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1.
The effect of the invertebrate octopamine agonists chlordimeform and clonidine on the concentration and turnover of p-octopamine and m- and p-tyramine was determined in rat hypothalamus and striatum. Clonidine (0.25 mg/Kg, s.c.) did not alter the concentration of p-octopamine in the hypothalamus or p-tyramine in the striatum. Administration of chlordimeform (50 mg/Kg, i.p.) resulted in an increase in p- and m-tyramine concentrations in the striatum but not that of p-octopamine in the hypothalamus. This increase in the tyramine isomers is consistent with the ability of chlordimeform and its metabolite, demethylchlordimeform, to inhibit monoamine oxidase (MAO). The concurrent administration of chlordimeform (50 mg/Kg, i.p.) and pargyline (75 mg/Kg, i.p.) produced a significant decrease in the accumulation of octopamine in the hypothalamus but not in the striatum. In contrast, the concurrent administration of clonidine (0.25 mg/Kg, s.c.) and pargyline (75 mg/Kg, i.p.) caused a significant decrease in the accumulation of octopamine in the striatum but not hypothalamus. These results show that the turnover of octopamine in the hypothalamus and striatum is decreased by chlordimeform and clonidine, respectively. Further, clonidine is known to modulate the turnover of amines in mammalian noradrenergic nerve terminals by an action at presynaptic adrenergic receptors. These data suggest that two mechanisms, one involving presynaptic adrenergic receptors in the striatum, and the other involving as yet unidentified receptors in the hypothalamus, modulate the turnover of octopamine in the mammalian brain.  相似文献   

2.
Vitamin E plays an essential role in maintaining the structure and function of the nervous system, and its deficiency, commonly associated with fat malabsorption diseases, may reduce neuronal survival. We previously demonstrated that the somatostatinergic system, implicated in neuronal survival control, can be modulated by α-tocopherol in the rat dentate gyrus, increasing cyclic adenosine monophosphate response element binding protein phosphorylation. To gain a better understanding of the molecular actions of tocopherols and examine the link among vitamin E, somatostatin and neuronal survival, we have investigated the effects of a deficiency and subsequent administration of tocopherol on the somatostatin signaling pathway and neuronal survival in the rat hippocampus. No changes in somatostatin expression were detected in vitamin-E-deficient rats. These rats, however, showed a significant increase in the somatostatin receptor density and dissociation constant, which correlated with a significant increase in the protein levels of somatostatin receptors. Nevertheless, vitamin E deficiency impaired the ability of the somatostatin receptors to couple to the effectors adenylyl cyclase and phosphotyrosine phosphatase by diminishing Gi protein functionality. Furthermore, vitamin E deficiency significantly increased phosphotyrosine phosphatase activity and PTPη expression, as well as PKCδ activation, and decreased extracellular-signal-regulated kinase phosphorylation. All these changes were accompanied by an increase in neuronal cell death. Subsequent α-tocopherol administration partially or completely reversed all these values to control levels. Altogether, our results prove the importance of vitamin E homeostasis in the somatostatin receptor–effector system and suggest a possible mechanism by which this vitamin may regulate the neuronal cell survival in the adult hippocampus.  相似文献   

