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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Neuropeptides ; Autonomic nerves ; Smooth muscle ; Gut innervation ; Cholecystokinin octapeptide ; Gastrin-releasing peptide ; Bombesin ; Neurotensin ; β-Endorphin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The guinea-pig intestine was found to harbor nerve fibers containing immunoreactive cholecystokinin (CCK), gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP), neurotensin or β- endorphin. Such fibers occurred in the myenteric and submucous ganglia and in the smooth muscle. GRP- and CCK-fibers, in addition, were found in the mucosa. Following colchicine treatment, neuronal perikarya in the myenteric ganglia displayed CCK-, GRP-, or β-endorphin immunoreactivity. CCK-immunoreactive perikarya were located also in the submucous ganglia. Neurotensin-immunoreactive cell bodies could not be detected. The presence of immunoreactive neuronal perikarya in intramural ganglia indicates that CCK-, GRP- and β-endorphin-containing fibers are intrinsic to the gut wall. GRP, neurotensin, and β-endorphin were identified in extracts of smooth muscle by immunochemical and Chromatographic analysis. CCK-8, GRP and neurotensin contracted the isolated taenia coli. Tetrodotoxin reduced the response to CCK-8 but not that to GRP and neurotensin, suggesting that the two latter peptides act directly on smooth muscle receptors. The effect of CCK-8 is partly mediated by cholinergic nerves, since not only tetrodotoxin but also atropine greatly reduced the CCK-8-induced contractile response. The substance P (SP) antagonist, (d-Pro2, d-Trp7,9)-SP1–11 had no effect on the CCK-8-induced contraction of the taenia. CCK-8 enhanced the SP-mediated (atropine-resistant) contractile response to electrical stimulation but not that mediated by acetylcholine. β-Endorphin had no effect on the tension of the muscle but reduced the response to electrical stimulation (cholinergic as well as SP-mediated) through a naloxone-sensitive mechanism. While CCK-8 and β-endorphin seem to play neuromodulatory roles in the taenia coli, the significance of GRP and neurotensin remains enigmatic.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Endocrine cells ; Gut ; Neurotensin ; Immunocytochemistry ; Comparative studies
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Endocrine cells displaying neurotensin immunoreactivity are found scattered in the jejuno-ileum of all mammals studied, including man. They are rather scarce in rat, guinea pig, rabbit and pig and fairly numerous in cat, dog and man. In most mammals the neurotensin cells predominate on the villi. Only in the dog are they more numerous in the crypts. In the chicken, neurotensin cells occur all along the intestinal tract. They are particularly numerous in the zone that joins the gizzard with the duodenum. The ontogeny of the neurotensin cells in the gut was studied in rats and chickens. In the rat, the cells are first observed in the jejuno-ileum immediately before birth. The adult frequency is reached 4–5 days later. In the chicken, neurotensin cells first appear in the colon in the 18 day old embryo and in the small intestine two days later (i.e. one or two days before hatching). A few days after hatching, the gut has achieved the adult number of neurotensin cells per unit area.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cell & tissue research 194 (1978), S. 367-376 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Chicken thymus ; Peptide hormones ; Neurotensin ; Somatostatin ; Immunohistochemistry ; Immunochemistry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Two distinct populations of endocrine cells in the chicken thymus display neurotensin and somatostatin immunoreactivity, respectively. Both cell types are few in number at hatching but proliferate rapidly during the first week. The neurotensin cells are ‘Grimelius-positive’ and ‘Hellerström-Hellmannegative’. The somatostatin cells are ‘Grimelius-negative’ and ‘Hellerström-Hellman-positive’. Both cell populations are non-argentaffin. The somatostatin-like material extracted from chicken thymus behaves immunochemically and chromatographically similar to synthetovine somatostatin, while the neurotensin-like material, from the thymus as well as from the gut, differs from synthetic bovine neurotensin in that it appears larger in size and more basic.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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