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1.
In this series of studies, the innervation patterns of whole-mount preparations of bicuspid and tricuspid valves were studied by light microscopy in the mouse, rat, guinea pig, and opossum. The acetylcholinesterase-positive networks of nerve fibers showed many similarities in the basic patterns of valve innervation in all of the species studied, but several interspecies variations were observed. The basal zone of the valve adjacent to the fibromuscular atrioventricular ring displayed the most dense plexus of nerves, with acetylcholinesterase-positive fibers being seen across the width of the valve. In the intermediate zone of the valve, less dense plexuses of nerve fibers were found; and these were more numerous in the cuspal areas and less numerous in the intervening commissural areas. In the distal portions of the valve, nerve networks arborized extensively, with some of their nerve fibers extending toward the chordae tendineae and the free edges of the valve cusps. Only in the guinea pig and opossum did these fibers reach the free margin of the valve cusp, where they either ended directly as free nerve endings or lay parallel to the free edge of the cusp, often running between adjacent chordae tendineae. Although the patterns of innervation were similar in both bicuspid and tricuspid valves, the innervation density of the bicuspid valve was greater than that of the tricuspid valve for each species examined. A distinguishing feature of guinea pig and opossum tricuspid valves was that their chordae tendineae were relatively more prominent and more densely innervated than the bicuspid chordae tendineae. Free nerve endings with no light microscopic evidence of specialization were present throughout the bicuspid and tricuspid valves of all species studied. Some nerve endings in the opossum showed evidence of specialization, with brush-like arborizations leading to presumed free terminals seen chiefly in the distal zone of the valve cusps. Although some general tendencies were apparent, we have demonstrated that interspecies heterogeneity exists in the terminal networks of the atrioventricular valves of mouse, rat, guinea pig, and opossum.  相似文献   

2.
To explore the possible role of gap junctions in neural regulation of hepatic glucose metabolism, the effects of hepatic nerve stimulation on metabolic and hemodynamic changes were examined in normal and regenerating rat liver which was perfused in situ at constant pressure via the portal vein with a medium containing 5 mM glucose, 2 mM lactate and 0.2 mM pyruvate. 1. The content of connexin 32, a major component of gap junctions in rat liver, decreased transiently to about 25% of the control level in regenerating liver 48-72 h after partial hepatectomy and recovered to normal by the 11th day after the operation. 2. In normal liver, electrical stimulation of the hepatic nerves (10 Hz, 20 V, 2 ms) and infusion of noradrenaline (1 microM) both increased glucose and lactate output and reduced perfusion flow. 3. In early stage of regenerating liver 48 h and 72 h after partial hepatectomy, the increase in glucose output in response to nerve stimulation was almost completely inhibited, whereas the change in lactate balance was partially suppressed and the reduction of flow rate was retained. The response of glucose output to nerve stimulation recovered by the 11th day after partial hepatectomy. In contrast, exogenous application of noradrenaline increased glucose output even in the early stage of regenerating liver. 4. The increase in noradrenaline overflow during hepatic nerve stimulation in the early stage of regenerating liver was approximately the same as in normal liver. Liver glycogen was sufficiently preserved in the early stage of regenerating liver. However, noradrenaline infusion could no more increase glucose output both in normal and in regenerating livers after 24 h of fasting that depleted liver glycogen. These results suggest that the impaired effects of sympathetic nerve stimulation on glucose metabolism observed in regenerating liver are derived neither from reduced release of noradrenaline nor from depletion of liver glycogen, but rather from transient reduction of gap junctions which assist signal propagation of the nerve action through intercellular communication in rat liver.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The distribution of nerve fibers displaying neuropeptide Y immunoreactivity in relationship to the catecholaminergic innervation of rat, guinea pig, and rabbit liver was investigated by single- and double-label immunofluorescence methods. In all three species, neuropeptide Y-immunoreactive fibers are prominent in association with the vasculature, biliary pathway, and stromal compartment. The neuropeptide Y innervation of the parenchyma, on the other hand, differs among the three species in term of density. It is quite sparse in the rat and rabbit, particularly in the former species. In the guinea pig liver, numerous single, varicose neuropeptide Y-containing nerve fibers innervate the hepatic parenchyma; often, thin processes surround single hepatocytes and lie close to sinusoids. The immunoreactive pattern of tyrosine hydroxylase, a marker for catecholaminergic neurons and fibers, is comparable to that of neuropeptide Y. Most neuropeptide Y-containing nerve fibers also contain tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity, in all three species, with the exception of the rabbit parenchyma, where a substantial proportion of catecholaminergic fibers lack immunoreactivity for neuropeptide Y. Finally, systemic administration of the sympathetic neurotoxin, 6-hydroxydopamine, in rats and guinea pigs resulted in virtually complete elimination of both neuropeptide Y- and tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive fibers. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that neuropeptide Y-containing nerve fibers form a subpopulation of the sympathetic innervation of the mammalian liver, which is likely to originate from prevertebral sympathetic ganglia.  相似文献   

