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Query: UNIPROT:Q9UIJ5 (
Rec
)
58,342
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In rat embryos, acetylcholinesterase (
AChE
, EC 3.1.1.7) activity is present in a continuous sleeve of myocytes that extends from the myocardium that is adjacent to the atrioventricular endocardial cushions via the ventricular trabeculae to the outflow tract. No activity is found in the atrial roof, in the ventricular walls and in the interventricular septum except for its subendocardial surface.
AChE
-positive cells are first identified in 11-day rat embryos, while the prototypical distribution is best demonstrable in 13-day embryos. Part of the
AChE
-positive cell system is identifiable as a precursor of the adult conduction system by topographical criteria in 16-day fetuses and by morphological criteria in 20-day fetuses. At birth (2 days later),
AChE
activity has disappeared from the cardiac myocytes except for a ring of tissue at the atrial side of the atrioventricular junction. These findings suggest that the embryonic heart can be divided into an upstream myocardium that has no
AChE
activity and a downstream myocardium that is characterized by the presence of
AChE
. Furthermore they suggest that an acetylcholine-dependent mechanism may be responsible for the retardation of the depolarization wave in the downstream parts of the heart. Finally they show that the adult conduction system is formed by a transdifferentiation of part of a far more extensive embryonic precursor system.
Anat
Rec
1987 Apr
PMID:Acetylcholinesterase in prenatal rat heart: a marker for the early development of the cardiac conductive tissue? 359 62
This work analyzed the rat soleus muscle after single and recurrent contusions at different stages of regeneration. A noninvasive contusion was produced by a type of drop-mass equipment. The posterior region of the right hind limb received a trauma and both right and left soleus muscles were analyzed 1, 4, and 6 days after a single contusion (1x), and 6 and 30 days after periodic contusions (10x, one trauma per week for 10 weeks). Single contusion: there was no significant difference between right and left soleus muscle weight. All animals showed abundant signs of acute damage in the right soleus.
AChE
activity was identified in regeneration segments of the right soleus. Periodic contusions: there was an increase in the right soleus muscle weight (alpha = 5%) only in the animals evaluated 6 days after periodic contusions. The right soleus muscle showed a high incidence of chronic signs of damage, such as split fibers and a centralized nucleus, which predominated when compared with the acute signs. Right soleus muscles showed split fibers with
AChE
activity in both the proximal and middle regions. There was no difference in the incidence of muscle fiber types (I, II, and IIC) between right and left soleus muscles after periodic contusions. Skeletal muscle contusion is common in humans, especially in sport activities, where repetitive traumas are also frequent. The results of this work indicate that despite the regeneration process there is an important change in the morphological aspect of regenerated muscle fibers, which possibly affect muscle performance.
Anat
Rec
1999 02 01
PMID:Effect of single and periodic contusion on the rat soleus muscle at different stages of regeneration. 997 13
Striated muscle of the esophagus was until recently considered to consist of "classical" skeletal muscle fibers innervated by cholinergic vagal motoneurons. The recently described co-innervation originating from enteric neurons expressing nNOS, VIP, NPY, and galanin added a new dimension of complexity. The aim of this study was to summarize current knowledge about, and to get further hints as to the possible function of enteric co-innervation of striated esophageal muscle fibers. Aldehyde fixed rat esophagi were processed for immunocytochemistry for CGRP or VAChT (to demonstrate vagal motor terminals), nNOS/NADPH-d, VIP, NPY, and galanin (to demonstrate enteric terminals), met-enkephalin, mu opiate receptor, muscarinic receptors m1-3, soluble guanylyl cyclase, and cGMP dependent kinase type I and II. Motor endplates were visualized using fluorochrome tagged alpha-bungarotoxin to label nicotinic receptors, or with
AChE
histochemistry. Besides light and confocal laser scanning microscopy, immuno electron microscopy was also employed. Up to 80% of motor endplates were co-innervated. In addition to nNOS, VIP, NPY, and galanin, many enteric terminals in esophageal motor endplates expressed met-enkephalin. Some appeared to stain for the muscarinic m(2) receptor. There was prominent immunostaining for the micro opioid receptor in the sarcolemma at both junctional and extrajunctional sites. Immunostaining for soluble guanylyl cyclase was prominent immediately beneath the clusters of nicotinic receptors. Enteric varicosities and vagal terminals intermingled in motor endplates often without intervening teloglial processes. During ontogeny, initially high co-innervation rates were reduced to adult levels in a cranio-caudally progressing manner. We conclude that, in addition to a possible nitrergic, VIP-, NPY-, and galaninergic modulation of neuromuscular transmission by enteric neurons, opioidergic mechanisms could play a role. On the other hand, cholinergic influence on enteric neurons may be exerted also by the nucleus ambiguus via motor endplates, in addition to the input from the dorsal motor nucleus. The observations that enteric nerve fibers contact striated muscle fibers at specialized sites, i.e., motor endplates, and that these contacts appear in an ordered cranio-caudal sequence after cholinergic motor endplates have been established point to a specific function in neuronal control of esophageal muscle rather than to be an unspecific "hangover" from the smooth muscle past of this organ.
Anat
Rec
2001 01 01
PMID:Enteric co-innervation of striated muscle fibers in the esophagus: just a "hangover"? 1114 27
Here, we investigate the morphology and topography of the celiac plexus components in degu (Octodon degus). The study was performed using six adult individuals of both sexes. Macromorphological observations were performed using a derivative of the thiocholine method specially adapted for this study type (Gienc, 1977). The classical H&E technique was used for analysis of the cytoarchitectonic of the ganglion, and the
AChE
(Karnovsky and Roots, 1964) and SPG (De la Torre, 1980) techniques to observe cholinergic and adrenergic activity. The celiac plexus of degu is located on the ventral and lateral surface of the abdominal aorta, at the level where the celiac artery separates from the aorta. This structure consists of two large and two smaller aggregations of neurocytes connected with postganglionic fibers. Histochemical investigations have demonstrated the mainly cholinergic characteristic of the intraganglionic and postganglionic fibers of the celiac plexus, while the adrenergic fibers accompanied only the blood vessels and neurocytes revealed differentiation of adrenergic activity. Histological analysis revealed that neurocytes occupied about half of the cross-section area, with the nerve fibers, connective tissue, and blood vessels forming the remaining part. Ganglionic cells were oval, and usually contained a single nucleus, although two nuclei were sometimes observed.
Anat
Rec
(Hoboken) 2015 Nov
PMID:Morphology and Topography of the Celiac Plexus in Degu (Octodon Degus). 2592 44