3.
1. The effect of 10-day treatment with growth hormone (GH) (1 mg/kg body weight day) and somatostatin (SRIF) (0.25 mg/kg body weight day) subcutaneously on the activity of muscarinic (M) receptors in rat hypothalamic, pituitary and cerebral cortical membrane fractions was studied using (3H)quinuclidinyl benzylate [(3H)QNB] as radioligand. 2. The administration of GH and SRIF significantly decreased the M-receptor binding affinity in the hypothalamus. 3. In the pituitary the M-receptor affinity was increased after both GH and SRIF treatment. 4. In the hypothalamus and the pituitary the binding capacity of muscarinic receptors was unchanged. 5. In the cerebral cortex the chronical GH injection induced an increase in the number of antagonist binding sites and a decrease of their affinity, while the similar SRIF treatment led to an increase of the binding affinity without any change of M-receptor capacity. 6. These results indicate that GH and SRIF selectively and region-specifically modulate muscarinic receptor binding affinity and capacity and provide new insight into the feedback regulatory mechanisms of GH secretion.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract: The suggestion that somatostatin is involved in the pathophysiology of obsessive-compulsive disorder and the evidence that selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors show significant antiobsessional effect prompted us to examine the effect of citalopram, a selective and potent serotonin reuptake inhibitor, on the somatostatinergic system in different brain regions of the rat. A single intraperitoneal injection of 10 mg/kg citalopram significantly reduced somatostatin levels in the striatum and nucleus accumbens after 4 but not 1, 8, or 24 h. No changes were found in hippocampus. In addition, we found that the K+-evoked overflow of somatostatin-like immunoreactivity from striatal slices was significantly increased 1 h after a single injection of citalopram and was still higher, although not significantly, 4 h after the drug injection. Levels of preprosomatostatin mRNA were unchanged in striatum and accumbens 1 and 4 h after a single drug administration. In rats treated with citalopram (10 mg/kg i.p.) twice daily for 14 days, the levels of somatostatin and its mRNA were significantly decreased in the striatum but not in other brain regions 24 h after the last dose. No change was found in the basal or K+-evoked overflow of somatostatin-like immunoreactivity at 1, 4, and 24 h after the last drug injection. These results suggest that acute and chronic treatment with citalopram reduces somatostatin levels in striatum by different mechanisms. Whereas a single dose of the drug reduces somatostatin levels by increasing the release of the peptide, repeated drug treatment reduces the biosynthesis of somatostatin.  相似文献   

5.
The in vivo regulation of [3H]acetylcholine [( 3H]ACh) recognition sites on nicotinic receptors in rat brain was examined by administering drugs that increase stimulation of nicotinic cholinergic receptors, either directly or indirectly. After 10 days of treatment with the cholinesterase inhibitor diisopropyl fluorophosphate, [3H]ACh binding in the cortex, thalamus, striatum, and hypothalamus was decreased. Scatchard analyses indicated that the decrease in binding in the cortex was due to a reduction in the apparent density of [3H]ACh recognition sites. In contrast, after repeated administration of nicotine (5-21 days), the number of [3H]ACh recognition sites was increased in the cortex, thalamus, striatum, and hypothalamus. Similar effects were observed in the cortex and thalamus following repeated administration of the nicotinic agonist cytisin. The nicotinic antagonists mecamylamine and dihydro-beta-erythroidine did not alter [3H]ACh binding following 10-14 days of administration. Further, concurrent treatment with these antagonists and nicotine did not prevent the nicotine-induced increase in these binding sites. The data indicate that [3H]ACh recognition sites on nicotinic receptors are subject to up- and down-regulation, and that repeated administration of nicotine results in a signal for up-regulation, probably through protracted desensitization at the recognition site.  相似文献   

6.
A radioiodinated analogue of somatostatin 28, 125I [Leu8,D-Trp22,Tyr25] SS-28, was used to localize and characterize somatostatin binding sites in both human and monkey brain. High-affinity binding sites (approximately 1 nM) were found in cerebral cortex. The highest binding was in cerebral cortex with intermediate binding found in hippocampus, striatum, and amygdala and low binding in hypothalamus and brainstem. There was a rough correlation between somatostatin receptor binding and concentrations of somatostatin-like immunoreactivity (SLI) in human brain. Somatostatin receptors were stable for up to 24 h in an animal model simulating human autopsy conditions and there was no correlation between postmortem interval and receptor binding in human brain. Pharmacologic characterization in human cortex showed that there was a correlation between the inhibition of receptor binding by somatostatin analogues and their known abilities to inhibit growth hormone secretion. These findings demonstrate that a highly specific membrane-associated receptor for somatostatin is present in both monkey and human brain. Examination of somatostatin receptor binding in Alzheimer's disease and Huntington's disease may improve understanding of the role of somatostatin in both these illnesses.  相似文献   