4.
In the perfused rat liver stimulation of the hepatic nerves around the portal vein and the hepatic artery was previously shown to increase glucose output, to shift lactate uptake to output, to decrease and re-distribute intrahepatic perfusion flow and to cause an overflow of noradrenaline into the hepatic vein. The metabolic effects could be caused directly via nerve hepatocyte contacts or indirectly by the hemodynamic changes and/or by noradrenaline overflow from the afferent vasculature into the sinusoids. Evidence against the indirect modes of nerve action is presented. Reduction of perfusion flow by lowering the perfusion pressure from 2 to 1 ml X min-1 X g-1--as after nerve stimulation--or to 0.35 ml X min-1 X g-1--far beyond the nerve stimulation-dependent effect--did not change glucose output and lowered lactate uptake only slightly. Only re-increase of flow to 2 ml X min-1 X g-1 enhanced glucose and lactate release transiently due to washout of glucose and lactate accumulated in parenchymal areas not perfused during low perfusion flow. In chemically sympathectomized livers nerve stimulation decreased perfusion flow almost normally but without changing the intrahepatic microcirculation; yet it enhanced glucose and lactate output only insignificantly and caused noradrenaline overflow of less than 10% of normal. Conversely, in the presence of nitroprussiate (III) nerve stimulation reduced overall flow only slightly without intrahepatic redistribution but still increased glucose and lactate output strongly and caused normal noradrenaline overflow.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Liver tissue from 12 different mammalian species was studied with a fluorescence histochemical technique for the cellular localization of amines (Falck-Hillarp technique) and with a chemical method for the determination of norepinephrine (HPLC-technique). Adrenergic nerve plexus were found in interlobular blood vessels derived from the portal vein and hepatic artery. Varicose adrenergic nerve fibres were, generally, seen to branch from the fibres around the blood vessels and to enter the liver parenchyma, where they formed a randomly distributed intralobular network. The density of these intralobular fibres showed marked species variation. Human liver and liver from the rhesus monkey, baboon, cynomolgus monkey and guinea pig showed a high density of parenchymal adrenergic nerves. Rabbit, cat, pig, cow and horse liver formed an intermediate group, having fewer varicose adrenergic nerve fibres but an unequivocal distribution of these nerves to the liver parenchyma. In rat and mouse liver no parenchymal innervation could be demonstrated. The density of the parenchymal innervation generally correlated with the concentration of norepinephrine in the liver tissue.  相似文献   

