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Query: UNIPROT:P20366 (
substance P
)
21,176
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Grafts of fetal ventral mesencephalon including substantia nigra have been used to correct some motor deficits produced by unilateral destruction of the dopaminergic nigrostriatal pathway in rats. Histochemical studies have shown that dopaminergic neurons within the graft send processes from the graft to the host neuropil, wherein they form synapses. The results of numerous immunocytochemical studies indicate, however, that a large proportion of neurons in grafts are not catecholaminergic. Whether or not the nondopaminergic neurons in grafts project to the host brain is unknown. The purpose of the present study was to combine immunocytochemistry and retrograde tracing with fluorogold to identify the cell types which project from grafts to the host striatum. Tissue from the ventral mesencephalon of E15 fetuses was placed into the 6-hydroxydopamine denervated striatum of graft recipients. Six weeks to 6 months following transplantation, fluorogold was pressure injected under stereotaxic control immediately adjacent to the ventral mesencephalic grafts; after 4 days CNS tissue was prepared for light microscopic immunocytochemistry. Ventral mesencephalic grafts contained cell bodies immunoreactive for enkephalin, GAD,
substance P
, and serotonin in addition to those immunoreactive for
tyrosine hydroxylase
. Some cells of each immunochemically defined type were retrogradely labeled by the fluorogold injection into the host brain. Nevertheless, more catecholaminergic and serotonergic cells projected from grafts to the fluorogold injection site than did other cell types. Since many of the nonmonoaminergic neurons in grafts are probably projection neurons, our results suggest that the extent of neurite outgrowth from grafted cells is influenced by the surrounding target tissue.
...
PMID:Specific outgrowth from neurons of ventral mesencephalic grafts to the catecholamine-depleted striatum of adult hosts. 171 May 72
The ganglionated plexus of the guinea pig pancreas was investigated by using histochemical, immunocytochemical, and tract-tracing methods in order to determine whether pancreatic ganglia are analogous to the ganglia of the enteric nervous system (ENS). Three lines of evidence suggest that the ganglia of the pancreas appear to be interconnected with one another, as are enteric ganglia. First, microinjections of the retrograde tracer Fluoro-Gold into individual pancreatic ganglia labeled the perikarya of neurons in distant pancreatic ganglia, whereas no labeling of neurons was observed if injections were placed in the connective tissue adjacent to pancreatic ganglia. Second, when the intercalating dye DiI was microinjected into single pancreatic ganglia in fixed tissues, DiI-labeled terminals were found in additional pancreatic ganglia. Finally, microinjections of the beta subunit of cholera toxin into individual pancreatic ganglia yielded similar results. The ganglionated plexus of the pancreas also expresses a diversity of transmitter content and cell type-specific localization of monoamine oxidase (MAO) that is analogous to the ENS. In common with guinea pig enteric ganglia, pancreatic ganglia contain highly varicose 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)-immunoreactive axons and intrinsic neuropeptide Y (NPY)- and
substance P
(SP)-immunoreactive neurons. The vast majority, but not all, of SP-immunoreactive fibers in the pancreatic parenchyma also contain calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) immunoreactivity. MAO-B was the primary type of MAO found in the intrinsic elements of the pancreas where it was located in neurons and fibers in the pancreatic parenchyma. In common with serotoninergic enteric neurons, MAO-B immunoreactivity was not found at the LM level in pancreatic serotoninergic neurites. In contrast, NPY- and
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH)-immunoreactive perivascular axons were found to contain abundant MAO-A, but no MAO-B immunoreactivity. It is concluded that MAO-B immunoreactivity is characteristic of a portion of the intrinsic innervation of the pancreas, whereas MAO-A immunoreactivity is a marker for the extrinsic sympathetic innervation of the pancreas. Because of its receipt of a direct neural innervation from myenteric ganglia of the bowel (Kirchgessner and Gershon, '90: J. Neurosci 10:1626-1642), similar connections, transmitter content and localization of type-specific MAO, the ganglionated plexus of the pancreas should be regarded as an extension or subset of the ENS.
...
