8 research outputs found

    LEWY BODIES IN PARKINSONISM SHARE COMPONENTS WITH INTRANEURONAL PROTEIN BODIES OF NORMAL BRAINS

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    Histochemical characteristics of the Lewy bodies, in catecholamine neurons of 10 Parkinsonian patients, were compared to those of the spherical protein bodies, the basic protein-rich markers of catecholamine neurons in man. Special methods for proteins and lipids showed that the core of the Lewy bodies, in the neurons of the locus coeruleus and the substantia nigra, contains basic proteins and lipids normally found in the protein bodies. Acid fuchsin and the lipid-soluble fluorescent dye rhodamine B stained the entire core of the Lewy body in the parkinsonian brains and the entire sphere of the protein body in the control brains. Bromsulfophthalein, another acidic dye, which selectively binds to the enzyme gluthathione-S-transferase, had affinity only for a ring-like lamina at the outer layer of the core of the Lewy body and for the outer rim of the protein body. These results demonstrate that Lewy bodies and protein bodies contain similar macromolecular components, that is lipids and two different types of proteins, which also show similar stratification in the two structures. On the other hand, the presence in several neurons of Parkinsonian patients, of aggregates representing transitional forms between protein bodies and Lewy bodies, indicates that abnormalities of protein bodies precede, and are somehow linked to Lewy body production

    Brain Neurons Partly Expressing Monoaminergic Phenotype: Distribution, Development, and Functional Significance in Norm and Pathology

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    Species Differences in the Immunoreactive Expression of Oxytocin, Vasopressin, Tyrosine Hydroxylase and Estrogen Receptor Alpha in the Brain of Mongolian Gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) and Chinese Striped Hamsters (Cricetulus barabensis)

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