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Query: UNIPROT:P01178 (
oxytocin
)
15,767
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fetal hypothalami obtained from normal Long-Evans rats were transplanted to the lateral, third or fourth ventricle of adult male Brattleboro rats, homozygous for
diabetes insipidus
. The density of the capillary plexuses within the grafts did not vary as a function of their intraventricular location; all transplants exhibited a capillary density equivalent to that of the in situ hypothalamus. Intravascular injections of HRP resulted in retrograde neuronal labeling only in grafts that were attached to circumventricular organs of the host brain, especially the median eminence. Typically, HRP-associated label was confined to vascular and perivascular elements and not diffusely distributed within the graft parenchyma, indicating that capillaries within the transplants developed barrier properties similar to those of the native hypothalamus. Neural integration of the transplant with the recipient brain was limited; at most points of apposition the neuropil of graft and host were separated by an intervening ependymal layer or glia limitans. All surviving grafts contained
neurophysin
and/or vasopressin-immunoreactive (VP-ir) neurons. Three anatomically distinct populations of VP-ir neurons were identified. Magnocellular VP-ir neurons were identified in less than half of the grafts, and when present they were few in number distinct, but sparse vasopressinergic innervation of median eminence capillaries was observed in all cases where grafts containing magnocellular neurons were apposed to this structure. Most grafts contained numerous, parvicellular VP-ir neurons arranged in aggregations which resembled the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). SCN-like cell groups projected to neural targets within the graft and the host brain, but they did not project onto blood vessels. A second, distinct class of parvicellular VP-ir neuron also was identified in a majority of transplants. In contrast to SCN-like ('type' I) cells, these 'type II' parvicellular neurons were somewhat larger and found in less discretely organized groups, and they projected to vascular targets; usually locally elaborated capillary plexuses intrinsic to the transplants. In the present study, there was no amelioration of the symptoms of
diabetes insipidus
in the host animals despite the presence of numerous VP-ir neurons in virtually all grafts. This was probably related to the limited survival of magnocellular VP-ir neurons, which appear to be the principal source of vasopressinergic projections from the graft to fenestrated capillary plexuses of the host brain.
...
PMID:Characteristics of vasculature and neurovascular relations in intraventricular anterior hypothalamic transplants. 244 72
Carboxypeptidase H (CPH) is a peptide-processing enzyme thought to be involved in the synthesis of many neuropeptides, including vasopressin (VP) and
oxytocin
(OT). In this study, employing in situ hybridization histochemistry, we have shown that CPH mRNA is abundantly expressed in the magnocellular paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei of the hypothalamus, the primary sites of OT and VP synthesis. Since this enzyme is copackaged in secretory vesicles and hence coreleased with the neurohypophysial hormones, enzyme stores are depleted in parallel with the peptide hormones during states of hypersecretion. Chronic osmotic stimulation, such as occurs in long-term salt-loading or in
diabetes insipidus
in the Brattleboro rat, causes depletion of neurohypophysial hormone stores and is accompanied by increased rates of neurohypophysial hormone transcription and translation. This study has shown that the expression of CPH mRNA is also significantly increased in
oxytocin
and vasopressin producing magnocellular neurons during chronic osmotic stimulation of the hypothalamic-neurohypophysial system. CPH mRNA levels in other peptidergic areas of the brain are not significantly changed by osmotic stimulation. These findings illustrate a coordinate regulation of the transcription of peptide hormones and an enzyme required for the hormones' posttranslational processing.
...