PMID:Guinea pig pancreatic ganglia: projections, transmitter content, and the type-specific localization of monoamine oxidase. 171 Jun 27
The catecholamine selective neurotoxin, 6-hydroxydopamine, was injected into the ventral mesencephalon of rats and the distribution of
tyrosine hydroxylase
immunoreactivity in the striatum was compared to that of
substance P
and calbindin immunoreactivities, recognized histochemical markers of striatal compartments. Two components of the TH-IR mesostriatal innervation were identified. A more vulnerable component, present in the core of the nucleus accumbens and matrix of the caudate-putamen, excepting its ventrolateral part, was eliminated rapidly, unmasking a less vulnerable component which was present primarily in the shell of the nucleus accumbens and patch(striosome) compartment of the caudate-putamen. The TH-IR innervation in the ventrolateral caudate-putamen also was patchy following these lesions but the patches corresponded consistently to neither patch nor matrix compartments.
...
PMID:Compartments in rat dorsal and ventral striatum revealed following injection of 6-hydroxydopamine into the ventral mesencephalon. 171 11
Immunoreactivity for the neurofilament protein triplet was investigated in neurons of the dorsal root ganglia of the guinea-pig by using a battery of antibodies. In unfixed tissue, nearly all neurons in these ganglia demonstrated some degree of neurofilament protein triplet immunoreactivity. Large neurons generally displayed intense immunoreactivity, whereas most small to medium-sized neurons showed faint to moderate immunoreactivity. Double-labelling immunofluorescence demonstrated that most antibodies to the individual subunits of the neurofilament protein triplet had the same distribution and intensity of labelling in sensory neurons. Increasing durations of tissue fixation in aldehyde solutions selectively diminished neurofilament protein triplet immunoreactivity in small to medium-sized neurons. Double-labelling with neurofilament protein triplet antibodies in combination with antibodies to other neuronal markers, such as neuron-specific enolase,
substance P
and
tyrosine hydroxylase
, showed that tissue processing conditions affect the degree of co-localization of immunoreactivity to the neurofilament protein triplet and to these other neuronal markers. These results indicate that, with a judicious manipulation of the duration of tissue fixation, neurofilament protein triplet immunoreactivity can be used in combination with other neuronal markers to distinguish groups of neurons according to their size and chemical coding.
...
PMID:Neurofilament protein triplet immunoreactivity in the dorsal root ganglia of the guinea-pig. 171 54
The serous lingual glands of von Ebner secrete lingual lipase, an enzyme that begins fat digestion in the stomach. The objective of this study was to characterize the neuromodulators in the rat tongue and von Ebner glands using immunocytochemical techniques. Rat lingual tissues were fixed in formalin, embedded in paraffin and sectioned at 4 microns for light microscopic studies. Immunocytochemical localization of neuromodulators was performed with monospecific anti-rat neuromodulator IgG or control (preimmune) IgG as the primary antibody, using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) technique. No staining was seen with control anti-rat IgG. Immunospecific staining for vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP),
tyrosine hydroxylase
and choline acetyltransferase (CHAT) was observed in nerves in the tongue, and cells containing immunospecific staining for serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) were seen in the stroma between the lingual glands. Selected cells in the serous glands stained positively for the presence of
substance P
and somatostatin. Adrenergic, VIP-containing and cholinergic nerves appear to innervate the tongue and serous glands.
Substance P
and somatostatin were identified in cells of the lingual serous glands and may be additional local modulators regulating lingual lipase release.
...
