توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Amino Acids as Chemical Transmitters
نام کتاب : Amino Acids as Chemical Transmitters
ویرایش : 1
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : اسیدهای آمینه به عنوان انتقال دهنده های شیمیایی
سری : NATO Advanced Study Institutes Series 16
نویسندگان : Victoria Chan-Palay (auth.), Frode Fonnum (eds.)
ناشر : Springer US
سال نشر : 1978
تعداد صفحات : 738
ISBN (شابک) : 9781461340324 , 9781461340300
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 27 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب :
این جلد نمایانگر مجموعه مقالات یک موسسه مطالعات پیشرفته ناتو در اسیدهای آمینه به عنوان فرستنده های شیمیایی است که در هتل Spatind در نروژ ، 14-21 اوت 1977 توری گرفت. اولین این جلسات در بنیاد راکفلر ، بلژیو ، ایتالیا ، 11-16 ژوئیه 1971 و مجموعه مقالات ، محفظه متابولیک در مغز ، توسط R. Balazs و J. E. Cremer ویرایش شد و توسط Macmillan در سال 1973 منتشر شد. جلسه دوم یک موسسه مطالعه پیشرفته در مورد بخش های متابولیک و ساختار مغز و عصبی بود. 1974. این مراحل توسط S. Berl ، D. D. Clarke و D. Schneider ویرایش شد و به عنوان جلد 6 از مجموعه علوم زندگی ناتو ASI توسط Plenum Press منتشر شد. هدف این جلسه بررسی و بحث در مورد وضعیت فعلی اسیدهای آمینه به عنوان فرستنده شیمیایی بود. چندین مسئله مانند پاسخ الکتروفیزیولوژیکی ، بومی سازی ، سینت SIS ، انتشار و اتصال گیرنده نامزدهای فرستنده مورد بحث قرار گرفت. همبستگی مورفولوژیکی احتمالی با این عملکردهای تفریحی نیز مورد بررسی قرار گرفت. در طول جلسه 24 مقاله پیشرو داده شد. علاوه بر این ، چندین نفر از شرکت کنندگان یافته های مهم جدیدی را در طول بحث ارائه دادند. برخی از این موارد به عنوان گزارش های کوتاه گنجانده شده است. حمایت مالی اصلی از ناتو ، بخش امور علمی به دست آمد.
فهرست مطالب :
Front Matter....Pages i-xii
Morphological Correlates for Transmitter Synthesis, Transport, Release, Uptake and Catabolism: A Study of Serotonin Neurons in the Nucleus Paragigantocellularis Lateralis....Pages 1-30
Comments on the Morphology of Inhibitory Axons....Pages 31-38
Ultrastructural Analysis of Axo-Dendritic Initial Collateral Terminals of a Feline Spinocervical Tract Neurone, Stained Intracellularly with Horseradish Peroxidase....Pages 39-48
Electron Cytochemistry of GABA-Transaminase in Rat Cerebellar Cortex, and Evidence for Multimolecular Forms of the Enzyme....Pages 49-53
Pre- and Non-Synaptic Activities of GABA and Related Amino Acids in the Mammalian Nervous System....Pages 55-86
Quantitative Studies of Iontophoretically-Applied Excitatory Amino Acids....Pages 87-91
Interactions of Central Depressants with Amino Acids and Their Antagonists....Pages 93-101
Critical Evaluation of the Use of Radioautography as a Tool in the Localization of Amino Acids in the Mammalian Central Nervous System....Pages 103-121
Transmitters in the Basal Ganglia....Pages 123-141
Comments on Localization of Neurotransmitters in the Basal Ganglia....Pages 143-153
Localization of Transmitter Amino Acids: Application to Hippocampus and Septum....Pages 155-171
Glutamate Concentration in Individual Layers of the Rabbit Hippocampus....Pages 173-176
The Effect of Intrahippocampal Administration of γ-Aminobutyric Acid (GABA)....Pages 177-180
Neurotransmitters in the Amygdala: A Brief Review....Pages 181-192
GABA Markers in the Hypothalamus : Topographical Distribution and Origin....Pages 193-212
Identified Aplysia Neurons with Rapid and Specific Glycine Uptake....Pages 213-219
Neurotransmitters in the Avian Visual System....Pages 221-239
Neurotransmitters of the Mammalian Visual System....Pages 241-256
The Localization and Metabolism of Neuroactive Amino Acids in the Retina....Pages 257-274
Light-Induced Release of Amino Acids from the Retina....Pages 275-295
Classification and Location of Neurons Taking Up 3 H-GABA in the Visual Cortex of Rats....Pages 297-303
GABA Agonists and Uptake Inhibitors of Restricted Conformations: Structure-Activity Relations....Pages 305-321
Muscimol Analogues Injected into Substantia Nigra: A Valuable New In Vivo Model for GABA-Ergic Drugs....Pages 323-326
Uptake, Exchange and Release of GABA in Isolated Nerve Endings....Pages 327-350
Cis 3-Aminocyclohexane Carboxylic Acid, a Selective Inhibitor and Substrate for the Neuronal GABA Uptake Process....Pages 351-356