PMID:Regulation of carboxypeptidase H gene expression in magnocellular neurons: response to osmotic stimulation. 262 43
This study investigated the mechanisms by which fetal hypothalamic transplants promote functional recovery in neurohypophysectomized rats. Seven days after neurohypophysectomy (resulting in urine osmolalities of about 800 mOsm), young adult male Long-Evans rats received either fetal hypothalamic grafts (n = 10) or sham transplants (n = 7). Recovery from the lesioned-induced
diabetes insipidus
was monitored for 6 months and then the transplant sites were evaluated by immunocytochemistry. Surviving host supraoptic magnocellular neurons and
neurophysin
-positive grafted neurons were counted and their formation of neurohemal contacts evaluated by retrograde transport of systemically injected horseradish peroxidase (HRP). There were significantly more surviving supraoptic magnocellular neurons in neurohypophysectomized animals with median eminence-placed grafts (2236 +/- 261 neurons/animal) than in animals with ectopic tissue grafts (895 +/- 142 neurons/animal) or sham implants (1052 +/- 92 neurons/animal). Almost all surviving host magnocellular neurons were labeled with retrogradely transported HRP while virtually none of the grafted
neurophysin
positive cells showed evidence of HRP uptake. The degree of functional recovery was directly correlated with the increased survival of host neurons. By 8 weeks post-transplantation, animals with median eminence-placed grafts had recovered from their
diabetes insipidus
and could concentrate their urine to within normal limits (2,120 +/- 110 mOsm). This recovery was stable for the remainder of the 6 month test period. In contrast, animals with ectopic grafts and sham transplants had permanent deficits in fluid regulation. Our results provide evidence for the long-term capacity of fetal neural tissue implants to rescue host neurons from the cell death that typically occurs in the mature central nervous system after axotomy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Fetal hypothalamic transplants promote survival and functional regeneration of axotomized adult supraoptic magnocellular neurons. 270 2
Acetylcholinesterase activity was demonstrated histochemically at light- and electron-microscopic levels, in Vibratome sections of the supraoptic nucleus of fixed hypothalami derived from osmotically stimulated and unstimulated Long Evans rats, from homozygous Brattleboro rats with hypothalamic
diabetes insipidus
, from lactating rats, from normal adult male house mice (Mus musculus) and from mice with hereditary nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (di/di). Reaction product was located in supraoptic magnocellular neurons; in dorsal and rostral aspects of the supraoptic nuclei lightly stained cells predominate, whereas in ventral and caudal regions densely staining perikarya predominate. Pre- and post-embedding immunocytochemical detection of
oxytocin
-
neurophysin
or vasopressin-
neurophysin
, combined with acetylcholinesterase histochemistry, showed that the lightly staining cells are oxytocinergic, and the densely staining cells vasopressinergic. Osmotic stimulation of the animals, either by substitution of drinking water for 3 days with 2.5% saline or reason of genetic defects which result in
diabetes insipidus
, enhanced the acetylcholinesterase activity of the vasopressin neurons but had little effect on the weekly acetylcholinesterase-reactive
oxytocin
cells. Acetylcholinesterase activity was particularly marked in the hypertrophied abnormal magnocellular neurons of homozygous Brattleboro rats which do not release significant amounts of vasopressin. The increased acetylcholinesterase activity in osmotically stimulated animals cannot, therefore, be a function of vasopressin. Acetylcholinesterase activity was also detected in large multipolar neurons lying dorsolateral to the supraoptic nucleus, and in their fine axonal processes which project towards the supraoptic nucleus. A very few synaptic boutons surrounded by acetylcholinesterase reaction product were found in contact with magnocellular neuron basal dendrites. However, much of the punctate acetylcholinesterase reactivity observed at the light microscopic level and previously interpreted as representing the loci of cholinergic synaptic boutons was shown to be intracellular, and probably caused by acetylcholinesterase activity in some large, secondary lysosomes.
...
PMID:Differential distribution of acetylcholinesterase activity among vasopressin- and oxytocin-containing supraoptic magnocellular neurons. 276 86
A single-base deletion in the single-copy vasopressin gene is the cause of
diabetes insipidus
in the homozygous Brattleboro rat (di/di). It results in the synthesis of an altered vasopressin precursor of which the axonal transport is blocked. Paradoxically, a small number of solitary hypothalamic neurons displays all the immunoreactivities of the wild-type vasopressin precursor (i.e., vasopressin,
neurophysin
, and a glycopeptide). In the present paper we provide evidence that these neurons have undergone a switch to a genuine heterozygous (di/+) phenotype; i.e., they contain the immunoreactivities of both the wild-type and the mutated vasopressin precursors. In the neural lobe, glycopeptide fibers are also present, showing that axonal transport of the wild-type precursor is restored. Moreover, the number of neurons displaying this di/+ phenotype increases markedly and in a linear way (from 0.1% up to 3% of the vasopressin cells) with age. These findings indicate that after mitotic division has ceased, genomic alterations occur in somatic neurons in vivo. The molecular event generating the di/+ phenotype in the di/di animal could involve a somatic intrachromosomal gene conversion between the homologous exons of the vasopressin and the related
oxytocin
genes.