PMID:Neuromodulators of the lingual von Ebner gland: an immunocytochemical study. 171 11
The vast majority of striatonigral projection neurons in pigeons contain
substance P
(SP), and the vast majority of SP-containing fibers terminating in the substantia nigra arise from neurons in the striatum. To help clarify the role of striatonigral projection neurons, we conducted electron microscopic single- and double-label immunohistochemical studies of SP+ terminals and/or dopaminergic neurons (labeled with either anti-dopamine, DA, or anti-
tyrosine hydroxylase
, TH) in pigeons to determine: (1) the synaptic organization of SP+ terminals, (2) the synaptic organization of TH+ perikarya and/or dendrites, and (3) the synaptic relationship between SP+ terminals and TH+ neurons in the substantia nigra. Tissue single-labeled for SP revealed numerous SP+ terminals contacting thin unlabeled dendrites in the substantia nigra, but few SP+ terminals were observed contacting perikarya or large-diameter dendrites. SP+ terminals contained round, densely packed, clear vesicles, and often contained one or more dense-core vesicles. Synaptic junctions between SP+ terminals and their targets were more often symmetric (86%) than asymmetric. In tissue single-labeled for DA, we observed few terminals contacting DA+ perikarya, whereas terminals contacting DA+ dendrites were more abundant. Terminals contacting DA+ structures comprised at least four different morphologically distinct types based on the morphology of the clear synaptic vesicles and the type of synaptic junction. One type of terminal contained round clear vesicles and made symmetric synapses, and thus resembled the predominant type of SP+ terminal. The second type contained round clear vesicles and made asymmetric synapses, the third type contained medium-size pleomorphic clear vesicles and made symmetric synapses, and the fourth type contained small pleomorphic clear vesicles and made symmetric synapses. The presence of contacts between SP+ terminals and dopaminergic dendrites in the substantia nigra was directly demonstrated in tissue double-labeled for SP (by the peroxidase-antiperoxidase procedure, or PAP, with diaminobenzidine) and TH (by either the silver-intensified immunogold procedure or the PAP procedure with benzidine dihydrochloride). SP+ terminals commonly contacted thin TH+ dendrites in the substantia nigra, but few SP+ terminals contacted large-diameter TH+ dendrites or perikarya. Synapses between SP+ terminals and TH+ neurons were always symmetric. TH+ dendrites also were contacted by terminals not labeled for SP, which were more abundant than were SP+ terminals. Non-TH+ neurons were also contacted by both SP+ terminals and non-SP+ terminals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Ultrastructural single- and double-label immunohistochemical studies of substance P-containing terminals and dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra in pigeons. 171 17
The cutaneous nerves of rat, cat, guinea pig, pig, and man were studied by immunocytochemistry to compare the staining potency of general neural markers and to investigate the density of nerves containing peptides. Antiserum to protein gene product 9.5 (PGP 9.5) stained more nerves than antisera to neurofilaments, neuron-specific enolase (NSE), and synaptophysin or histochemistry for acetylcholinesterase (AChE). Peptidergic axons showed species variation in density of distribution and were most abundant in pig and fewest in man. However, the specific peptides in nerves innervating the various structures were consistent between species. Nerve fibers immunoreactive for calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and/or vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) predominated in all the species; those immunoreactive to tachykinins (
substance P
and
neurokinin A
[NKA]) and neuropeptide tyrosine (NPY) were less abundant. Neonatal capsaicin, at the doses employed in this study, destroyed approximately 70% of CGRP- and
tachykinin
-immunoreactive sensory axons; whereas 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) at the doses employed resulted in a complete loss of NPY and
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH) immunoreactivity without affecting VIP, CGRP, and tachykinins. Thus, this study confirms that antiserum to PGP 9.5 is the most suitable and practical marker for the demonstration of cutaneous nerves. Species differences exist in the density of peptidergic innervation, but apparently not for specific peptides. Not all sensory axons immunoreactive for CGRP and
substance P
/NKA are capsaicin-sensitive. However, all sympathetic TH- and NPY-immunoreactive axons are totally responsive to 6-OHDA; but no change was seen in VIP-immunoreactive axons, suggesting some demarcation of cutaneous adrenergic and cholinergic sympathetic fibers.
...
PMID:An immunocytochemical study of cutaneous innervation and the distribution of neuropeptides and protein gene product 9.5 in man and commonly employed laboratory animals. 171 91
The distribution, morphology and number of serotonin-, catecholamine- and
substance P
-containing neurons in the human dorsal raphe nucleus were studied. Parallel series of sections were prepared from 10 human brainstems obtained at autopsy from patients without neurological disease aged between 42 and 88 years. The neurons were identified using immunohistochemistry with antibodies raised against phenylalanine hydroxylase (tryptophan hydroxylase-containing, serotonin neurons),
tyrosine hydroxylase
(catecholamine neurons) and
substance P
. A reference series of Nissl-stained sections was also prepared and data published separately were used to delineate the subnuclear divisions of the dorsal raphe nucleus and to establish the total number of neurons in each subnucleus. The following principal findings emerged. (1) Serotonin-synthesizing neurons are present in all regions of the dorsal raphe nucleus and their total number is 165,000 +/- 34,000. The same types of neurons as those seen in Nissl material characterize each of the five subnuclei (caudal, dorsal, ventral, ventrolateral and interfascicular). (2)
Substance P
-containing neurons mostly occupy the rostral part of the nucleus and their number is 74,600 +/- 17,600. (3) Catecholamine cells are only found in the rostral part of the dorsal raphe nucleus and their number is 5600 +/- 3400. (4) In the ventral and interfascicular subnuclei the combined number of serotonin-synthesizing and
substance P
-containing neurons exceeds the total number of Nissl-stained neurons suggesting that serotonin and
substance P
co-exist in a substantial part of the cell population of the dorsal raphe nucleus. This is further supported by the highly similar morphology and size of these neurons. It is concluded that there are demonstrable chemical differences between the various subregions of the human dorsal raphe nucleus. These differences are in harmony with the results of hodological studies in animals, which have demonstrated differential projection pathways emerging from this nucleus.
