gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glycine have been implicated in the inhibition of sensory pathways in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. The object of this study is to investigate the interactions between neurones immunoreactive for GABA and/or glycine and hair follicle afferent terminals labelled by intracellular injection with neurobiotin. GABA and glycine-like immunoreactivity in axons and dendrites in synaptic contact with the afferent terminals was demonstrated by using a postembedding immunogold method, and serial section reconstruction was used to show the distribution and nature of these interactions in lamina III of the dorsal horn. Most afferent boutons (94%) were postsynaptic at axo-axonic synapses: 67% of presynaptic boutons presynaptic to the afferent terminals were immunoreactive for GABA and glycine, 24% for GABA alone, and 7% for glycine alone. Only a small percentage of dendrites postsynaptic to afferent boutons appeared to belong to inhibitory interneurones: 3% were immunoreactive for GABA and glycine, 10% for glycine alone, but 87% were immunoreactive for neither antibody. Many afferent boutons were the central terminals of what appeared to be type IIb glomeruli and were involved triadic synaptic arrangements at which boutons presynaptic to an afferent terminal also made axodendritic contacts with dendrites postsynaptic to the afferent. Many of the presynaptic boutons involved in the triads were immunoreactive for GABA and glycine. Because afferent terminals do not themselves express glycine receptors (Mitchell et al. [1993] J. Neurosci. 13:2371-2381), glycine may therefore act on dendrites postsynaptic to hair follicle afferent terminals at these triads.
The object of this study was to analyze the synaptic interactions of identified muscle spindle afferent axon terminals in the spinal cord of the rat. Group 1a muscle afferents supplying the gastrocnemius muscle were impaled with microelectrodes in the dorsal white matter of the spinal cord and stained by intracellular injection with Neurobiotin. Postembedding immunogold techniques were used to reveal GABA- and glycine-like immunoreactivity in boutons presynaptic to afferent terminals in the ventral horn and the deep layers of the dorsal horn. Serial-section reconstruction was used to reveal the distribution of synaptic contacts of different types on the afferent terminals. The majority of afferent boutons received axoaxonic and made axodendritic or axosomatic synaptic contacts. In the ventral horn, 91% of boutons presynaptic to the afferent terminals were immunoreactive for GABA alone and 9% were immunoreactive for both GABA and glycine. The mean number of axo-axonic contacts received per terminal was 2.7, and the mean number of synaptic contacts at which the terminal was the presynaptic element was 1.4. In the deep layers of the dorsal horn, 58% of boutons presynaptic to afferent terminals were immunoreactive for GABA alone, 31% were immunoreactive for GABA and glycine, and 11% for glycine alone. The mean number of axoaxonic contacts received per afferent terminal in this region was 1.6 and the mean number of synaptic contacts at which the terminal was the presynaptic element was 0.86. This clearly establishes the principle that activity in 1a afferents is modulated by several neurochemically distinct populations of presynaptic neuron.
The protectivity of the natural honey has been assessed against the toxicity of Doxorubicin (DOX) in liver tissues of 106 male Albino mice Mus musculus strain weighing 37 ± 3 gm. The body and liver weights, morphological behavior changes, liver function and pathological effects on liver were recorded. Toxicity study of DOX showed that the LD 50 and LD were 20 and 30 mg/Kg, respectively. Intra-peritoneal (i.p.) injection of DOX induced significant (p ≤ 0.01 -0.001) pathological changes in the health, i.e. general weakness, a few morphological changes associated with bleedings, ulceration of skin, hair loss, dimorphism of limbs and bosselation. Daily ingestion of natural honey for seven weeks has led to significant (p ≤ 0.01 -0.001) improvement of these symptoms which appeared as increases in both body and liver weights in comparison with control animals. The natural honey had enhanced the function of liver in treated animals with DOX + honey and reduced the pathological effects of DOX on the above morphological symptoms as well as in the hepatocytes. It is concluded that the ingestion of natural honey has a protective potency against the toxic effects of DOX.
The prevalence of two gastrointestinal parasites the Entamoeba histolytica and Giardia lamblia parasites and their impact on some blood parameters, i.e. packed cell volume (PCV), hemoglobin (Hb%) and total protein (TP) of a total 780 patients (children and adults) admitted to Samarra General Hospital were assessed. Samples of fresh feces were collected in normal physiological saline and examined using Olympic microscopes. The frequency of the parasite E. histolytica was 12.8% (46.3% male and 53.6% female). The highest frequency of infection of E. histolytica (13.8%) was found at age group (1-5 years old) followed by <1 year old children while the lowest (7.4%) was at ages (>41 years old). The highest rate of infection (33.9%) was found in September and the lowest (2.2%) in January. Similarly, the general infection frequency of the parasite G. lamblia was 3.9% with the highest rate at ages 1-20 years old and the lowest rate was 7.3% for >50 years old. The monthly, highest rate of infection (5.2%) was in August and least (2.2%) in January (2.2%). The frequency of total protein (TPD) in the blood relevant to the presence of parasite E. histolytica and G. lamblia was 4.6% and 1%, respectively. It is concluded that the above two parasites are the most common gastrointestinal parasite in Iraq whose pathogenesis to be which is likely to escalate during the summer seasons and at low hygienic services environment. There has been an irrelevance neither to anemia nor total protein deficiency. It is recommended that Ministry of Health in Iraq should not share the global idea of defining the giardiasis as a neglected disease.
Growth factors (GFs) are naturally occurring proteins or steroid hormones which act as signaling molecules between cells that play a key role in the processes of proliferation, cell differentiation and maturation of a wide variety of cells and tissues. A recently purified synthetic basic b-FGF was assessed using a routine tissue culture assay via application of a wide range of doses ranged between 0.1 and 300 ng/mL of the basic fibroblast growth factor (b-FGF) in phosphate buffer saline (PBS) and 10% fetal calf serum (FCS) on the growth rate of Rama-27 mammary cell line. Applying SPSS "Student T-test" biostatistics the result showed significant increase (p ≤ 0.05), almost 7 folds in tissue proliferation at a low dose of 0.3 ng/mL FGF in comparison with control tissue (PBS) only. It is concluded that 0.3 ng/mL dose represents the lower optimal dose suggesting its possibility of an in vivo technique to test its potency in curing skin wounds in rats.
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