7.
Somatostatin mediates its multiple biological effects via specific plasma membrane receptors belonging to the family of G-protein coupled receptors with seven putative membrane-spanning domains. Five somatostatin receptor subtypes (sst1-sst5) have been cloned in human, mouse, and rat. We have raised specific antibodies against the five human somatostatin receptors by using the fusion protein technique. DNA sequences encoding C-terminal parts of the somatostatin receptors were inserted into a pGEX-2T plasmid vector. E. coli bacteria were transformed with the recombinant plasmid and fusion proteins were expressed and purified using the glutathione S-transferase Gene Fusion System. The fusion proteins were emulsified with Freund's complete adjuvant and polyclonal antibodies were raised in rabbits. The antisera were tested for specificity in Western blot analysis of membrane preparations from cell lines expressing the receptors and in membrane preparations of brain tissues. The receptors were visualized at the light microscopical level in paraformaldehyde fixed tissue sections by use of biotin labelled secondary antibodies as well as by amplification with biotinylated tyramide. The final step in the immunohistochemical visualization of the receptors was done by both peroxidase labelled streptavidin/biotin and different fluorophores. At the electron microscopical level, some of the receptors could be visualized in tissues fixed with a combination of paraformaldehyde and low concentrations of glutaraldehyde. In the hamster brain, sst2 receptors labelling was observed in both neuronal processes and perikarya. The staining was present in neo-, and allocortical areas of the forebrain, the hypothalamus, brain stem, and spinal cord. In the rat and human, sst1 receptor was shown to be an auto receptor on somatostatinergic neurons located in the hypothalamus. In the retina both sst1 and sst2 receptors were present. sst1 receptors were confined to amacrine cells, few ganglionic cells, and Müller cell-end feet. sst2 receptors were more widespread than the sst1 receptors. sst2-immunoreactivity was present in dopaminergic amacrine cells, the Müller cell-end feet, and in the inner segments of the cone photoreceptors. Thus, the availability of subtype specific antibodies against the five somatostatin receptors makes it possible to identify the receptors involved in the multiple somatostatinergic system in the body.  相似文献   

8.
P Leroux  G Pelletier 《Peptides》1984,5(3):503-506
Somatostatin-14 (S14) and its precursor, somatostatin-28 (S28), are widely distributed throughout the rat brain, suggesting that they could act as neurotransmitter or neuromodulator in the central nervous system. The present study was undertaken to study the localization of S14 and S28 receptors in the rat brain determined by "in vitro" radioautography. The study performed on slide mounted frozen brain section with iodinated S14 and S28 analogs revealed an identical distribution of binding sites for the two forms of somatostatin. A good correlation could be observed between receptor distribution and immunohistologically localized neuropeptides except for striatum and hypothalamus. However, receptors were not detectable in the hypothalamus and were found in low concentration in the caudate-putamen nucleus, two regions containing high amounts of S28 and S14, suggesting a high occupancy of receptors in these areas by endogenous peptides or an inverse correlation between receptor and peptide concentrations.  相似文献   

9.
Puebla, L., A. OcaÑa and E. Arilla. Histamine H1-receptors modulate somatostatin receptors coupled to the inhibition of adenylyl cyclase in the rat frontoparietal cortex. Peptides 18(10) 1569–1576, 1997.—Since exogenous histamine has been previously shown to increase the somatostatin (SS) receptor-effector system in the rat frontoparietal cortex and both histamine H1-receptor agonists and SS modulate higher nervous activity and have anticonvulsive properties, it was of interest to determine the participation of the H1-histaminergic system in this response. The intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) administration of the specific histamine H1-receptor agonist 2-pyridylethylamine (PEA) (10 μg) to rats 2 h before decapitation increased the number of SS receptors (599 ± 40 vs 401 ± 31 femtomoles/mg protein, p< 0.01) and decreased their apparent affinity for SS (0.41 ± 0.03 vs 0.26 ± 0.02 nM, p < 0.01) in rat frontoparietal cortical membranes. No significant differences were seen for the basal and forskolin (FK)-stimulated adenylyl cyclase (AC) activities in the frontoparietal cortex of PEA-treated rats when compared to the control group. In the PEA group, however, the capacity of SS (10−4 M) to inhibit basal and FK (10−5 M)-stimulated AC activity in frontoparietal cortical membranes was significantly higher than in the control group (34 ± 1% vs 20 ± 2%, p < 0.001). The ability of low concentrations of the stable GTP analogue 5′-guanylylimidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p] to inhibit FK-stimulated AC activity in frontoparietal cortical membranes was similar in the PEA-treated and control animals. These results suggest that the increased SS-mediated inhibition of AC activity in the frontoparietal cortex of PEA-treated rats may be due to the increase of the number of SS receptors induced by PEA. Pretreatment with the H1-receptor antagonist mepyramine (30 mg/kg, intraperitoneally (IP) prevented the PEA-induced changes in SS binding and SS-mediated inhibition of AC activity. Mepyramine (30 mg/kg, IP) alone had no observable effect on the somatostatinergic system. The in vitro addition of PEA or mepyramine to frontoparietal cortical membranes obtained from untreated rats did not affect the SS binding parameters. Altogether, these results suggest that the H1-histaminergic system modulates the somatostatinergic system in the rat frontoparietal cortex.  相似文献   