...
PMID:Distribution, morphology and number of monoamine-synthesizing and substance P-containing neurons in the human dorsal raphe nucleus. 172 Feb 27
In this study chromatographic, immunochemical, and immunocytochemical methods provide evidence of a galanin-like peptide(s) in an invertebrate, the blowfly Phormia terraenovae. The major portion of the galanin-like immunoreactivity (GAL-LI) in fly heads was extractable in acetic acid but not in boiling water, which suggests that the peptide(s) may be highly basic in nature. GAL-LI was present both in the head and body portion of the blowfly in roughly the same amounts. Initial gel filtration data, using a G-50 Sephadex column and a weak phosphate-buffer (pH 6.5) as eluent, suggested that a fly GAL-LI peptide(s) from fly heads, eluting as an apparent single peak, was smaller than porcine GAL(1-29) and GAL(1-15). However, concomitant analysis using a G-25 Sephadex column and acetic acid (0.2 M) as eluent, spread the immunoreactive material over a great portion of the chromatogram, although the main portion of the material eluted in the same size range as porcine GAL(1-29). Taken together, the gel filtration data thus suggest that fly GAL-LI peptide(s) may be highly basic but presumably similar in size to vertebrate GAL(1-29). However, the hydrophobic properties of the fly GAL-LI peptide(s) differ from that of porcine GAL as demonstrated by the presence of several immunoreactive components eluting both early as well as late in the chromatogram when using reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC); early peaks may represent highly basic and/or possibly smaller GAL-immunoreactive peptide(s), whereas later peaks may represent less basic and possibly elongated forms. Immunocytochemistry indicated that GAL-LI was present in the nervous system of the blowfly. About 160 GAL-immunoreactive neurons were found in the brain and subesophageal ganglion, 26 in the fused thoracic ganglion and 30 in the fused abdominal ganglion. In the brain, GAL-immunoreactive fibers supply specific subdivisions of the central body, optic lobe, superior protocerebrum, and tritocerebrum as well as neuropil in the subesophageal ganglia. In the thoracico-abdominal ganglia, GAL-immunoreactive neuron processes are found inside synaptic neuropil as well as in the neural sheath of the ganglia and several of the dorsal nerve roots. Many of the GAL-immunoreactive neurons react also with an antiserum against porcine galanin message associated peptide, a peptide present in the preprogalanin protein. Immunocytochemical double-labeling indicated that some GAL-immunoreactive neurons also reacted with antisera against the molluscan peptides FMRFamide and SCPB, whereas no evidence could be found for colabeling with antisera against
tyrosine hydroxylase
,
substance P
and physalaemin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Galanin immunoreactivity in the blowfly nervous system: localization and chromatographic analysis. 172 Jul 94
Immunoreactivity for the calcium binding protein, calretinin (calretinin-ir), was demonstrated in cell bodies of vagal and glossopharyngeal sensory ganglia (jugular, petrosal, and nodose ganglia) and in associated nerve fibers. In the jugular and petrosal ganglia, many calretinin-ir neurons were also immunoreactive for calcitonin gene-related peptide and
substance P
. In the nodose ganglion, most of the calretinin-ir neurons lacked these peptides. None of the calretinin-ir neurons in these ganglia were also immunoreactive for
tyrosine hydroxylase
.
...
PMID:Calretinin-immunoreactivity in vagal and glossopharyngeal sensory neurons of the rat: distribution and coexistence with putative transmitter agents. 172 Sep 97
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