Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (somatostatin)
22,083 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Biochemical indices of cortical nerve cells affected in Alzheimer's disease have been proposed (excitatory dicarboxylic amino acid, EDAA, sodium-dependent carrier; phosphate-activated glutaminase activity; serotonin type 2 recognition site; somatostatin-like immunoreactivity). These and the content of EDAAs and two related amino acids, and choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity have been measured in up to 13 areas of cerebral cortex and the cerebellar cortex from 16 patients with Alzheimer's disease and 17 controls. Reduction of the index of the serotonin recognition site, somatostatin content and another biochemical index of interneurones coincide and indicate a rather unexpected focal loss of such neurones from the parietal lobe. No unequivocal measure of the integrity of pyramidal neurones could be established as the content of no amino acid was reduced, the index of the EDAA carrier showed evidence of change in few brain regions and glutaminase activity was subject to unexplained variability. ChAT activity alone closely paralleled a previous report of the distribution of morphological degeneration. The results are discussed in relation to therapy and positron emission tomography.
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PMID:Topographical distribution of neurochemical changes in Alzheimer's disease. 289 11

Attention modulates neural activities in sensory cortices. Because cortical neurons are composed of many types of neurons, the activities of these different types of cells can exhibit different modifications depending on whether an animal pays attention to a particular sensory stimulus or not. In the present study, we examined which types of cortical neurons change their activities in rats during one of two types of audio-visual discrimination (AVD) tasks by using Fos immunohistochemistry. In the tasks, both auditory and visual stimuli were simultaneously presented but only one of the two modalities was task-relevant. Once the rats had learned one of the AVD tasks, presenting only relevant sensory stimuli was sufficient for them to perform the task correctly. These results suggest that the rats indeed attended to the relevant stimuli during the performance of the tasks. We found that Fos expression in the primary auditory and visual cortices was enhanced in a task-dependent manner during the performance of the AVD tasks. The enhancement of Fos expression depended on the behavioural significance of the stimulus in the tasks. Moreover, using double immunohistochemistry of Fos and a cell type-specific marker protein (phosphate-activated glutaminase, nonphosphorylated neurofilament protein, parvalbumin, calretinin or somatostatin), the task-dependent Fos expression was observed preferentially in excitatory neurons but not in inhibitory interneurons. These results suggest that modulation in cortical excitatory neurons might have critical roles in selecting and processing behaviourally relevant sensory stimuli.
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PMID:Task-dependent and cell-type-specific Fos enhancement in rat sensory cortices during audio-visual discrimination. 1188 53