Properties of the Accumulation of D-[ 14 C]Aspartate into Rat Cerebral Crude Synaptosomal Fraction....Pages 357-361
The Effect of Glutamate on the Structure and K + -Transport of Synaptosomes....Pages 363-366
On the Metabolic and Intrasynaptic Origin of Amino Acid Transmitters....Pages 367-377
Glutamate as a CNS Neurotransmitter: Properties of Release, Inactivation and Biosynthesis....Pages 379-412
Role of Gabaergic and Glycinergic Transmissions in the Substantia Nigra in the Regulation of Dopamine Release in the Cat Caudate Nucleus....Pages 413-423
The Interaction between GABA-Ergic Drugs and Dopaminergic Stimulants....Pages 425-430
Glutamate Decarboxylase, Properties and the Synaptic Function of GABA....Pages 431-438
The Possible Involvement of GABA and Its Compartmentation in the Mechanism of Some Convulsant and Anticonvulsant Agents....Pages 439-444
The GABA Receptor Assay: Focus on Human Studies....Pages 445-456
3 H-GABA Binding to Membranes Prepared from Post-Mortem Human Brain: Pharmacological and Pathological Investigations....Pages 457-466
Studies on the Gamma-Aminobutyric Acid Receptor/Ionophore Proteins in Mammalian Brain....Pages 467-486
Comparison of 3 H-Muscimol and 3 H-GABA Receptor Binding in Rat Brain....Pages 487-492
GABA Receptor in Rat Brain: Demonstration of an Antagonist Binding Site....Pages 493-498
A Study of the GABA Receptor Using 3 H-Bicuculline Methobromide....Pages 499-506
GABA Receptors and Phospholipids....Pages 507-516
Second Messenger Responses and Regulation of High Affinity Receptor Binding to Study Pharmacological Modifications of Gabaergic Transmission....Pages 517-530
Glycine: Inhibition from the Sacrum to the Medulla....Pages 531-570
Taurine and other Sulfur containing Amino Acids: Their Function in the Central Nervous System....Pages 571-597
A Functional Role for Amino Acids in the Adaptation of Tissues from the Nervous System to Alterations in Environmental Osmolality....Pages 599-627
Isolation and Biochemical Characterization of Morphologically Defined Structures, Including Cell Types, from the Cerebellum....Pages 629-651
Glial Cells and Amino Acid Transmitters....Pages 653-662
Interactions between Neurotransmitters and Astroglial Cells....Pages 663-668
Amino Acid Precursors: Their Transport into Brain and Initial Metabolism....Pages 669-689
Metabolic Compartmentation of the Glutamate - Glutamine System: Glial Contribution....Pages 691-708
Compartmentation of Amino Acids in Brain: The GABA-Glutamine-Glutamate Cycle....Pages 709-723
Computer Modeling as an Aid to Understanding Metabolic Compartmentation of the Krebs Cycle in Brain Tissue....Pages 725-738
Back Matter....Pages 739-747
توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب به زبان اصلی :
This volume represents the proceedings of a NATO Advanced Study Institute on Amino Acids as Chemical Transmitters, which took ~lace at Spatind Hotel in Norway, August 14-21, 1977. The meeting is related to two previous meetings on metabolic compart mentation in the brain. The first of these meetings took place at Rockefeller Foundation, Bellagio, Italy, July 11-16, 1971 and the proceedings, Metabolic Compartmentation in Brain, were edited by R. Balazs and J. E. Cremer and published by Macmillan in 1973. The second meeting was an Advanced Study Institute on Metabolic Com partmentation and Neurotransmission Relation to Brain Structure and Function, which was held in Oxford, September 1-8, 1974. The proceedings were edited by S. Berl, D. D. Clarke and D. Schneider and published as Volume 6 of the NATO ASI Life Science series by Plenum Press. The object of the present meeting was to review and discuss the present status of amino acids as chemical transmitters. Several issues such as electrophysiological response, localization, synthe sis, release and receptor binding of transmitter candidates were discussed. The possible morphological correlates to these func tions were also reviewed. During the meeting 24 leading papers were given. In addition, several of the participants presented important new findings during the discussion. Some of these have been included as short reports. The main financial support was obtained from NATO, Scientific Affairs Division.