10.
The postnatal development of [3H]dihydroalprenolol binding to beta-adrenergic receptors has been studied in frontal cortex, cerebellum, striatum, and hypothalamus of the rat after prenatal and perinatal exposure to diazepam. Dams were injected subcutaneously with single daily doses of 1 mg of diazepam/kg from day 7 to 20 of gestation or from day 15 of gestation to day 6 after birth. Prenatal exposure had no effect on litter size or length of gestation or on the postnatal development of body and brain weights of the progeny. However, a reduced mortality of the pups was observed in relation to vehicle-treated controls until postnatal day 10. Prenatal diazepam administration decreased [3H]dihydroalprenolol binding in frontal cortex, striatum, and hypothalamus but not in cerebellum. This decrease in beta-adrenergic receptor binding was due to a decrease in receptor density rather than in receptor affinity. In contrast, perinatal diazepam exposure led to a transient decrease in [3H]dihydroalprenolol binding limited to the frontal cortex. The permanent reduction in number of beta-adrenergic receptors, which depends on the scaling and duration of the drug application period, points to the necessity of a prolonged evaluation of effects of exposure to psychotropic drugs in early stages of brain development.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The aim of this work was to study the effect of cyclosporine on the somatotropic axis. Accordingly, growth hormone (GH) secretion, circulating insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) and IGF binding proteins (IGFBPs) in response to cyclosporin A (CsA) treatment were examined in adult male Wistar rats. Cyclosporine administration (5, 10 or 20 mg/Kg daily) over 8 days did not modify the body weight, but it did decrease serum concentration of corticosterone and increased serum IGF-I and GH levels. Rats treated with 5 and 10 mg/Kg of cyclosporine had similar levels of serum IGFBPs to control rats, but there was an increase in circulating IGFBP-3 and IGFPB-1,2 in the group treated with 20 mg/Kg of CsA. The increase in circulating GH correlates with a decrease in pituitary GH content in CsA treated rats, with no modification in hypothalamic somatostatin content, suggesting an increase in pituitary GH release. In order to test this hypothesis, anterior pituitary cell cultures were exposed to different CsA concentrations during a 4 h incubation period. Cyclosporine increased GH secretion in cultured pituitary cells (p<0.05). These data suggest that cyclosporine increases circulating IGF-I and GH by stimulating pituitary GH release.  相似文献   

13.
Hypoglycemia was induced by administration of insulin (40 I.U./kg) to 24 h fasted rats. Somatostatinlike immunoreactivity (SLI) and125I-Tyr11-somatostatin binding were measured in the striatum and hypothalamus at the onset of hypoglycemic coma (5–10 min). No significant changes in SLI concentration were detected in either site although the total number of specific somatostatin receptors in the striatum membranes, but not in the hypothalamus, decreased in insulin-injected rats when compared with the control group.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract: Primary embryonic cortical cultures were used as an in vitro model to evaluate the influence of glia on developmental expression of α7-type nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in rat brain. In cells cultured in serum-containing medium without mitotic inhibitors, specific 125I-α-bungarotoxin binding to α7-type nicotinic receptors was maximal 4–8 days after plating. Treatment with 5'-fluorodeoxyuridine (80 µ M ) from 1 to 3 days in vitro significantly reduced glial proliferation and concomitantly increased 125I-α-bungarotoxin binding, whereas plating onto a glial bed layer decreased binding. There was no significant binding to pure glial cultures. Treatment-induced changes in neuronal binding resulted from alterations in receptor density, with no change in affinity. 5'-Fluorodeoxyuridine treatment also increased cellular expression of α7 receptor mRNA but had no effect on N -[3H]methylscopolamine binding to muscarinic receptors. Glial conditioned medium decreased 125I-α-bungarotoxin binding in both control and 5'-fluorodeoxyuridine-treated cultures, suggesting the release of a soluble factor that inhibits α7-type nicotinic receptor expression. An additional mechanism of glial regulation may involve removal of glutamate from the surrounding medium, as added glutamate (200 µ M ) increased 125I-α-bungarotoxin binding in astrocyte-poor cultures but not in those that were astrocyte enriched. These results suggest that glia may serve a physiological role in regulating α7-type nicotinic receptors in developing brain.  相似文献   