6.
In perfused rat liver hepatic nerve stimulation (10 Hz, 2 ms) caused an increase in glucose and lactate output, a decrease in flow and an overflow of noradrenaline into the hepatic vein. Noradrenaline (1 microM) (NA) and prostaglandin F2 alpha (5 microM) (PGF2 alpha), which are implicated as mediators of nerve action, elicited similar effects. 1) All actions of nerve stimulation and the hemodynamic but not the metabolic effects of noradrenaline and PGF2 alpha were largely dependent on extracellular calcium. 2) The dihydropyridine type calcium antagonist nifedipine (5 microM) inhibited the hemodynamic but not the metabolic actions of nerve stimulation, NA and PGF2 alpha, while the phenylalkylamine type calcium antagonist verapamil (5 microM) had no effect. These findings allow the following conclusions: Calcium influx into I nerve endings, necessary for the release of neurotransmitter, II parenchymal cells, for the display of metabolic effects induced by nerve stimulation, and III the actions of NA and PGF2 alpha, do not appear to be mediated by the normal affinity nifedipine- or the verapamil-sensitive channels. Calcium influx into vascular smooth muscle and/or endothelial cells for the display of hemodynamic action induced by nerve stimulation and the NA and PGF2 alpha effects, appear to occur through nifedipine-sensitive but verapamil-insensitive channels.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The autonomic innervation of the ovary was studied in 12 mammalian species utilizing the cholinesterase method in combination with pseudocholinesterase inhibition for the cholinergic component, and glyoxylic acid histochemistry together with fluorometric determination of noradrenaline for the adrenergic component. Ovaries from cow, sheep, cat, and guinea pig were very richly supplied with adrenergic nerves in the cortical stroma, particularly enclosing follicles in various stages of development. In the follicular wall the nerve terminals were located in the theca externa, where they ran parallel to the follicular surface. Numerous adrenergic terminals also surrounded ovarian blood vessels. The adrenergic innervation was of intermediary density in the human ovary and in the pig, dog, cat, and opossum. Ovaries from rabbit, mouse and hamster had a sparse adrenergic nerve supply. The amount of intraovarian adrenergic nerves agreed well with the tissue concentration of noradrenaline in the various species. The cholinergic innervation was generally less well developed, but had the same distribution as the adrenergic system around blood vessels and in the ovarian stroma, including follicular walls.  相似文献   

8.
The regulation of ketogenesis by the hepatic nerves was investigated in the rat liver perfused in situ. Electrical stimulation of the hepatic nerves around the portal vein and the hepatic artery caused a reduction of basal ketogenesis owing to a decrease in acetoacetate release to 30% with essentially no change in 3-hydroxybutyrate release. At the same time, as observed before [Hartmann et al. (1982) Eur. J. Biochem. 123, 521-526], nerve stimulation increased glucose output, shifted lactate uptake to output and decreased perfusion flow. Ketogenesis from oleate, which enters the mitochondria via the carnitine system, was also lowered after nerve stimulation owing to a decrease of acetoacetate release to 30% with no alteration in 3-hydroxybutyrate release. Ketogenesis from octanoate, which enters the mitochondria independently of the carnitine system, was decreased after nerve stimulation as a result of a drastic decrease of acetoacetate output to 15% and a less pronounced decrease of 3-hydroxybutyrate release to 65%. Noradrenaline mimicked the metabolic nerve effects on ketogenesis only at the highly unphysiological concentration of 0.1 microM under basal conditions and in the presence of oleate as well as partly in the presence of octanoate. It was essentially not effective at a concentration of 0.01 microM, which might be reached in the sinusoids owing to overflow from the hepatic vasculature. Sodium nitroprusside prevented the hemodynamic changes after nerve stimulation; it did not affect the nerve-dependent reduction of ketogenesis under basal conditions and in the presence of oleate, yet it diminished the nerve effect on octanoate-dependent ketogenesis. Phentolamine clearly reduced the metabolic and hemodynamic nerve effects, while propranolol was without effect. The present data suggest that hepatic ketogenesis was inhibited by stimulation of alpha-sympathetic liver nerves directly rather than indirectly via hemodynamic changes or noradrenaline overflow from the vessels and that the site of regulation should be mainly intramitochondrial.  相似文献   

