Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01178 (oxytocin)
15,767 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The distribution of FMRFamidelike peptides was studied in the nervous system of the lobster Homarus americanus by using immunocytochemical and radioimmunological techniques. By radioimmunoassay FMRFamidelike immunoreactivity (FLI) was found in low levels (ca. 1 pmol/mg protein) throughout the ventral nerve cord and in much higher amounts (60-100 pmol/mg protein) in the neurosecretory pericardial organs. Immunocytochemical studies showed FLI in approximately 300-350 cell bodies, and in distinct neuropil regions, neuronal fiber tracts, and varicose endings. Specificity of the immunostaining was tested by preabsorbing the antiserum with FMRFamide, with peptides having similar carboxyl termini to FMRFamide (Met-enkephalin-Arg-Phe, Phe-Met-Arg-Tyr-amide), with several amidated peptides (alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone, substance P, oxytocin), and with proctolin, a peptide found widely distributed in the lobster nervous system. Of these substances, only FMRFamide blocked the staining. In addition to the pericardial organs, significant levels of FLI were found in neurosecretory regions associated with thoracic second roots and in the connective tissue sheath that surrounds the ventral nerve cord. In all three regions, immunocytochemical studies showed the FLI to be localized to fine fibers and associated terminal varicosities lying close to the surface of the tissue, with no obvious target in their immediate vicinity. When examined at the ultrastructural level, the immunoreactive varicosities of the thoracic second roots and of the ventral nerve cord sheaths were found a few microns from the surface of the tissue and contained electron-dense granules. In the immunoreactive nerve cord sheath endings, in addition to the large, dense granules, small, clear vesicles were found. The appearance and location of these terminals suggest a neurohormonal role for FMRFamidelike peptides in lobsters. The observation that low levels of FLI are found in the hemolymph supports this suggestion. In addition, the localization of FLI to particular neuronal somata, fiber tracts, and neuropil regions suggests possible functional roles for these peptides in (1) integration of visual and olfactory information, (2) function of the anterior and posterior gut, and (3) the control of exoskeletal muscles.
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PMID:FMRFamidelike peptides of Homarus americanus: distribution, immunocytochemical mapping, and ultrastructural localization in terminal varicosities. 332 67

Intracranial dialysis was used to measure the release of oxytocin (OXY), monoamines and their metabolites and uric acid (UA) from the substantia nigra (SN) and olfactory bulb (OB) of sheep during parturition, suckling, separation from lambs and eating. Results showed that OXY concentrations increased significantly during parturition, suckling and eating in the SN and during parturition and suckling in the OB. Concentrations of dopamine (DA) increased significantly in the SN during suckling and eating and in the OB during parturition and suckling. The dopamine metabolite, homovanillic acid, also increased significantly in the SN during parturition. Concentrations of the noradrenaline metabolite, 4-hydroxy-3-methoxyphenylethan-1,2-diol (MHPG) and the purine metabolite, UA, were significantly raised during parturition, suckling and separation from the lambs in the SN and increased UA levels were also found during eating. In a separate experiment it was confirmed that OXY was detectable in homogenates of both the SN and the OB. These results show that, in the sheep, OXY and DA release in the SN is associated with maternal and ingestive behaviour whereas similar release in the OB may only be related to maternal behaviour. Release of MHPG in the SN may be associated with maternal behaviour and/or stress.
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PMID:Intracranial dialysis measurement of oxytocin, monoamine and uric acid release from the olfactory bulb and substantia nigra of sheep during parturition, suckling, separation from lambs and eating. 335 76

