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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Substance P receptor-like immunoreactive (SPR-LI) structures and changes following intravenous injection of
vasopressin
in the medullary visceral zone (MVZ) of the rat were studied by using immunohistochemical methods. In normal control rats the distribution of SPR-LI structure in MVZ generally matched with that of immunostaining against substance P (SP-LI) except in some areas. SPR-LI neurons and dendrites differed in size and shape in different areas of MVZ. Their dendrites could be classified into three types, i.e, wool-shaped, smooth and varicose. Some SPR-LI neurons were also positive for
tyrosine hydroxylase
-like immunoreactivity (TH-LI) . After administration of
vasopressin
SPR-LI structures became denser, especially at levels of pyramidal decussation (PYX) and area postrema (AP). The dendrites of motor dorsal nucleus of X (NMDX) in the dorsal part of MVZ appeared thin and straight in morphology instead of curl and thick outlooks. These results implicate that some SPR-LI neurons might be involved in the modulation of the cardiovascular stress induced by
vasopressin
.
...
PMID:Distribution of SPR-like immunoreactivity in the medullary visceral zone of the rat and changes following acute myocardial ischemia induced by intravenous injection of vasopressin. 1002 36
The neurotransmitters expressed by neurons activated by D-fenfluramine (5 mg/kg, i.p.) were identified in the hypothalamus, amygdala and bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. Induction of Fos immunoreactivity following D-fenfluramine injection was used as an index of neuronal activation. To test whether D-fenfluramine activated neurons by releasing serotonin from the serotonergic nerve terminals, rats were pretreated with fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, i.p.), a serotonin reuptake inhibitor that prevents the release of serotonin stimulated by D-fenfluramine, 12 h before D-fenfluramine injection. The approximate percentages of peptidergic neurons that contained Fos immunoreactivity after D-fenfluramine administration were 94% of corticotropin-releasing factor and 22% of oxytocin cells in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus, 6% of oxytocin cells in the supraoptic nucleus of the hypothalamus, 36% of enkephalin and 15% of neurotensin cells in the central amygdaloid nucleus, and 19% of enkephalin and 9% of neurotensin cells in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. Fluoxetine pretreatment blocked Fos expression in corticotropin-releasing factor- and oxytocin-expressing cells in the hypothalamus, but not in enkephalin-and neurotensin-expressing cells located in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis and central amygdaloid nucleus. D-Fenfluramine did not induce Fos immunoreactivity in
vasopressin
-, thyrotropin-releasing hormone-, somatostatin- and
tyrosine hydroxylase
-containing cells in the hypothalamus, and corticotropin-releasing factor-expressing cells in the central amygdaloid nucleus and bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. These results show that D-fenfluramine stimulates corticotropin-releasing factor- and oxytocin-expressing cells in the hypothalamus via serotonin release. The enkephalin- and neurotensin-expressing cells in the amygdala are activated by D-fenfluramine via non-serotonergic mechanisms. Induction of Fos expression by D-fenfluramine in restricted populations of cells suggests a selective activation of neuronal circuitry that is likely to be involved in the appetite suppressant effects of D-fenfluramine.
...
PMID:D-Fenfluramine induces serotonin-mediated Fos expression in corticotropin-releasing factor and oxytocin neurons of the hypothalamus, and serotonin-independent Fos expression in enkephalin and neurotensin neurons of the amygdala. 1021 85
Recent investigations in the rat have implicated a noradrenergic innervation to the horizontal nucleus of the diagonal band of Broca as a critical link in a neural circuit that conveys baroreceptor information centrally to inhibit the firing of
vasopressin
-secreting neurons in the hypothalamic supraoptic nucleus. In this study we used small intra-diagonal band injections of a retrograde tracer, rhodamine latex microspheres, in combination with
tyrosine hydroxylase
histochemistry to identify brainstem noradrenergic cells contributing to this innervation. In three cases where tracer injections were limited to the horizontal limb of the diagonal band, we observed 20-50 double-labelled neurons ipsilaterally in the dorsal part of the locus coeruleus (A6) and the caudal nucleus tractus solitarius (A2), and bilaterally in the caudal ventrolateral medulla (A1). Double-labelled neurons were also noted in the ventral tegmental area (dopaminergic A10 cell group). Although all major brainstem noradrenergic cell groups contribute fibers to the horizontal limb of the nucleus of diagonal band, data from physiological studies suggest that the noradrenergic A2 neurons in the nucleus tractus solitarius are the most likely pathway through which it receives this baroreceptor information.