9.
The regional distributions of acetylcholine (ACh) and choline (Ch) in the guinea pig heart were investigated with a pyrolysis-mass fragmentography technique. Using ACh as a marker for cholinergic neurons, we have described a pattern of parasympathetic innervation in the guinea pig heart. This distribution is very similar to that suggested by studies using several different cholinergic indicators in various species. Atrial areas receive richer parasympathetic innervation than ventricular areas, with the right portions receiving more than the left. The nodal areas were the most abundantly innervated regions examined. Ch content is not a good indicator for cholinergic innervation as the regional distribution of ACh and Ch throughout the guinea pig heart are not strongly associated.  相似文献   

10.
The mode of action of hepatic nerves on the metabolism of carbohydrates was studied in the rat liver perfused in situ. 1. Electrical stimulation of the nerve bundles around the hepatic artery and the portal vein resulted in an increase of glucose and lactate output, an enhancement of phosphorylase a activity and a decrease of portal flow. 2. Sodium nitroprusside prevented the hemodynamic changes after nerve stimulation without affecting the metabolic alterations. 3. Phentolamine or an extracellular calcium level below 300 mumol x 1(-1) abolished both hemodynamic and metabolic changes after nerve stimulation, while propranolol or atropine were without effect. 4. Norepinephrine infusion mimicked nerve stimulation only at the highly unphysiological concentration of 0.1 microM; it was not effective at a concentration of 0.01 microM, which might be reached in the sinusoidal blood due to an overflow from intrahepatic synapses. The present results suggest that, in rat liver, glycogen breakdown is regulated by alpha-sympathetic nerves directly rather than indirectly via hemodynamic changes or via norepinephrine overflow.  相似文献   

11.
M Iwai  K Jungermann 《FEBS letters》1987,221(1):155-160
In isolated rat liver perfused at constant pressure with Krebs-Henseleit buffer containing 5 mM glucose, 2 mM lactate, 0.2 mM pyruvate and 0.1% bovine serum albumin, perivascular nerve stimulation (20 V, 20 Hz, 2 ms) and infusion of ATP (100 microM), noradrenaline (1 microM) or arachidonic acid (100 microM) caused an increase in glucose and lactate output and a reduction of perfusion flow. The metabolic effects of nerve stimulation but not those of ATP and noradrenaline were inhibited strongly by the phospholipase A2 inhibitor bromophenacyl bromide (BPB, 20 microM) and the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin (Indo, 20 microM) and only slightly by the lipoxygenase inhibitor nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA, 20 microM). In contrast, the hemodynamic effects not only of nerve stimulation but also of ATP and noradrenaline were inhibited strongly by BPB and Indo and slightly by NDGA. The metabolic and hemodynamic actions of arachidonate were inhibited specifically by Indo. These results suggest that the effects of nerve stimulation were at least partially mediated or modulated by eicosanoids, especially by prostanoids.  相似文献   

12.
Cell-to-cell communication via gap junctions has been proposed to be involved in the metabolic actions of sympathetic liver nerves in the rat. The effects of hepatic nerve stimulation and noradrenaline-, PGF2 alpha- and glucagon infusion on glucose metabolism and perfusion flow were studied in perfused rat liver in the absence and presence of the gap junctional inhibitors, heptanol, carbenoxolone and (4 beta)phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (4 beta PMA). (i) Stimulation of the hepatic nerve plexus increased glucose output, decreased flow and caused an overflow of noradrenaline into the hepatic vein. (ii) Heptanol completely inhibited not only the nerve stimulation-dependent metabolic and hemodynamic alterations but also the noradrenaline overflow. Thus the heptanol-dependent inhibitions were caused primarily by a strong impairment of transmitter release. (iii) Carbenoxolone inhibited the effects of neurostimulation on glucose metabolism partially by about 50%, whereas it left perfusion flow and noradrenaline overflow essentially unaltered. (iv) 4 beta PMA reduced the nerve stimulation-dependent enhancement of glucose release by about 80% but the noradrenaline-dependent increase in glucose output only by about 30%; the increase in glucose release by PGF2 alpha and by glucagon remained essentially unaltered. 4 beta PMA reduced the nerve stimulation-dependent decrease in portal flow by about 35% but did not affect the noradrenaline-and PGF2 alpha-elicited alterations, nor did it alter noradrenaline overflow. The results allow the conclusion that gap junctional communication plays a major role in the regulation of hepatic carbohydrate metabolism by sympathetic liver nerves, but not by circulating noradrenaline, PGF2 alpha or glucagon.  相似文献   