15.
Incubation of rat striatal tissue in the presence of acetylcholine, carbachol, oxotremorine, or nicotine results in a significant decrease in the sodium-dependent high-affinity glutamate uptake (HAGU). The cholinergic inhibitory effect on glutamate transport is no more detectable in the presence of atropine, a cholinergic receptor antagonist. These data support the hypothesis that glutamatergic nerve ending activity in the striatum is modulated by cholinergic neurons. The effects would involve both muscarinic and nicotinic presynaptic receptors located on the corticostriatal glutamatergic terminals.  相似文献   

16.
The present experiments show that N-[3H]-methylcarbamylcholine ([3H]MCC) binds specifically and with high affinity to rat hippocampus, frontal cortex, and striatum. The highest maximal density of binding sites was apparent in frontal cortex and the lowest in hippocampus. [3H]MCC binding was potently inhibited by nicotinic, but not muscarinic, agonists and by the nicotinic antagonist dihydro-beta-erythroidine in all three brain regions studied. The effect of unlabeled MCC on acetylcholine (ACh) release from slices of rat brain was tested. The drug significantly enhanced spontaneous ACh release from slices of hippocampus and frontal cortex, but not from striatal slices. This effect of MCC to increase ACh release from rat hippocampus and frontal cortex was antagonized by the nicotinic antagonists dihydro-beta-erythroidine and d-tubocurarine, but not by alpha-bungarotoxin or by the muscarinic antagonist atropine. The MCC-induced increase in spontaneous ACh release from hippocampal and frontal cortical slices was not affected by tetrodotoxin. The results suggest that MCC might alter cholinergic transmission in rat brain by a direct activation of presynaptic nicotinic receptors on the cholinergic terminals. That this alteration of ACh release is apparent in hippocampus and frontal cortex, but not in striatum, suggests that there may be a regional specificity in the regulation of ACh by nicotinic receptors in rat brain.  相似文献   

17.
It has been recently shown that salsolinol (SAL) is present in the hypothalamic neuroendocrine dopaminergic (NEDA) system and appears to be a selective and potent stimulator of prolactin (PRL) secretion in the rat. Furthermore, the lack of interference of SAL with 3H-spiperone binding in the striatum and the anterior lobe (AL) of the pituitary gland has been also demonstrated. These data clearly indicate that SAL does not act at the dopamine (DA) D(2) receptors, and suggest that SAL supposedly has a binding site through which the secretion of PRL may be affected. Therefore, binding of 3H-SAL to different regions of the central nervous system (CNS) has been investigated. Specific and saturable binding has been detected in the striatum, cortex, median eminence and in the hypothalamus as well as in the AL and the neuro-intermediate lobe (NIL) of the pituitary gland. K(D) values of the bindings were in the nanomolar range in all tissue tested. 3H-SAL displacing activity of several agonists and antagonists of known DA receptors have also been tested. It has been found that DA and in a lesser extent, apomorphine could displace 3H-SAL, but other DA receptor specific ligands have not been able to affect it. Furthermore, several pharmacologically active compounds, selected on the basis of their influence on DA synthesis, transport mechanisms and signal transduction, have also been tested. Neither mazindol (a selective DA transporter inhibitor) nor clonidine (an alpha(2)-adrenoreceptor agonist) could alter SAL binding. At the same time, L-dopa, carbidopa, benserazide and alpha-methyldopa were able to displace 3H-SAL. The possible changes in SAL binding due to physiological and pharmacological stimuli, like suckling stimulus and reserpine pretreatment (that blocks vesicular monoamine transport in DA terminals), respectively, have also been investigated. In the NIL of the pituitary gland and in the median eminence of the hypothalamus the binding decreased following 10 min of suckling stimulus compared to the binding detected in the same tissues obtained from mothers separated from their pups for 4h and not allowed to be suckled. At the same time, there were no changes in the binding at the AL and striatum. Following reserpine pretreatment that has completely prevented PRL releasing effect of SAL, the binding was significantly augmented. These results support our assumption that SAL should have specific binding sites through which it can affect PRL secretion. Furthermore, it clearly suggests that it may regulate DAergic neurotransmission of NEDA neurons by an altered intracellular or intraterminal synthesis and/or distribution of hypophysiotropic DA.  相似文献   

