on the basis of neuronal size, morphology, staining characteristics and packing density. The rostral portion of the IPN contains a rostral dorsal, a rostral ventral and paired rostral lateral and dorsal lateral nuclei. The dorsal lateral nuclei continue into the caudal IPN, which also contains a caudal dorsal, a caudal ventral and paired caudal lateral nuclei. The distribution of extrinsic afferents and of chemically identified intrinsic neuronal and fiber populations within subdivisions of the IPN was examined using immunohistochemistry, acetylcholinesterase histochemistry, catecholamine histofluorescence and the autoradiographic tracing method. Six immunohistochemically distinct neuronal groups are identified in the IPN. Perikarya and axons showing substance P-, leu-enkephalin-, somatostatin-, avian pancreatic polypeptide-, serotonin- and glutamic acid decarboxylase-like immunoreactivity are localized to specific IPN subnuclei. Acetylcholinesterase-positive staining, extrinsic norepinephrine-containing fibers and afferents from the dorsal tegmental nuclei are also distributed specifically to IPN subnuclei. These findings demonstrate a cytoarchitectonic and cytochemical complexity in the rat IPN that implies an important functional role for this poorly understood nuclear complex.
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PMID:Interpeduncular nucleus organization in the rat: cytoarchitecture and histochemical analysis. 614 33

Numerous nerve fibres containing vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), substance P (SP) or immunoreactive avian pancreatic polypeptide (APP) occur in the nasal mucosa of several mammals, including man. Generally, the nerve fibres are distributed around small blood vessels and seromucous glands. In addition, SP containing fibres can be seen in the nasal epithelium. The pterygopalatine ganglion contains acetylcholinesterase (AChE) positive nerve cell bodies together with VIP and SP containing ones. After exposure to colchicine it could be shown that the VIP and SP containing nerve cell bodies also were positive for AChE. VIP and SP are potant mediators of atropine resistent vasodilatation in the mucosa. The physiological effects of APP are not known.
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PMID:Peptide containing nerves in the nasal mucosa. 616 79

Four peptides--vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, substance P, somatostatin and a peptide-like avian pancreatic polypeptide--have been found in nerves of the human male genitalia using highly sensitive and specific methods of immunocytochemistry and radioimmunoassay. Five other peptides (met-enkephalin, leu-enkephalin, neurotensin, bombesin and cholecystokinin-8) were absent. Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide was the most abundant peptide, its highest concentration being in the proximal corpus cavernosum. Immunoelectron microscopy localized this peptide to large (97 +/- 20 nm), round, electron-dense granules of p-type nerve terminals. Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-immunoreactive neuronal cell bodies were found in the prostate gland and the root of the corpus cavernosum. Substance P immunoreactive material was present in smaller concentration and was mainly localized in nerves around the corpuscular receptors of the glans penis. Somatostatin immunoreactive nerves were associated mainly with the smooth muscle of the seminal vesicle and the vas deferens. When antiserum to avian pancreatic polypeptide was applied, certain nerves were stained, particularly in the vas deferens, the prostate gland and the seminal vesicle. However, chromatography detected no pure avian pancreatic polypeptide suggesting the presence of a structurally related substance, possibly neuropeptide Y, which cross-reacts with the avian pancreatic polypeptide antiserum. Similar distributions between vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-immunoreactive and acetylcholinesterase-positive nerves and between avian pancreatic polypeptide-immunoreactive and adrenergic nerves were observed. A general neuronal marker, neuron-specific enolase, was used to investigate the general pattern of the organ's innervation. The abundance and distribution patterns of these peptide-immunoreactive nerves indicate that they may play important roles in the male sexual physiology.
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PMID:Peptidergic innervation of the human male genital tract. 619 58

Numerous nerve fibres containing acetylcholinesterase and noradrenaline, as well as avian pancreatic polypeptide-, vasoactive intestinal peptide-, or substance P-like immunoreactivity are observed around arteries in the external carotid rete of the cat. The nerves are located in the adventitial layer close to the media. It is possible that adrenergic, cholinergic and peptidergic nerve fibres may have a strong neurogenic influence on the rete blood vessels.
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PMID:Perivascular nerves in the feline carotid rete. 712 30


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