13.
In isolated rat liver perfused at constant pressure perivascular nerve stimulation caused an increase of glucose and lactate output and a reduction of perfusion flow. The metabolic and hemodynamic nerve effects could be inhibited by inhibitors of prostanoid synthesis, which led to the suggestion that the effects of nerve stimulation were, at least partially, mediated by prostanoids [Iwai, M. & Jungermann, K. (1987) FEBS Lett. 221, 155-160]. This suggestion is corroborated by the present study. 1. Prostaglandin D2, E2 and F2 alpha as well as the thromboxane A2 analogue U46619 enhanced glucose and lactate release and lowered perfusion flow similar to nerve stimulation. 2. The extents, the kinetics and the concentration dependencies of the metabolic and hemodynamic actions of the various prostanoids were different. Prostaglandin F2 alpha and D2 caused relatively stronger changes of metabolism, while prostaglandin E2 and U46619 had stronger effects on hemodynamics. Prostaglandin F2 alpha elicited greater maximal alterations than D2 with similar half-maximally effective concentrations. Prostaglandin F2 alpha mimicked the nerve actions on both metabolism and hemodynamics best with respect to the relative extents and the kinetics of the alterations. 3. The hemodynamic effects of prostaglandin F2 alpha could be prevented completely by the calcium antagonist nifedipine without impairing the metabolic actions of the prostanoid. Apparently, prostaglandin F2 alpha influenced metabolism directly rather than indirectly via hemodynamic changes. The present results, together with the previously described effects of prostanoid synthesis inhibitors, suggest that prostanoids, probably prostaglandin F2 alpha and/or D2, could be involved in the actions of sympathetic hepatic nerves on liver carbohydrate metabolism. Since prostanoids are synthesized only in non-parenchymal cells, nervous control of metabolism appears to depend on complex intra-organ cell-cell interactions between the nerve, non-parenchymal and parenchymal cells.  相似文献   

14.
Five sows, five cows, five hens, six guinea pigs, six rabbits, and six rats were used in a study to determine if hepatic microsomal triglyceride transfer protein activity differed among species that varied in site of fatty acid synthesis and rate of hepatic triglyceride export. No differences in plasma nonesterified fatty acids were seen among species. Plasma concentrations of glucose were highest in the hen, intermediate in the rat, guinea pig, and rabbit and lowest in the sow and cow. Liver triglyceride was low in all species with the only significant difference being between the hen and the guinea pig (4.7 and 1.1%, DM basis, respectively). No microsomal triglyceride transfer protein activity was found in muscle. The cow, rat, and guinea pig had the lowest levels and the hen and rabbit the highest levels of duodenal microsomal triglyceride transfer protein activity. Hepatic microsomal triglyceride transfer protein activity was significantly higher in the sow than the other species. Hepatic microsomal triglyceride transfer protein activity was 1.51, 1.63, 2.36, 2.72, 2.95, and 6.70 nmole triolein transferred/h/mg microsomal protein for the guinea pig, rabbit, cow, rat, hen, and sow, respectively. Microsomal triglyceride transfer protein activity in duodenal tissue was 18.0, 18.6, 19.2, 33.4, 113, and 161% of hepatic microsomal triglyceride transfer protein activity for the sow, cow, rat, guinea pig, hen, and rabbit, respectively. Hepatic microsomal triglyceride transfer protein activity scaled to liver weight and metabolic body size was 2.69, 3.36, 4.58, 5.83, 7.49, and 22.3 nmole triolein transferred in the liver/min/kg body weight0.75 for the rabbit, guinea pig, rat, hen, cow, and sow, respectively. There was little relationship between previously published rates for triglyceride export and hepatic microsomal triglyceride transfer protein activity measured in this experiment.  相似文献   

