نتایج جستجو برای: enteric glial cells

تعداد نتایج: 1403854  

Journal: :Fishes 2023

Twenty-four adult molly fish (Poecilia sphenops, Valenciennes 1846) were collected to study the morphology and distribution of ganglia using histological, immunohistochemical, electron microscopy focusing on their relation immune cells. The classified spatially into cranial spinal, functionally sensory autonomic. Spinal (dorsal root ganglia, DRG) contained large close ganglionic cells, enclosed...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 2017
Jonathon L McClain Brian D Gulbransen

Glia play key roles in the regulation of neurotransmission in the nervous system. Fluoroacetate (FA) is a metabolic poison widely used to study glial functions by disrupting the tricarboxylic acid cycle enzyme aconitase. Despite the widespread use of FA, the effects of FA on essential glial functions such as calcium (Ca2+) signaling and hemichannel function remain unknown. Therefore, our goal w...

Journal: :The Journal of clinical investigation 2011
Catia Laranjeira Katarina Sandgren Nicoletta Kessaris William Richardson Alexandre Potocnik Pieter Vanden Berghe Vassilis Pachnis

The enteric nervous system (ENS) in mammals forms from neural crest cells during embryogenesis and early postnatal life. Nevertheless, multipotent progenitors of the ENS can be identified in the adult intestine using clonal cultures and in vivo transplantation assays. The identity of these neurogenic precursors in the adult gut and their relationship to the embryonic progenitors of the ENS are ...

2005
Takaharu Taketomi Daigo Yoshiga Koji Taniguchi Takashi Kobayashi Atsushi Nonami Reiko Kato Mika Sasaki Atsuo Sasaki Hitoshi Ishibashi Maiko Moriyama Akihiko Yoshimura

We report here that loss of the Sprouty2 gene (also known as Spry2) in mice resulted in enteric nerve hyperplasia, which led to esophageal achalasia and intestinal pseudo-obstruction. Glial cell line–derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) induced hyperactivation of ERK and Akt in enteric nerve cells. AntiGDNF antibody administration corrected nerve hyperplasia in Sprouty2-deficient mice. We show Sp...

Journal: :Gut 2006
G Bassotti V Villanacci C A Maurer S Fisogni F Di Fabio M Cadei A Morelli T Panagiotis G Cathomas B Salerni

BACKGROUND Idiopathic slow transit constipation is one of the most severe and often intractable forms of constipation. As motor abnormalities are thought to play an important pathogenetic role, studies have been performed on the colonic neuroenteric system, which rules the motor aspects of the viscus. AIMS We hypothesised that important neuropathological abnormalities of the large bowel are p...

2011
Tiffany A Heanue Vassilis Pachnis

The capacity to identify and isolate lineage-specific progenitor cells from developing and mature tissues would enable the development of cell replacement therapies for disease treatment. The enteric nervous system (ENS) regulates important gut functions, including controlling peristaltic muscular contractions, and consists of interconnected ganglia containing neurons and glial cells. Hirschspr...

Journal: :The international journal of biochemistry & cell biology 2004
Kristjan R Jessen

The nervous system is built from two broad categories of cells, neurones and glial cells. The glial cells outnumber the neurones and the two cell types occupy a comparable amount of space in nervous tissue. The main glial cell types are, in the central nervous system, astrocytes and oligodendrocytes and, in the peripheral nervous system, Schwann cells, enteric glial cells and satellite cells. I...

2002
G. Burnstock S. Lavin

Interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC) in the guinea pig intestine, identified by the tyrosine kinase receptor, c-Kit, have been shown with immunohistochemistry to express nucleotide P2X2 and P2X5 receptors. P2X5 receptors have also been demonstrated on interstitial cells in the mouse ileum. It is speculated that release of ATP from enteric nerves, enteric glial cells or from contracting smooth musc...

2015
David E. Fried Brian D. Gulbransen

Reflex behaviors of the intestine are controlled by the enteric nervous system (ENS). The ENS is an integrative network of neurons and glia in two ganglionated plexuses housed in the gut wall. Enteric neurons and enteric glia are the only cell types within the enteric ganglia. The activity of enteric neurons and glia is responsible for coordinating intestinal functions. This protocol describes ...

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