Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During mating, the female golden hamster displays a stereotyped specific receptive posture, characterized by lordosis of the back, elevation of the tail, and extension of the legs. Muscles involved in this posture are thought to be iliopsoas, cutaneus trunci, lateral longissimus (LL), and quadratus lumborum (QL). Lesion studies in rats suggest that mating behavior is controlled by the mesencephalic periaqueductal gray (PAG). The PAG does not project directly to the motoneurons innervating the muscles involved in mating, but is thought to make use of the nucleus retroambiguus (NRA) as relay. The NRA is located ventrolaterally in the most caudal medulla, and projects directly to iliopsoas and cutaneus trunci motoneuronal cell groups. The question is whether this is also true for LL and QL muscles. Retrograde HRP tracing experiments revealed that LL and QL motoneurons are located medially in the ventral horn of the T12-L6 and T13-L4 segments, respectively. A subsequent ultrastructural study combined wheatgerm agglutinin-conjugated horseradish peroxidase injections in the NRA with cholera-toxin B-subunit injections in LL and QL muscles. The results revealed monosynaptic contacts between anterogradely labeled NRA-fiber terminals with retrogradely labeled dendrites of both LL and QL motoneurons. Almost all these terminals had asymmetrical synapses and contained spherical vesicles, suggesting an excitatory function of this NRA-motoneuronal pathway. These results correspond with the hypothesis that in hamster the PAG-NRA-motoneuronal projection not only involves motoneurons of iliopsoas and cutaneus trunci but also of LL and QL.
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PMID:Ultrastructural evidence for a direct excitatory pathway from the nucleus retroambiguus to lateral longissimus and quadratus lumborum motoneurons in the female golden hamster. 1555 82

Pure neuritic leprosy (PNL) accounts for 5% to 10% of leprosy patients who usually present with asymmetrical neuropathy in the absence of lepra bacilli on slit-skin smears. However, nerve biopsies in PNL lack appropriate categorization in current immunologic terms. We aimed to classify nerve biopsies according to the immune spectrum of leprosy and assess the role of histologic classification of nerve biopsies in treating PNL. Patients from two tertiary care referral centres were enrolled in this incident case study. Patients presenting with mononeuropathy and multiple mononeuropathies presumably with leprosy, without skin lesions, underwent nerve biopsy and slit-skin smear examination. Amongst 78 patients with mononeuropathy, 38 were diagnosed with leprosy on nerve biopsy. Leprosy was classified as tuberculoid in 16, lepromatous in 5 and borderline in 17 patients. Lepra bacilli were present in 15 biopsies. On comparing histologic subtypes with number of nerves involved clinically, a significant number of cases with single nerve involvement showed multibacillary (BB, BL or LL) histology and vice versa. Nerve biopsy helps in diagnosing patients presenting with PNL and aids in classifying it to customize the treatment for best results. Current treatment recommendations for PNL from WHO and National Leprosy Eradication Program are based on clinical assessment only, which are likely to result in inconsistent treatment and possibly relapse in cases where histomorphology shows disparity. Inclusion of nerve biopsy to guide therapy in patients with PNL is suggested.
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PMID:Mandating nerve biopsy: A step towards personalizing therapy in pure neuritic leprosy. 3007 7

Neuroimaging-derived markers are used to model post-stroke impairment. Among these, lesion size, corticospinal-tract lesion-load (CST-LL) and resting-state functional-connectivity (rs-FC) have been correlated with impairment. It has been shown that the sensory cortex (S1) is associated with motor learning and is essential for post-stroke recovery; yet stroke-induced changes in S1 connectivity alone are yet to be investigated. We aim to determine whether interhemispheric rs-FC could be used to refine imaging models of stroke-related impairment. Subjects' post-stroke and age-matched controls underwent rs-fMRI. Stroke-related disability was correlated with lesion size, CST-LL and interhemispheric S1 and M1 rs-FC as independent seeds. Regression analyses were performed to assess the contribution of these markers in stroke-related deficits. Post-stroke subjects showed an asymmetrical pattern of rs-FC in which affected hemisphere S1 and M1 were mostly connected with ipsi-lesional regions. Correlations between rs-FC and stroke-severity were found. Adding rs-FC of S1 to the regression model of impairment decreased the variance 31% compared to lesion size only. After a stroke, S1 interhemispheric connectivity is decreased, with S1 only connected with ipsi-lesional regions. This asymmetry correlates with neurological and motor impairment. Furthermore, when combined with lesion anatomical measures, S1 connectivity might be an important marker in explaining stroke outcome.
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PMID:Interhemispheric connectivity of primary sensory cortex is associated with motor impairment after stroke. 3013 96