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Development of neuropeptide Y innervation in the liver

✍ Scribed by Ding, Wei-Guang; Kitasato, Hiroshi; Kimura, Hiroshi


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
605 KB
Volume
39
Category
Article
ISSN
1059-910X

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✦ Synopsis


Hepatic neuropeptide Y (NPY) innervation was studied by immunohistochemistry in various mature vertebrates including the eel, carp, bullfrog, turtle, chicken, mouse, rat, guinea pig, dog, monkey, and human. In addition, an ontogenetic study on hepatic NPY was made in developing mice and guinea pigs. In all species examined except the eel, NPY-like immunoreactivity was detected in nerve fibers. In the carp, bullfrog, turtle, chicken, mouse, and rat, NPY-positive fibers were distributed around the wall of hepatic vessels and the bile duct of the Glisson's sheath. The density of NPY-positive fibers increased with evolution. However, in the guinea pig, dog, monkey, and human, numerous NPY-positive fibers were observed not only in the Glisson's sheath but also in the liver parenchyma. Positive fibers formed a dense network that surrounded the hepatocytes. The present immunoelectron microscopic study has confirmed that NPY-positive terminals are closely apposed to hepatocytes. Ontogenically, NPY-positive fibers were first found in the embryonic liver of 19-day-old mice. Positive fibers increased with age, and the highest peak was seen 1 week after birth. However, NPY-positive nerve fibers were present abundantly in Glisson's sheath and in the hepatic parenchyma of neonatal (3 and 7 days old) guinea pigs in a distribution similar to that in mature animals. This ontogenetic pattern suggests that NPY plays a certain role in the developing liver. Microsc.


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