SUMMARY:The pronator quadratus is the principal muscle responsible for pronation of forearm, helped by the pronator teres. To study the innervation of the pronator teres, eighteen forearms from a formol fixed corpses were dissected and the relationship of the median nerve to the pronator teres was examined. The elbow articular line was used as reference point. In all cases the most branches of the median nerve to the pronator teres began in the arm distal third part, whereas the most branches penetrated at the distal half of the forearm proximal third part (75% in right upper limb and 75.8% in left upper limb). The treatment of pronator syndrome could be making easier with the knowledge of the anatomical distribution of nerves.
Urocortin 3 (UCN3) is a neuropeptide member of the corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) peptide family that acts as a selective endogenous ligand for the CRF, subtype 2 (CRF2) receptor. Immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization data from rodents revealed UCN3-containing neurons in discrete regions of the central nervous system (CNS), such as the medial preoptic nucleus, the rostral perifornical area (PFA), the medial nucleus of the amygdala and the superior paraolivary nucleus. UCN3-immunoreactive (UCN3-ir) terminals are distributed throughout regions that mostly overlap with regions of CRF2 messenger RNA (mRNA) expression. Currently, no similar mapping exists for non-human primates. To better understand the role of this neuropeptide, we aimed to study the UCN3 distribution in the brains of New World monkeys of the Sapajus genus. To this end, we analyzed the gene and peptide sequences in these animals and performed immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization to identify UCN3 synthesis sites and to determine the distribution of UCN3-ir terminals. The sequencing of the Sapajus spp. UCN3-coding gene revealed 88% and 65% identity to the human and rat counterparts, respectively. Additionally, using a probe generated from monkey cDNA and an antiserum raised against human UCN3, we found that labeled cells are mainly located in the hypothalamic and limbic regions. UCN3-ir axons and terminals are primarily distributed in the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMH) and the lateral septal nucleus (LS). Our results demonstrate that UCN3-producing neurons in the CNS of monkeys are phylogenetically conserved compared to those of the rodent brain, that the distribution of fibers agrees with the distribution of CRF2 in other primates and that there is anatomical evidence for the participation of UCN3 in neuroendocrine control in primates.
The orexin-immunoreactive neurons are part of an important arousal-promoting hypothalamic population. Several groups have investigated these neurons during the lactation period, when numerous physiological alterations occur in the dam's body to cope with the newly acquired metabolic needs of the litter. Although those studies have probed this population during the early and intermediate stages of lactation, few works have examined its response to weaning, including the cessation of the tactile suckling stimulus as the litter stops nursing. Using double immunohistochemistry for orexin and FOS combined with three-dimensional reconstruction techniques, we investigated orexin-synthesizing neurons and their activation at different times during weaning, in addition to the role played by the suckling stimulus. We report here that weaning promoted a decline in the anterior population of orexin-immunoreactive neurons and decreased the number of double orexin-FOS neurons labeled in the central dorsomedial hypothalamus, in addition to reducing the overall number of FOS-immunoreactive cells in the whole tuberal hypothalamus. Disruption of the suckling stimulus from the pups impaired the decrease in the number of anteriorly located orexin-immunoreactive neurons, attenuated the activation of orexin-synthesizing cells in the dorsomedial hypothalamus and reduced the number of FOS-immunoreactive neurons across the tuberal hypothalamus. When taken together, our data suggest that the weaning period is necessary to restore neurochemical pathways altered during the lactation period and that the suckling stimulus plays a significant role in this process.
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