We explore the patterns of survival among dopaminergic cells of the midbrain in MPTP-treated maca... more We explore the patterns of survival among dopaminergic cells of the midbrain in MPTP-treated macaque monkeys and 6OHDA-lesioned Sprague-Dawley rats. For the monkeys, animals were injected intramuscularly with MPTP for 8 days consecutively and then allowed to survive for 21 days. For the rats, 6OHDA was injected into the midbrain and then allowed to survive for either 7, 28 or 84 days. Brains were processed for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and calbindin immunocytochemistry to label populations in the ventral and dorsal tiers of midbrain dopaminergic cells. In monkeys, while there was a decrease in the TH+ cell number in the ventral tier of MPTP-treated cases (65%), there was an overall increase (22%) in the TH+ and calbindin+ cell number in the dorsal tier. Double labelling studies indicate that ∼50% of TH+ cells of the dorsal tier contain calbindin also. In rats, there was a decrease in TH+ cell number in the ventral tier of 6OHDA-lesioned cases (97%), and to a lesser extent, in the TH+ and calbindin+ cell number in the dorsal tier (∼40%). In conclusion, we show a surprising increase in TH+ and calbindin+ cell number in the dorsal tier in response to MPTP insult; such an increase was not evident after 6OHDA insult. We suggest that the increase in antigen expression relates to the dopaminergic reinnervation of the striatum in MPTP-treated cases. We also suggest that the greater loss of dopaminergic cells in the ventral tier when compared to the dorsal tier relates to glutamate toxicity.
Tanycytes are specialized ependymal cells lining the infundibular recess of the third ventricle o... more Tanycytes are specialized ependymal cells lining the infundibular recess of the third ventricle of the cerebrum. Early and recent investigations involve tanycytes in the mechanism of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) release to the portal blood. The present investigation was performed to obtain a specific immunological marker of tanycytes and to identify the compound(s) responsible for this labeling. After 30 days of organ culture, explants of bovine median eminence formed spherical structures mostly constituted by tanycytes. These tanycyte spheres were xenotransplanted to rats, and the antibodies raised by the host animals against the transplanted living tanycytes were used for immunochemical studies of the bovine and rat median eminence. This antiserum immunoreacted with two compounds of 60 kDa and 85 kDa present in extracts of bovine and rat median eminence. The individual immunoblotting analysis of rat medial basal hypothalami showed a decrease in the amount of the 85-kDa compound in castrated rats as compared to control rats processed at oestrus and dioestrus. The antiserum, labeled as anti-P85, when used for immunostaining of sections throughout the rat central nervous system, immunoreacted specifically with the hypothalamic tanycytes. Within tanycytes, P-85 immunoreactivity was exclusively present in the basal processes. It is suggested that the 85-kDa and 60-kDa compounds correspond to two novel proteins selectively expressed by tanycytes. The possibility that they are secretory proteins involved in GnRH release is discussed. Anti-P85 appears to be the first specific marker of hypothalamic tanycytes.
The current study examined relations between parent anxiety and child anxiety, depression, and ex... more The current study examined relations between parent anxiety and child anxiety, depression, and externalizing symptoms. In addition, the study tested the additive and interactive effects of parent anxiety with parent depression and externalizing symptoms in relation to child symptoms. Forty-eight parents with anxiety disorders and 49 parents without any psychiatric disorder participated with one of their children (ages 6 to 14 years; 46.4% male; 75.8% Caucasian). Parent anxiety was related to both child anxiety and depression, but not child externalizing symptoms. Hierarchical regression analyses showed that only parent externalizing symptoms had additive effects, beyond parent anxiety symptoms, in relation to child anxiety symptoms. Further, parent anxiety symptoms moderated the relationship between parent and child externalizing symptoms, such that the strength of this relationship was reduced in the presence of high levels of parent anxiety symptoms. Results of this study illuminate the role of parent comorbidity in understanding relations between parent and child symptoms.
Abstract Machine vision has been made easier by the development of computer systems capable of pr... more Abstract Machine vision has been made easier by the development of computer systems capable of processing information at high speeds and by inexpensive camera-computer systems. A Camera-Computer system called SIVEDI was developed based in the shape ...
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