18.
A single type of high-affinity binding sites for IL-1 beta was identified in the rat hypothalamus (Kd = 1.0 +/- 0.2 nM) and cerebral cortex (Kd = 1.3 +/- 0.2 nM), but not in the pituitary. The maximum binding capacity (Bmax) in the hypothalamus (Bmax = 75.4 +/- 10.8 fmol/mg protein) was 4 times greater than in the cerebral cortex (Bmax = 17.2 +/- 1.5 fmol/mg protein). Neither various neuropeptides nor IL-2 appeared to influence the binding of [125I]IL-1 beta to the hypothalamic membrane preparations. The potency of unlabeled IL-1 alpha to replace the binding of [125I]IL-1 beta to the hypothalamic membrane preparations was considerably less than that of unlabeled IL-1 beta. These findings indicate that IL-1 beta receptors are heterogeneously distributed in the central nervous system and that IL-1 alpha does not bind with IL-1 beta receptors in the brain.  相似文献   

19.
In the present study, the effects of 17beta-estradiol (E(2)) treatment on the expression of preprosomatostatin (PPSS) I, PPSS II', and PPSS II" mRNA in the hypothalamus and endocrine pancreas (Brockmann body), as well as the effects of E(2) treatment on plasma somatostatin (SS)-14 and -25 concentrations in sexually immature rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), were investigated. E(2) treatment significantly (P < 0.001) depressed both plasma SS-14 and SS-25. In the hypothalamus, E(2) treatment significantly (P < 0.001) decreased the levels of PPSS I and PPSS II" mRNA. However, there was no effect of E(2) treatment on PPSS II' mRNA levels. In the pancreas, E(2) treatment had no significant effect on the levels of either PPSS II' mRNA or PPSS II" mRNA. However, E(2) treatment significantly (P < 0.005) decreased levels of PPSS I mRNA. These data suggest that E(2) acts, in part, to increase plasma growth hormone levels in rainbow trout by decreasing the endogenous inhibitory somatostatinergic tone by inhibiting plasma levels of both SS-14 and SS-25 and hypothalamic levels of mRNA encoding these proteins.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of galanin, a peptide present in a subpopulation of histaminergic neurons emanating from the rat posterior hypothalamus, was investigated on K(+)-evoked [3H]histamine release in slices and synaptosomes from rat cerebral cortex, striatum, hippocampus and hypothalamus. Porcine galanin (0.3 microM) significantly inhibited histamine release induced by 25 mM K+ in slices from hypothalamus and hippocampus, but not from cerebral cortex and striatum, i.e., only in regions in which a colocalization of histamine and galanin has been described. The inhibitory effect of galanin was concentration dependent, with an EC50 value of 5.8 +/- 1.9 nM. The maximal inhibition was of 30-40% in hypothalamic and hippocampal slices depolarized with 25 mM K+. The galanin-induced inhibition observed in hypothalamic slices was not prevented in the presence of 0.6 microM tetrodotoxin and also occurred in hippocampal and hypothalamic synaptosomes, strongly suggesting the activation by galanin of presynaptic receptors located upon histaminergic nerve endings. The maximal inhibitory effect of galanin in slices or synaptosomes was lower than that previously reported for histamine acting at H3-autoreceptors, possibly suggesting that not all histaminergic axon terminals, even in the hypothalamus and hippocampus, are endowed with galanin receptors. It increased progressively in hypothalamic and hippocampal synaptosomes as the strength of the depolarizing stimulus was reduced. It is concluded that galanin modulates histamine release via presynaptic receptors, presumably autoreceptors located upon nerve terminals of a subpopulation of cerebral histaminergic neurons.  相似文献   

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