...
PMID:Projections of medullary and pontine noradrenergic neurons to the horizontal limb of the nucleus of diagonal band in the rat. 1036 29
This study has evaluated the dynamic of intracellular
vasopressin
and
tyrosine hydroxylase
contents in the neuron cell bodies in the supraoptic nucleus and in the axons of the posterior lobe in rats drinking 2% NaCl for 1, 2, and 3 weeks. The number of
vasopressin
-immunoreactive neurons increased by the end of the second week of osmotic stimulation that might be explained by the onset of
vasopressin
synthesis in the neurons which do not synthesize this neurohormone under normal physiological conditions. The concentration of
vasopressin
fell down continuously during the first two weeks of salt-loading, apparently, due to predominance of the
vasopressin
release over its synthesis. Over the third week of salt-loading, the intracellular concentration of
vasopressin
was not changed significantly suggesting the establishment of the dynamic equilibrium between the
vasopressin
synthesis and release. The number of
tyrosine hydroxylase
-immunoreactive neurons and the amount of
tyrosine hydroxylase
in cell bodies and the large axonal swellings, Herring bodies, increased gradually showing that the rate of
tyrosine hydroxylase
synthesis prevailed over that of its enzymatic degradation. Thus, the chronic stimulation of
vasopressin
neurons is accompanied by a number of the adaptive reactions; the most important is related to the onset of
vasopressin
and
tyrosine hydroxylase
synthesis in the neurons which do not synthetize both of them under normal conditions.
...
PMID:[Response of vasopressin and tyrosine hydroxylase expressing neurons of the rat supraoptic nucleus to chronic osmotic stimulation]. 1051 3
Retrograde, transneuronal viral tracing technique combined with neurotransmitter immunohistochemistry was used to identify the type of neurons in spinal cord and brain that project to the rat's kidney. Pseudorabies virus (PRV) injections were made into the left kidney. After an incubation of 4 days postinjection, PRV-infected neurons were located immunocytochemically in the ipsilateral intermediolateral (IML) cell column of the spinal cord and several brainstem cell groups: medullary raphe nuclei, ventromedial medulla (VMM), rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM), A5 cell group and the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVH). In the medulla, serotonin (5-HT)-immunoreactive neurons of the caudal raphe nuclei, substance P (SP)-immunoreactive neurons of the raphe obscurus (ROb) nuclei and
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH)-immunoreactive neurons of A5 cells were infected. In the VMM and RVLM, immunoreactive phenylethanolamine-N-methyltransferase (PNMT) neurons were infected. Some PRV-infected neurons in VMM contain 5-HT immunoreactivity. In the hypothalamus, immunoreactive
vasopressin
(VP) and oxytocin (OT) neurons were infected with PRV. This work indicates that sympathetic outflow to kidney is regulated by different types of neurons and the bulbospinal pathways regulating sympathetic outflow to the kidney are not obviously different from those regulating the other visceral, e.g., adrenal, heart, etc.
...
