Trigeminoparabrachial projection neurons showing substance P receptor-like immunoreactivity in the rat

Neuroscience Research
Y Q DingN Mizuno

Abstract

By means of substance P receptor (SPR) immunofluorescence histochemistry combined with Fluoro-Gold fluorescent retrograde labeling, SPR-like immunoreactive neurons in the caudal subnucleus of the spinal trigeminal nucleus of the rat were observed to send their axons to the nucleus of Kölliker-Fuse and ventrolateral part of the lateral parabrachial nucleus bilaterally with a clear ipsilateral dominance. These neurons were distributed mainly in lamina I, and additionally in lamina III.

References

May 22, 1989·Neuroscience Letters·J F BernardJ M Besson
Oct 8, 1985·The Journal of Comparative Neurology·D F CechettoC B Saper
Jan 1, 1983·Annual Review of Neuroscience·R Dubner, G J Bennett
Mar 20, 1995·The Journal of Comparative Neurology·C B Saper
Apr 30, 1993·Neuroscience Letters·R ShigemotoN Mizuno

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Citations

Jul 20, 2002·Brain Research Bulletin·Terence V Sewards, Mark Sewards
Mar 21, 2009·The Anatomical Record : Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology·Bo-Chang LüYun-Qing Li
Jan 30, 2004·The Journal of Comparative Neurology·Radhouane DallelPatrick Raboisson
Dec 1, 2017·Nature Neuroscience·Erica RodriguezFan Wang
Jul 29, 2006·The Journal of Comparative Neurology·Jinlian LiNoboru Mizuno

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Antibody Specificity

Antibodies produced by B cells are highly specific for antigen as a result of random gene recombination and somatic hypermutation and affinity maturation. As the main effector of the humoral immune system, antibodies can neutralize foreign cells. Find the latest research on antibody specificity here.