Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: EC:3.1.3.5 (
5'-nucleotidase
)
3,167
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Purinergic nerves supply the gastrointestinal tract of vertebrates, including fish, amphibians, reptiles and birds, as well as mammals. Their cell bodies are located in Auerbach's plexus and their axons extend in an anal direction before innervating mainly the circular muscle coat. In the stomach they are controlled by preganglionic cholinergic fibres of parasympathetic origin. They are involved in "receptive relaxation" of the stomach, "descending inhibition" in peristalsis and reflex relaxation of oesophageal and internal anal sphincters. The terminal
varicosities
of purinergic nerves are characterised by a predominance of "large opaque vesicles," which can be distinguished from the "large granular vesicles" found in small numbers in both adrenergic and cholinergic nerves. Stimulation of purinergic nerves with single pulses produces hyperpolarisations of up to 25 mV (inhibitory junction potentials) in smooth muscle cells. These potentials are unaffected by atropine, adrenergic neuron blocking agents or sympathetic denervation, but are abolished by tetrodotoxin. The "rebound contraction" which characteristically follows cessation of purinergic nerve stimulation is probably due to prostaglandin. Evidence that ATP is the transmitter released from purinergic nerves includes: (1) synthesis and storage of ATP in nerves; (2) release of ATP from the nerves when they are stimulated; (3) exogenously applied ATP mimicking the action of nerve-released transmitter, both producing a specific increase in K+ conductance; (4) the presence of Mg-activated ATPase,
5'-nucleotidase
and adenosine deaminase, enzymes which inactivate ATP; (5) drugs (including quinidine, some 2-substituted imidazolines, 2-2'pyridylisatogen and dipyridamole) which produce similar blocking or potentiating effects on the response to exogenously applied ATP and nerve stimulation. Speculations are made about the evolution and development of the nervous system, including the possibility that purinergic nerves are a primitive nerve type.
...
PMID:Comparative studies of purinergic nerves. 17 88
Distribution of the binding sites for [3H]diprenorphine, a non-selective opiate ligand, was studied in membrane fractions from longitudinal muscle/myenteric plexus and circular muscle containing deep muscular plexus. [3H]saxitoxin was used as a marker for neuronal plasma membranes and
5'-nucleotidase
as a marker for smooth muscle plasma membranes. Saxitoxin binding correlated strongly with diprenorphine binding, but
5'-nucleotidase
correlated poorly with diprenorphine or saxitoxin binding in these fractions. Opiate binding sites in membranes of myenteric and deep muscular plexus were of high affinity (Kd = 0.12 and 0.18 nM, respectively) with maximum binding capacity of 400 and 500 fmol/mg protein, respectively. Competition experiments using subtype-selective opiate ligands indicated that all three subtypes of opiate receptors were present in the same ratio of 40-45% mu-subtypes, 40-45% delta-subtypes, and 10-15% kappa-subtypes on both plexuses. Opiate receptors of canine small intestine, therefore, are located primarily or exclusively on nerves with similar distributions in nerve membranes containing only axonal
varicosities
(deep muscular plexus) as in those containing neurons, dendrites, and
varicosities
(myenteric plexus).
...
PMID:Distribution of opioid receptors in canine small intestine: implications for function. 254 2
Histochemical staining techniques for
5'-nucleotidase
(5'-Nase) and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) were undertaken to localize the lymphatic network and nerve plexus in the monkey urinary bladder. Abundant 5'-Nase-positive lymphatic networks were characterized by increased number of valve-like structures and decreased calibre of blind-ends from the subepithelium to the subserosa. AChE-positive nerve fibers were visible throughout the vesical walls as fine plexuses, the densest being the neuromuscular plexus among the detrusor muscle cells or in each muscle bundle. AChE-positive nerve fibers or terminals were more frequently discernible around blood vessels than around lymphatics, and showed more intimate association with the lymphatics in the muscularis than those in the subepithelium. The nerve terminals in the subepithelium were frequently separated from attenuated lymphatic endothelium by the long processes of fibroblasts or some connective tissue cells. An ultrastructural observation revealed that unmyelinated nerve fibers with numerous neurofilaments and neurotubules run in close apposition to the lymphatic endothelium. Noteworthily, fewer terminal
varicosities
containing numerous small agranular vesicles (30-50 nm) and mitochondria, partially or completely bare of their Schwann cell covering in the vicinity of the lymphatic endothelium, were found in the subendothelium of initial lymphatics than in collecting ones. These terminals were occasionally identified at a distance of 120-350 nm from the subendothelial aspect of valve-originating roots, although no direct innervation of the vascular muscle cells could be found. A loose fibro-elastic connective tissue was usually interlaced between glial cell covering and lymphatic endothelium. The intrinsic interrelation of the lymphatic wall with the nerve plexus implies that the twisted subendothelial nerve terminals might be involved in intramural lymph drainage of the bladder.
...
PMID:Intrinsic interrelation of lymphatic endothelia with nerve elements in the monkey urinary bladder. 1076 Jul 47