PMID:Characterization of the central cell groups regulating the kidney in the rat. 1052 46
Hypothalamic magnocellular neurons constitute a good model of neurochemical plasticity, because a single neuron can express various combinations of neuropeptides and enzymes under different physiological conditions. Tyrosine hydroxylase has been shown to occur ectopically in various non-catecholaminergic neurons. We investigated the expression of
tyrosine hydroxylase
and its possible role in the magnocellular neurons of the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei in salt-loaded and lactating rats, using in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry, alone or combined, in light and electron microscopy. Our results demonstrated that almost 25% of the magnocellular neurons in the supraoptic nucleus and 15% in the paraventricular nucleus expressed
tyrosine hydroxylase
in salt-loaded rats, and 10% in the supraoptic nucleus of two-day lactating rats. Double labelling showed that this
tyrosine hydroxylase
was essentially synthesized in magnocellular neurons expressing
vasopressin
. The ultrastructural localization of
tyrosine hydroxylase
was less homogeneous in the cytoplasm of magnocellular neurons than in periventricular neurons. In lactating and salt-loaded rats, magnocellular neurons were devoid of the catecholamine biosynthesis markers aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase, L-3,4 dihydroxyphenylalanine, dopamine and GTP-cyclohydrolase I. Tyrosine hydroxylase expression did not increase after rats were injected with reserpine. Our results indicate that the phenotype of the magnocellular neurons expressing
tyrosine hydroxylase
in lactating and salt-loaded rats is non-catecholaminergic, and suggest that this
tyrosine hydroxylase
might be involved in osmoregulation.
...
PMID:Ectopic expression of non-catecholaminergic tyrosine hydroxylase in rat hypothalamic magnocellular neurons. 1061 5
Our purpose was to investigate the proportion of
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH)-immunoreactive (IR) neurons expressing
vasopressin
(VP) mRNA in the human paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei by combining in situ hybridization with immunohistochemistry on the same tissue section. A variability in the proportion of TH-IR neurons synthesizing VP mRNA was observed in adults which was usually more than 50%. In neonates almost all the TH-IR neurons appeared to contain VP mRNA.
...
PMID:Simultaneous detection of tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactivity and vasopressin mRNA in neurons of the human paraventricular and supraoptic nucleus. 1065 Jan 48
In the present study we have used the detection of Fos, the protein product of c-fos, to determine the distribution of neurons in the medulla and hypothalamus that are activated by changes in central blood volume. Experiments were conducted in both barointact and barodenervated conscious rabbits, to determine the contribution of arterial baroreceptors to the pattern of Fos expression evoked by changes in central blood volume, induced either by intravenous infusion of an isotonic modified gelatin solution, or by partial occlusion of the vena cava. These procedures resulted in a significant increase and decrease, respectively, in right atrial pressure over a 60 min period. In control experiments, barointact and barodenervated rabbits were subjected to the identical procedures except that no changes in central blood volume were induced. In comparison with the control observations, central hypervolaemia produced a significant increase in the number of Fos-immunoreactive neurons in the nucleus tractus solitarius, area postrema, the caudal, intermediate and rostral parts of the ventrolateral medulla, supraoptic nucleus, paraventricular nucleus, arcuate nucleus, suprachiasmatic nucleus and median preoptic nucleus. The overall pattern of Fos expression induced by central hypervolaemia did not differ significantly between barointact and barodenervated animals. Similarly, the overall pattern of Fos expression induced by central hypovolaemia did not differ significantly between barointact and barodenervated animals, but did differ significantly from that produced by hypervolaemia. In particular, central hypovolaemia produced a significant increase in Fos expression in the same regions as above, but also in the subfornical organ and organum vasculosum lamina terminalis. In addition, compared with central hypervolaemia, hypovolaemia produced a significantly greater degree of Fos expression in the rostral ventrolateral medulla and supraoptic nucleus. Furthermore, double-labelling for
tyrosine hydroxylase
immunoreactivity demonstrated that neurons in the ventrolateral medulla that expressed Fos following hypovolaemia were predominantly catecholamine cells, whereas following hypervolaemia they were predominantly non-catecholamine cells. Finally, double-labelling for
vasopressin
immunoreactivity demonstrated that the number of Fos/
vasopressin
immunoreactive cells in the supraoptic nucleus was approximately 10 times greater following hypovolaemia compared with hypervolaemia, but there were very few such double-labelled neurons in the paraventricular nucleus in response to either stimulus. The results demonstrate that central hypervolaemia and hypovolaemia each induces reproducible and specific patterns of Fos expression in the medulla and hypothalamus. The degree and pattern of Fos expression was unaffected by arterial baroreceptor denervation, indicating that it is primarily a consequence of inputs from cardiac receptors, together with an increase in the level of circulating hormones such as atrial natriuretic peptide, angiotensin II or
vasopressin
. Furthermore, the pattern of Fos expression produced by central hypervolaemia and hypovolaemia is distinctly different from that evoked by hypertension and hypotension, respectively [Li and Dampney (1994) Neuroscience 61, 613-634], particularly in hypothalamic regions. These findings therefore indicate that the central pathways activated by changes in blood volume are, at least in part, separate from those activated by changes in arterial pressure.