An immunocytochemical study of the magnocellular neurosecretory nuclei was performed in the snake Natrix maura and the turtle Mauremys caspica by use of antisera against: (1) a mixture of both bovine neurophysins, (2) bovine oxytocin-neurophysin, (3) arginine vasotocin, and (4) mesotocin. Arginine vasotocin- and mesotocin-immunoreactivities were localized in individual neurons of the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei, with a distinct pattern of distribution in both species. The same cells appeared to be stained by the anti-oxytocin-neurophysin and antimesotocin sera. The supraoptic nucleus can be subdivided into rostral medial and caudal portions. In N. maura, but not in M. caspica, neurophysin-immunoreactive neurons were found in the retrochiasmatic nucleus. No immunoreactive elements were seen in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of both species after the use of any of the antisera. A dorsolateral aggregation of neurophysin-containing cells, localized over the lateral forebrain bundle, was present in both species. Magnocellular and parvocellular neurophysin-immunoreactive neurons were present in the paraventricular nucleus of both species. In the turtle, the paraventricular neurons were arranged into four distinct layers parallel to the ependyma; these neurons were bipolar with the major axis perpendicular to the ventricle, and many of them projected processes toward the cerebrospinal-fluid compartment. In N. maura a group of large neurons of the paraventricular nucleus was found in a very lateral position. The posterior lobe of the hypophysis and the external zone of the median eminence contained arginine vasotocin- and mesotocin-immunoreactive nerve fibers. The lamina termialis of both species was supplied with a dense bundle of fibers containing immunoreactive neurophysin. Neurophysin-immunoreactive fibers were also present in the septum, some telencephalic regions, including the cortex and the olfactory tubercule, in the paraventricular organ, and the periventricular and periaqueductal gray of the brainstem.
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PMID:Immunocytochemical study of the hypothalamic magnocellular neurosecretory nuclei of the snake Natrix maura and the turtle Mauremys caspica. 340 95

Nulliparous female Sprague-Dawley rats, cannulated in the left lateral ventricle, were ovariectomized and estrogen primed, then either rendered anosmic via intranasal irrigation with zinc sulfate or left with intact olfaction. Forty-eight hr later, after a 2-hr habituation to the test cage, these animals were injected with either intracerebroventricular oxytocin (400 ng in 2 microliter saline) or saline (2 microliter). Only the group receiving both zinc sulfate and oxytocin became maternal. Additionally, approximately one third of the olfaction-intact rats and none of the anosmic rats cannibalized the rat pups. These results are discussed in regard to discrepancies in the literature regarding oxytocin's role in inducing maternal behavior, as well as the functional connection of the olfactory and oxytocin systems.
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PMID:The ability of oxytocin to induce short latency maternal behavior is dependent on peripheral anosmia. 360 16

The de Morsier syndrome, or septo-optic dysplasia, is a developmental anomaly characterized by involvement of the optic system, hypothalamic-pituitary axis and septum pellucidum. Only a few anatomical observations are recorded. We report three new cases and review the pertinent literature. The neuropathological lesions varied as did the clinical features. The hypothalamic nuclei were most commonly involved, followed by the optic system and the septum pellucidum. Other lesions were found in the cerebral cortex, corpus callosum, olfactory system and cerebellum. The hypopituitarism appeared to have been secondary to hypothalamic damage rather than to intrinsic pituitary defect. A virtually normal histology and the usual endocrine cell populations were demonstrated by immunocytochemistry in the adenohypophysis. Damage to the neurophysin-containing cells of the hypothalamus explains the various degrees of clinically observed diabetes insipidus.
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PMID:Neuropathology of "septo-optic dysplasia" (de Morsier syndrome) with immunohistochemical studies of the hypothalamus and pituitary gland. 362 36

Oxytocin-binding sites were detected by autoradiography on rat brain sections incubated in the presence of the [3H]oxytocin. These sites were characterized pharmacologically using quantitative autoradiography. High pressure liquid chromatography controls of the incubation media indicated that labelling was due to the intact [3H]oxytocin molecule. Pharmacological analysis of different locations (central amygdaloid nucleus, ventral subiculum and ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus) showed that the sites detected had a high affinity for oxytocin and also for arginine-vasopressin. In contrast, some areas known to bind vasopressin intensely, such as suprachiasmatic and lateral septum nuclei, had little or no affinity for oxytocin. Autoradiographs revealed [3H]oxytocin-binding sites in already known brain areas (olfactory centres, ventral subiculum, central amygdaloid nucleus, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis) albeit with more extensive labelling of some of these formations, in particular, the amygdaloid complex. In addition, specific [3H]oxytocin-binding sites were found in areas not yet reported to bind oxytocin, such as the paraventricular thalamic and caudate nuclei. In the hypothalamus, specific binding sites were not detected in the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei: the only structure labelled was the ventrolateral part of the ventromedial nucleus. Discrepancies between the concentrations of [3H]oxytocin-binding sites, the known distribution of oxytocin-containing endings and electrophysiological data indicate that autoradiography, under our conditions, apparently only reveals some of the oxytocin receptors in the brain. Thus, in the hypothalamus, no relationship can be established between the known effect of oxytocin on oxytocinergic magnocellular neurons and detection of specific [3H]oxytocin-binding sites. Autoradiography may reveal mainly oxytocin-binding sites in areas receiving diverse "parasynaptic" information, where oxytocin might play a modulatory role rather than exerting rapid, short-term effects of the neurotransmitter type.
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PMID:Pharmacological characteristics and anatomical distribution of [3H]oxytocin-binding sites in the Wistar rat brain studied by autoradiography. 364 80