15.
1. Binding of 3H-cortisol by serum proteins by means of competitive adsorption was relatively high by serum of the gerbil, human, rabbit, sheep, tree shrew, hamster, rhesus monkey and horse. 2. A somewhat lower binding was observed by serum proteins of the baboon, cattle, dog, rat and cat. 3. Serum taken from either the mouse, guinea pig or pig gave very flat binding curves, specific binding not exceeding 5% of added 3H-cortisol. 4. It is concluded that the measurement of protein-binding of 3H-cortisol by means of competitive adsorption is a reliable method for serum of most eutherian species but is unsuited if serum of the mouse, guinea pig or pig is used.  相似文献   

16.
In perfused rat liver perivascular nerve stimulation (7.5 Hz, 20 V, 2 ms, 5 min) at the liver hilus caused an increase in glucose and lactate output and a decrease in flow. The influence of the alpha 1-receptor blocker prazosine and the beta-blocker propranolol on these nerve effects was studied in the isolated rat liver perfused classically via the portal vein only and, as developed recently, via both the hepatic artery and the portal vein. 1) In livers perfused via the portal vein only the nerve stimulation-dependent metabolic alterations were nearly completely inhibited by prazosine (5 microM), but not influenced by propranolol (10 microM). The hemodynamic changes were lowered to only 33% by prazosine and not altered by propranolol either. 2) In livers perfused via the hepatic artery (100 mm Hg, 20-40% of flow) and the portal vein (10 mm Hg, 80-60% of flow)--similar to portal perfusions--the nerve stimulation--dependent metabolic alterations were almost completely blocked by arterial, portal or simultaneously applied arterial and portal prazosine. However--in contrast to portal perfusions--the metabolic alterations were reduced to about 20% (glucose) and 50% (lactate) also by propranolol independently of its site of application. The decrease in flow was reduced by prazosine to about 60%, 50% and 30% when applied via the artery, the portal vein or via both vessels, respectively. The hemodynamic alterations were not influenced by propranolol. These results allow the following conclusions: A subpopulation of beta-receptors can play a permissive role in the alpha 1-receptor-mediated sympathetic nerve action on glucose and lactate metabolism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Summary The pattern of noradrenergic innervation of guinea-pig hepatic tissue was examined by using the fluorescence method of Falk et al. (1962). The distribution of monoaminergic nerve fibres in untreated animals was clearly evident at the level of the portal vein, the hepatic artery and the bile duct. The hepatic artery was the most densely innervated. Mast cells and Kupffer cells had no connection with the adrenergic fibres. In daunomycin-pretreated animals, the hepatic cells appeared to be deep red in colour owing to the presence of the antibiotic. Some noradrenergic nervous fibres, never previously described, were unexpectedly distinguishable in the liver parenchyma against the background red colour of daunomycin-pretreated tissue. They appeared to be contiguous to the hepatocytes and were of different shapes: comma-like, V-like, or like a string of pearls. The nature and the functional role of these elements is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

