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  • Ampullary electroreceptor  (1)
  • C-fibers  (1)
  • Liver  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Neuropeptide Y ; Substance P ; Immunocytochemistry ; C-fibers ; Dura mater ; Dural sinus ; Meningeal arteries ; Electron microscopy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Density and pattern of nerve fibers with neuropeptide Y-like immunoreactivity (NPY-LI) and substance P-like immunoreactivity (SP-LI) in the rat dura mater encephali were investigated by light and electron microscopy using whole-mount preparations. NPY-LI fibers are observed throughout the encephalic dura mater. A remarkable net of NPY-LI nerve fibers is located in the walls of the sagittal and transverse sinuses. Beyond that NPY-LI network, distinct NPY-LI nerve fibers or plexus occur in the rostral falx, parietal dura mater of the olfactory bulb, supratentorial dura mater, parietal dura mater of the cerebellum, tentorium cerebelli and the ventral dura mater. Electron microscopic studies reveal that NPY-LI is exclusively located in unmyelinated axons of small and large nerve fiber bundles, with or without a perineural sheath. Immunopositive C-fibers are predominantly associated with the vascular bed. SP-LI nerve fibers have a moderate and more uniform distribution in the encephalic dura mater. A distinct plexus of SP-LI fibers follows the branches of the middle meningeal artery and the adjacent dura mater. SP-LI fibers are most prominent in the parietal dura mater of the cerebellum. Fine beaded SP-LI fibers, arising from larger SP-LI fiber bundles, are observed in close association to the capillary bed. SP-LI axons are all unmyelinated. They are found in larger nerve fiber bundles with a perineural sheath or in Schwann cells lacking any perineural sheath. The function of NPY-LI and SP-LI nerve fibers in the rat dura mater is discussed in relation to their topography, density and termination.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Ampullary electroreceptor ; Tuberous electroreceptor ; Sensory innervation ; Scanning and transmission electronmicroscopy ; Pseudocetopsis spec. (catfish)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Two types of electroreceptors, the ampullary and the tuberous electroreceptor (silurid knollenorgan) in the epidermis of the catfish, Pseudocetopsis spec., were investigated with semithin and ultrathin serial sections. The ampullary organ contains one or two sensory cells which are embedded in supporting cells at the base of open epithelial canals. They bear some slender microvilli on their apical surface and form several synaptic bars. The afferent myelinated nerve fiber arborizes in the connective tissue papilla and looses its myelin sheath about 30 μm below the supporting cell layer. A second thin myelinated axon occur up to the supporting cell layer. The tuberous electroreceptor organ contains one large receptor cell. Most of the cell body is exposed to the lumen of a specialized proximal canal segment and is closely covered with microvilli. A single myelinated axon looses its myelin sheath within the supporting cell layer about 1 μm before terminating as a flat calyx at the base of the sensory cell. A functional significance of the two types of receptors will be discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cell & tissue research 186 (1978), S. 209-226 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Erythrocyte ; Sequestration ; Neuraminidase-treatment ; Liver ; Spleen
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Scintigraphic experiments and radioactivity measurements of tissues have shown that the radioactivity of 51Cr-labelled and neuraminidase-treated rabbit erythrocytes is rapidly accumulated in liver and spleen. Sequestration of these erythrocytes by liver and spleen was demonstrated by light and electron microscopy of these tissues after perfusion of the rabbits with solutions for tissue fixation. In liver the phagocytic activity of Kupffer cells was increased after injection of desialylated erythrocytes, while in spleen a significantly enhanced number of erythrocytes was found attached to the sinusoidal walls and in the reticulum of the red pulp. It was shown by scanning electron microscopy that neuraminidasetreatment did not influence the shape of erythrocytes. Desialylated and 51Cr-labelled erythrocytes from the cow are rapidly cleared from the blood-stream with a half-life time of about 3 h. It was shown in an in-vitro test that they adsorb to surviving slices from liver and spleen derived from the same animal. The amount of radioactivity adsorbed is appreciably enhanced in the presence of homologous serum when compared with buffer only. Human neuraminidase-treated erythrocytes are agglutinated in the direct and especially in the indirect Coombs-tests. The involvement of T-antigen in this phenomenon was largely excluded. The in vitro experiments and antibody consumption tests suggest that immunoglobulins (IgG) and complement from serum may be involved in recognition and sequestration of desialylated erythrocytes by macrophages in vivo.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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