Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0344307 (analgesia)
28,200 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Estrogen affects female sexual behavior, analgesia, and micturition in mammals. One of the possible sites at which estrogen might exert its effect on these functions is the periaqueductal gray (PAG). The PAG is involved in each of these functions, it receives sensory input relevant to these functions from the lumbosacral cord, and contains estrogen receptor-alpha immunoreactive (ER-alpha IR) neurons. The present light (LM) and electron microscopic (EM) study seeks to determine whether there are monosynaptic projections from the lumbosacral cord to ER-alpha IR neurons in the PAG of the female rhesus monkey. Tracer was injected into the lumbosacral cord to visualize the lumbosacral-PAG projection, and the distribution of ER-alpha IR neurons in the PAG was studied immunohistochemically. The medial part of the ventrolateral caudal PAG received the densest projection from the lumbosacral cord. Another prominent projection was found in the lateral PAG at the intercollicular level. Although ER-alpha IR neurons were widely distributed throughout the PAG, approximately 40% of ER-alpha IR PAG neurons were located as a distinct cluster in the medial portion of the ventrolateral, caudal PAG. Double labeling experiments showed that the location of this cluster precisely overlapped with the densest lumbosacral-PAG projection. EM revealed that axons from the lumbosacral cord made asymmetrical synaptic contacts with unlabeled dendrites and ER-alpha IR neuronal somata in the ventrolateral PAG. It is concluded that there exists a specific, monosynaptic pathway from lumbosacral neurons to ER-alpha expressing PAG neurons in the rhesus monkey. This pathway might be involved in the mechanisms of analgesia, blood pressure, mating behavior, and micturition.
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PMID:Estrogen receptor-alpha immunoreactive neurons in the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray receive monosynaptic input from the lumbosacral cord in the rhesus monkey. 1179 45

The periaqueductal gray (PAG) contains numerous estrogen receptor-alpha immunoreactive (ER-alpha IR) neurons that are distributed in a species-specific way. These neurons might modulate different types of behavior that are mediated by the PAG such as active and passive coping responses, analgesia, and reproductive behavior. In primates, it is not known whether ER-alpha IR PAG neurons represent local interneurons and/or neurons that project to brainstem areas that control these behaviors. In this double labeling study, we asked whether ER-alpha IR neurons in the PAG of the rhesus monkey project to the nucleus retroambiguus (NRA), an area in the ventrolateral caudal medulla oblongata that is involved in expiration, vocalization, and reproductive behavior. Tracer was injected into the caudal lateral medulla oblongata to retrogradely label PAG neurons, and ER-alpha was visualized immunohistochemically. Although ER-alpha IR neurons and NRA-projection neurons were present at similar levels of the PAG, their distributions hardly overlapped. ER-alpha IR PAG neurons that project to the lateral caudal medulla represented less than 2% of ER-alpha IR PAG neurons. These double-labeled neurons were mainly located in the ipsilateral caudal PAG. The cluster of neurons in the medial part of the lateral PAG that projects specifically to the NRA-region did not contain double-labeled cells. The results indicate that only a few ER-alpha IR PAG neurons project to the NRA-region. This might be related to the modest effects of estrogen on mating-related behavior in primates compared most other mammalian species. Remaining ER-alpha IR PAG neurons might act locally on other PAG neurons, or they might represent neurons that project to other areas. Furthermore, the finding that the distributions of ER-alpha IR neurons and neurons that project to premotor neurons in the NRA-region scarcely overlap illustrates that the PAG in primates is very highly organized into anatomically distinct regions compared with other species.
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PMID:Projections from estrogen receptor-alpha immunoreactive neurons in the periaqueductal gray to the lateral medulla oblongata in the rhesus monkey. 1505 Nov 63