...
PMID:Age-related development of a heterozygous phenotype in solitary neurons of the homozygous Brattleboro rat. 276 32
Apomorphine, a centrally-acting emetic, was administered subcutaneously (50 micrograms/kg) to nine normal subjects (four male, five female; aged 22-36 years) and four patients with idiopathic
diabetes insipidus
(DI) (one male, three female; aged 24-49 years). In the normal subjects this stimulus caused nausea (and vomiting in seven of nine) with a latency of 9.5 +/- 0.9 min which was followed by a large increase in plasma arginine vasopressin (AVP) concentration (from 0.9 +/- 0.2 pmol/l to 249 +/- 104 pmol/l at 15 min after the onset of symptoms; mean +/- SEM, P less than 0.01). There was a small but significant increase in plasma
oxytocin
(
OXT
) concentration (from 1.6 +/- 0.4 pmol/l to 6.2 +/- 3.4 pmol/l; P less than 0.05). Mean arterial pressure (MAP) fell slightly (from 87 +/- 1.9 mm Hg to 71 +/- 4.4 mm Hg; P less than 0.05) 15 min after the onset of nausea; there was no change in blood haematocrit or plasma osmolality and sodium concentration. In the DI patients apomorphine produced nausea (with vomiting in three of four) with a latency of 10.0 +/- 1.4 min but failed to cause an increase in either plasma AVP or
OXT
. In the DI patients the fall in MAP did not reach statistical significance (83 +/- 4 mm Hg to 71 +/- 11 mm Hg); there was also no change in haematocrit, osmolality or sodium concentration. Ipecacuanha, an emetic with both peripheral and central actions, was administered orally to seven normal subjects (three male, four female; aged 22-36 years) six of whom also underwent apomorphine tests.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Responses of plasma oxytocin and arginine vasopressin to nausea induced by apomorphine and ipecacuanha. 290 23
A paradigm was developed for the chronic osmotic stimulation of homozygous
diabetes insipidus
rats of the Brattleboro strain, a strain that fails to synthesize vasopressin. This study examines the adaptation of 2 sets of coexisting peptide hormone magnocellular neurons in the hypothalamoneurohypophyseal system (HNS) of Long Evans (LE), Brattleboro heterozygote (HZ), and Brattleboro homozygote (DI) rats: (1) the arginine8-vasopressin (AVP)/dynorphin (DYN) neurons, and (2) the
oxytocin
(OT)/cholecystokinin (CCK8) neurons of the paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei, which project to the posterior pituitary. The regimen of chronic intermittent salt-loading (CISL) involved the replacement of 2% saline for normal drinking water for 18 hr/d. This protocol effectively increased plasma levels of AVP and OT in LE and HZ rats,
oxytocin
in DI rats, and maintained the posterior pituitary in a state depleted of AVP, OT, CCK, and peptides derived from pro-dynorphin: DYN A 1-17, DYN A 1-8, and DYN B 1-13. The ratio of pituitary DYN A 1-17 to DYN A 1-8 content in DI rats or in LE, HZ, and DI rats following 6 d of CISL suggests a preferential release of DYN A 1-17 during periods of chronic secretory activity. In response to chronic secretory activity, mRNAs for AVP, OT, DYN, and CCK increased 1.5-2-fold in all 3 AVP rat strains, with mRNAs for coexisting peptide hormones displaying parallel increases. Mutant AVP mRNA in the DI rat was expressed at very low levels and DYN mRNA in very high levels, with each of these mRNAs continuing to be regulated by CISL in a normal manner. These results suggest a regulatory relationship between AVP and OT neurons, in which vasopressin neurons are feedback-regulated by AVP, most likely via plasma osmolarity, and that
oxytocin
neurons are modulated by peptides derived from pro-dynorphin.
...