The axonal efferents of neurons of the supraoptic nucleus area were studied by radioautography in the rat after discrete stereotaxic injections of [3H]leucine into this nucleus. Beside a densely labeled pathway running from the nucleus to the posterior pituitary through the internal median eminence, several of the visualized labeled axonal bundles were found to project into various extrahypothalamic regions, including the olfactory bulb, the cortex, the lateral habenula, the subcommissural organ, the amygdala, the mammillary bodies and the locus coeruleus. These results suggest that part of the vasopressin- or oxytocin-containing perikarya located in the supraoptic nucleus constitute the cells of origin of axons which also contain these peptides and which have already been shown to be present in the above extrahypothalamic areas. This also implies that, like the paraventricular nucleus, the supraoptic nucleus is also involved in central extrahypothalamic regulations.
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PMID:Radioautographic evidence that axons from the area of supraoptic nuclei in the rat project to extrahypothalamic brain regions. 372 90

A 28-year-old man with the chronic syndrome of Inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion and hypertension was found to have an olfactory neuroblastoma. We demonstrated evidence of elevated circulating arginine vasopressin levels, significantly elevated arginine vasopressin and vasopressin neurophysin levels in the tumor extract, and immunohistochemical staining for arginine vasopressin and vasopressin neurophysin in the tumor cells. The patient's clinical syndrome, including hypertension, resolved following subtotal removal of the tumor and radiation therapy. This study identified olfactory neuroblastoma as a definite cause of ectopic arginine vasopressin secretion causing the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion.
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PMID:Chronic syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion and hypertension in a patient with olfactory neuroblastoma. Evidence of ectopic production of arginine vasopressin by the tumor. 375 13

The objective of the present study was to investigate whether oxytocin is released in response to feeding in analogy to the response induced by suckling. Therefore, repeated plasma samples were drawn from dogs and pigs during feeding and suckling and oxytocin levels were determined by radioimmunoassay. As expected suckling gave rise to immediate and short-lasting increases of oxytocin levels in both species. More surprisingly, feeding in female and male dogs as well as in lactating sows was accompanied by a similar-sized rise of oxytocin levels. The oxytocin peak sometimes occurred before the actual period of suckling or feeding, suggesting that the output of oxytocin had been conditioned to visual, olfactory or auditory stimuli associated with both types of situations. It is well known that oxytocin is released in lactating animals in response to touching of the teats. It is possible that also the presence of food in the gastro-intestinal tract activates neurogenic mechanisms which stimulates the release of oxytocin. Since oxytocin causes a release of insulin and VIP (vasoactive intestinal polypeptide), peptides which appear in the circulation following both suckling and feeding, it is suggested that oxytocin may be involved in the control of the suckling- and feeding-related output of these peptides.
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PMID:Plasma levels of oxytocin increase in response to suckling and feeding in dogs and sows. 384 Mar 20

An autoradiographical oxytocin (OXT) labeling procedure using frozen, unfixed tissue sections resulted in very dense labeling of the mammary gland. Binding sites for OXT were also found in various forebrain areas, including the hippocampus, especially the ventral subiculum and taenia tecta, central amygdala, posterior part of the anterior olfactory nucleus, claustrum, nucleus accumbens, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus, and the posterior pituitary. The ependyma of the lateral ventricle and/or the chorioid plexus near the lateral septum was labeled as well. These data support the hypothesis that OXT plays a role in a number of centrally regulated processes.
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PMID:Light microscopic autoradiographic localization of [3H]oxytocin binding sites in the rat brain, pituitary and mammary gland. 407 53


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