18.
In perfused rat liver hepatic nerve stimulation (10 Hz, 2 ms) (NS) increased glucose and lactate output, decreased flow and was accompanied by an overflow of noradrenaline into the hepatic vein. These effects were dependent on extracellular and partly on intracellular calcium. Infusion of noradrenaline (1 microM) (NA) elicited similar effects. 1) Calmidazolium at 1, 2 and 5 microM caused an increase in basal glucose output and a decrease and intrahepatic redistribution of flow after a lag of 30, 20 and 5 min, respectively. 2) After 5 min of 1 microM calmidazolium, i.e. before it altered basal metabolism and flow, the actions of NS and NA remained unaltered. 3) After 40 min of 1 microM calmidazolium, i.e. after it had just begun to alter basal metabolism and flow, NS caused a decrease in glucose and lactate output rather than an increase and the metabolic effects of NA were strongly reduced whereas the hemodynamic changes of both stimuli were not altered. 4) TMB-8 at 25, 50 and 100 microM caused a transient increase in lactate output and a decrease and intrahepatic redistribution of flow after a lag of 5 min only at 100 microM concentrations. 5) The effects of NS were inhibited already by 25 microM TMB-8 which reduced NA release whereas the effects of NA were not influenced. Thus, calmidazolium and TMB-8 did not act as a calmodulin and intracellular calcium antagonist, respectively, but had unspecific "side effects" in the complex system of the perfused liver. The antagonists cannot be used to study the role of intracellular calcium in intact organs.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of noradrenaline on oxygen uptake, on periportal and perivenous oxygen tension at surface acini, on microcirculation and on glucose output were studied in isolated rat livers perfused at constant flow with Krebs-Henseleit-hydrogen carbonate buffer containing 5mM glucose and 2mM lactate. Noradrenaline at 1 microM concentration caused a decrease in oxygen uptake, while at 0.1 microM it led to an increase. Both high and low doses of noradrenaline decreased the tissue surface oxygen tension in periportal and - after a transient rise - in perivenous areas. Noradrenaline at an overall constant flow caused an increase of portal pressure and an alteration of the intrahepatic distribution of the perfusate: at the surface of the liver and in cross sections infused trypan blue led to only a slightly heterogeneous staining after a low dose of noradrenaline but to a clearly heterogeneous staining after a high dose. Both high and low doses of noradrenaline stimulated glucose release. All effects could be inhibited by the alpha-blocking agent phentolamine. In conclusion, control of hepatic oxygen consumption by circulating noradrenaline is a complex result of opposing hemodynamic and metabolic components: the microcirculatory changes inhibit oxygen uptake; they dominate after high catecholamine doses. The metabolic effects include a stimulation of oxygen utilization; they prevail at low catecholamine levels. The noradrenergic control of glucose release is also very complex, involving direct, metabolic and indirect, hemodynamic components.  相似文献   

20.
O H?pp?l?  M Lakomy 《Histochemistry》1989,92(3):211-218
The localization and distribution of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and bombesin/gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) immunoreactivity were studied in the rat, guinea pig and pig female genital organs with indirect immunohistochemical technique. In the rat, guinea pig and pig, CGRP and GRP immunoreactivities were localized in nerve fibers of the uterus, ovary and oviduct. Generally, CGRP-immunoreactive nerve fibers were intensely stained, while GRP-immunoreactive nerve fibers exhibited moderate immunoreactivity. The number of GRP-immunoreactive nerve fibers in these organs was lower in comparison with that of CGRP-immunoreactive nerve fibers. The pattern of distribution of these nerve fibers was very similar in different genital organs of all species studied. In the uterus of rat, guinea pig and pig, CGRP- and GRP-immunoreactive nerve fibers and nerve bundles were observed in the muscular membrane and around blood vessels. Some delicate CGRP- and GRP-immunoreactive nerve fibers were also present in the submucous layer of the uterus. In the oviduct, CGRP- and GRP-immunoreactive nerve fibers were seen in the muscular membrane, around blood vessels and in the submucous layer. In the ovary, CGRP- and GRP-immunoreactive nerve fibers were distributed in medullary stroma, in close contact with blood vessels and between follicles of different stages of development.  相似文献   

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