PMID:Regulation of hypothalamic magnocellular neuropeptides and their mRNAs in the Brattleboro rat: coordinate responses to further osmotic challenge. 290 13
Anti-
neurophysin
serum was applied in the immunohistochemical technique to anterior pituitary tissues obtained from normal and chronically dehydrated rats and also from rats with chronic
diabetes insipidus
(Brattleboro strain). In all cases there was a positive staining in the corticotrophs, which also stained for either beta-endorphin (beta-END) or adrenocorticotrophin hormone (ACTH). It was concluded that corticotroph-
neurophysin
may be synthesized independently of either ACTH or beta-END.
...
PMID:Non-coordinate localization of corticotroph-neurophysin and beta-endorphin in the anterior pituitary gland of the rat. 301 38
Neurohypophysial hormones and neurophysins are former domains of common precursors processed during the axonal transport from hypothalamus to neurohypophysis. Two neurohormones, an
oxytocin
-like and a vasopressin-like, and two neurophysins, termed VLDV- and MSEL-neurophysins according to residues in positions 2, 3, 6 and 7, are usually found in vertebrate species. In mammals, a non-covalent stoichiometric and reversible complex including the two neurohormones and the two neurophysins has been isolated. In contrast to other mammals investigated, the three-domain precursor of vasopressin (vasopressin, MSEL-
neurophysin
and copeptin) is not completely processed in guinea pig and an intermediate precursor including MSEL-
neurophysin
and copeptin linked by an arginine residue has been isolated and sequenced. "In vitro" processing of this intermediate through trypsin-Sepharose has revealed cleavages only in the inter-domain region, showing the role of precursor conformation in the processing. In neurosecretory granules from guinea pig, only free vasopressin and MSEL-
neurophysin
have been detected. In bovine foetus at the age of 3 and 7 months, only vasopressin and
oxytocin
in molar ratios 4 and 3, respectively, have been identified as well as adult MSEL- and VLDV-neurophysins. No vasotocin and no additional
neurophysin
when compared to the adult have been found.
Diabetes insipidus
rats from the Brattleboro strain have been examined in order to identify an abnormal vasopressin precursor. No free vasopressin and no free MSEL-
neurophysin
have been detected through high pressure liquid chromatography whereas
oxytocin
and VLDV-
neurophysin
have been identified.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Common precursors of neurohypophysial hormones and neurophysins]. 305 82
The number of gene assignments to human chromosome 20 has increased slowly until recently. Only seven genes and one fragile site were confirmed assignments to chromosome 20 at the Ninth Human Gene Mapping Workshop in September 1987 (HGM9). One fragile site, 13 additional genes, and 10 DNA sequences that identify restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs), however, were provisionally added to the map at HGM9. Five mutated genes on chromosome 20 have a relation to disease: a mutation in the adenosine deaminase gene results in a deficiency of the enzyme and severe combined immune deficiency; mutations in the gene for the growth hormone releasing factor result in some forms of dwarfism; mutations in the closely linked genes for the hormones arginine vasopressin and
oxytocin
and their neurophysins are probably responsible for some
diabetes insipidus
; and mutations in the gene that regulates both alpha-neuraminidase and beta-galactosidase activities determine galactosialidosis. The gene for the prion protein is on chromosome 20; it is related to the infectious agent of kuru, Creutzfeld-Jacob disease, and Gertsmann-Straussler syndrome, although the nature of the relationship is not completely understood. Two genes that code for tyrosine kinases are on the chromosome, SRC1 the proto-oncogene and a gene (HCK) coding for haemopoietic kinase (an src-like kinase), but no direct relation to cancer has been shown for either of these kinases. The significance of non-random loss of chromosome 20 in the malignant diseases non-lymphocytic leukaemia and polycythaemia vera is not understood. Twenty-four additional loci are assigned to the chromosome: five genes that code for binding proteins, one for a light chain of ferritin, genes for three enzymes (inosine triphosphatase, s-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase, and sterol delta 24-reductase), one for each of a secretory protein and an opiate neuropeptide, a cell surface antigen, two fragile sites, and 10 DNA sequences (one satellite and nine unique) that detect RFLPs.
...
PMID:The map of chromosome 20. 307 44
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