...
PMID:Activation of brain neurons following central hypervolaemia and hypovolaemia: contribution of baroreceptor and non-baroreceptor inputs. 1065 30
We have investigated with histochemical techniques the expression of peptides and other neurochemical markers in the hypothalamus and olfactory bulb of male mice, in which the genes encoding the alpha and beta thyroid hormone receptors (TRalpha1, TRbeta1 and TRbeta2) have been deleted. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone messenger RNA levels were increased in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus and in the medullary raphe nuclei of mutant mice lacking the thyroid hormone receptors alpha1 and beta (alpha1(-/-)beta(-/-)), as compared to wild-type mice. In contrast, galanin messenger RNA levels were lower in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus of mutant animals, as was galanin-like immunoreactivity in the internal layer of the median eminence. Substance P messenger RNA levels were unchanged in the medullary raphe nuclei. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone receptor messenger RNA levels were increased in motoneurons, unchanged in the subiculum, and lower in the amygdala of mutant animals. Galanin messenger RNA levels were unchanged in the hypothalamic dorsomedial and arcuate nuclei of the thyroid hormone receptor alpha1(-/-)beta(-/-) mice, as was the immunocytochemistry for oxytocin and for
vasopressin
in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus. A reduction in
tyrosine hydroxylase
messenger RNA levels was found in the arcuate nucleus of mutant mice. In the olfactory bulb, immunohistochemistry for calbindin and for
tyrosine hydroxylase
revealed a reduction in the intensity of labeling of nerve processes in the glomerular layer of thyroid hormone receptor alpha1(-/-)beta(-/-) mice. The
tyrosine hydroxylase
messenger RNA levels were also slightly reduced. In contrast, the levels of galanin and neuropeptide Y messenger RNA in this region were unchanged in thyroid hormone receptor alpha1(-/-)beta(-/-) mice as compared to wild-type mice. Together these studies reveal many regional and neurochemically selective alterations in neuronal phenotype of mice devoid of all known thyroid hormone receptors.
...
PMID:Expression of peptides and other neurochemical markers in hypothalamus and olfactory bulb of mice devoid of all known thyroid hormone receptors. 1111 49
Sensory input from female reproductive structures is paramount for the co-ordination of neuroendocrine changes at parturition. Using a retrograde tracer (fluorescent latex microspheres) in combination with Fos (as an indicator of neuronal activation) and
tyrosine hydroxylase
(to identify catecholaminergic neurons) immunocytochemistry we identified cells within the brainstem and main olfactory bulb that project to the supraoptic nucleus, and which become significantly activated at parturition (compared to virgin rats and rats on the day of expected parturition). Within the A2/C2 region in the nucleus tractus solitarii, 60% of the projecting activated cells were catecholaminergic, as were 59% of such cells in the A1/C1 region of the ventrolateral medulla. This suggests that oxytocin and
vasopressin
neurons within the supraoptic nucleus are stimulated at parturition via afferent inputs from the brainstem, but the input is not exclusively noradrenergic. Within the mitral layer of the main olfactory bulb, cells that projected to the supraoptic nucleus were significantly activated, suggesting that the olfactory system may regulate supraoptic nucleus cell firing at parturition. The preoptic area, organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis and medial amygdala contained cells that projected to the supraoptic nucleus but these projections were not significantly activated at parturition, although non-projecting cells in these regions were. On the expected day of parturition, but before birth, projections from the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis to the supraoptic nucleus became significantly activated. These findings provide evidence of direct afferent pathways to the supraoptic nucleus from the brain stem and olfactory bulbs that are activated at parturition.
...
PMID:Direct pathways to the supraoptic nucleus from the brainstem and the main olfactory bulb are activated at parturition in the rat. 1111 50
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