Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0403608 (ureter)
9,655 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Using specific radioligand receptor binding assays, we have, for the first time, quantitated both alpha- and beta-adrenergic receptors in the musculature of the lower ureter, bladder body, posterior bladder base, and proximal urethra of the dog, and in the bladder base and body of the rabbit. For the beta receptor assay 3H-dihydroalprenolol was used as the ligand, and, for the alpha receptor assay, 3H-dihydroergocryptine was used. In the dog, there was a significantly greater density of beta receptors in the bladder body than in either the ureter or the posterior bladder base. The urethra had an intermediate density. The bladder base and the proximal urethra had a significantly greater density of alpha receptors than either the ureter or the bladder dome. The dissociation constant of beta receptors for DHA was approximately 9 nM for all tissues studied, and that of alpha receptors for DHE approximately 7 nM. A similar distribution of alpha-and beta adrenergic receptors was seen in the rabbit bladder.
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PMID:Quantitative analysis of alpha and beta adrenergic receptor densities in the lower urinary tract of the dog and the rabbit. 22 37

I investigated the biochemical (Bmax, KD) and functional (contractile force) characteristics of autonomic receptors in the 1-day-old rabbit urinary tract smooth muscle, and compared the data obtained to those already reported in adult rabbits. The rank order of the receptor densities in neonatal rabbits are dome greater than base greater than urethra greater than ureter for alpha 1 (3H-PZ), ureter greater than urethra greater than base greater than dome for alpha 2 (3H-YOH), dome greater than base greater than urethra greater than ureter for beta (3H-DHA) and dome greater than base greater than urethra greater than ureter for muscarinic (3H-QNB). Unlike the findings in the adult rabbit, there is a much larger number of functional muscarinic receptors in the bladder dome and a much smaller number of functional alpha 1-receptors in the urethra of neonatal rabbits. The differences observed in the pattern of distribution of these receptors between neonatal and adult urinary tracts may play a determinant role in the physiological development of the urinary system.
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PMID:[Biochemical and functional characteristics of autonomic receptors in neonatal urinary tract smooth muscle]. 204 1