Open AccessJournal Article
Immunocytochemistry: 2nd edn
908
About: This article is published in Immunology. The article was published on 01 Jan 1980. and is currently open access. The article focuses on the topics: Immunocytochemistry.
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Citations
Insulin receptors in the pituitary gland: morphological evidence for influence on opioid peptide-synthesizing cells.
Jürgen W. Unger,Winfried Lange +1 more
TL;DR: The relationship between β-endorphin and insulin receptors provides further evidence for the hypothesis that peripheral insulin acts as a regulatory hormone in the control of body energy homeostasis via various steps of the neuroendocrine axis, including opioid peptides in the hypothalamus and pituitary known to play an important role in the regulation of feeding behaviour.
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Light microscopic immunocytochemical localization of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in rat brain: topographical distribution and relation to cholinergic and catecholaminergic nuclei
TL;DR: Results provide the first morphological evidence that PDHC, a general metabolic enzyme complex, is enriched in selective perikarya that are heterogeneously distributed in brain and are especially abundant in many of the regions containing cholinergic neurons.
49
Few cortical cholecystokinin immunoreactive neurons have long projections.
TL;DR: CCK-like immunoreactive neurons of the rat cerebral cortex are predominantly local circuit neurons and that only minor corticocortical and cortico-subcortical CCK-containing projections exist.
49
Immunohistochemical localization of seven different peptides in the human spinal cord.
TL;DR: The comparative distribution of seven peptides examined in the human spinal cord showed a similar distribution pattern at all spinal levels, but CCK was mainly found in thoracic and lumbar levels, and TRH terminals were mainly located in the ventral horn.
49
Degeneration and graft-induced restoration of dopamine innervation in the weaver mouse neostriatum: a quantitative radioautographic study of [3H]dopamine uptake.
G. Doucet,P. Brundin,S. Seth,Y. Murata,Robert E. Strecker,Lazaros C. Triarhou,Bernardino Ghetti,Anders Björklund +7 more
TL;DR: Data show that a quantitatively significant DA reinnervation of the weaver neostriatum can be provided by fetal mesencephalic cell suspension grafts and that these DA fibers become functional, at least with respect to their DA uptake and storage mechanisms, in a nestriatal environment where intrinsic weaver DA axons are strongly deficient.
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