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Showing papers by "University College London published in 1990"


Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the process of selection into self-employment over the life cycle and the determinants of self employment earnings using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Young Men (NLS) for 1966-1981 and the Current Population Surveys for 1968-1987.
Abstract: About 4.2 million men and women operate businesses on a full-time basis. Comprising more than a tenth of all workers, they run most of our nation’s firms and employ about a tenth of all wage workers. The fraction of the labor force that is self-employed has increased since the mid-1970s after a long period of decline.1 This paper examines the process of selection into self-employment over the life cycle and the determinants of self-employment earnings using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Young Men (NLS) for 1966–1981 and the Current Population Surveys for 1968–1987.

2,188 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The contrasting pharmacology and ionic dependence of the glutamate uptake carriers in the vesicle membrane and in the plasma membrane explain how glutamate (but probably not aspartate) can function as a neurotransmitter, and why the extracellular glutamate concentration rises to neurotoxic levels in brain anoxia.

1,140 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Reconstruction of past lake-water pH from diatom data involves two steps; regression, where responses of modern diatom abundances to pH are modelled and calibration, where the modelled responses are used to infer pH fromdiatom assemblages preserved in lake sediments.
Abstract: Palaeolimnological diatom data comprise counts of many species expressed as percentages for each sample. Reconstruction of past lake-water pH from such data involves two steps; (i) regression, where responses of modern diatom abundances to pH are modelled and (ii) calibration where the modelled responses are used to infer pH from diatom assemblages preserved in lake sediments. In view of the highly multivariate nature of diatom data, the strongly nonlinear response of diatoms to pH, and the abundance of zero values in the data, a compromise between ecological realism and computational feasability is essential. The two numerical approaches used are (i) the computationally demanding but formal statistical approach of maximum likelihood (ML) Gaussian logit regression and calibration and (ii) the computationally straightforward but heuristic approach of weighted averaging (WA) regression and calibration. When the Surface Water Acidification Project (SWAP) modern training set of 178 lakes is reduced by data-screening to 167 lakes, WA gives superior results in terms of lowest root mean squared errors of prediction in cross-validation. Bootstrapping is also used to derive prediction errors, not only for the training set as a whole but also for individual pH reconstructions by WA for stratigraphic samples from Round Loch of Glenhead, southwest Scotland covering the last 10 000 years. These reconstructions are evaluated in terms of lack-of-fit to pH and analogue measures and are interpreted in terms of rate of change by using bootstrapping of the reconstructed pH time-series.

1,046 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is argued that the cells in the cluster are indeed primordial germ cells, at a stage significantly earlier than any reported previously, and this would indicate that the PGC lineage in the mouse is set aside at least as early as 7 dpc, and that its differentiation, as expressed by ALP activity, is gradual.
Abstract: With the aid of a whole-mount technique, we have detected a small cluster of alkaline phosphatase (ALP)-positive cells in whole mounts of mid-primitive-streak-stage embryos, 7-7 1/4 days post coitum (dpc). Within the cluster, about 8 cells contain a small cytoplasmic spot, intensely stained for ALP activity and possibly associated with an active Golgi complex. The cluster lies just posterior to the definitive primitive streak in the extraembryonic mesoderm, separated from the embryo by the amniotic fold. Towards the end of gastrulation, the number of cells containing the ALP-positive spot rises to between 50 and 80. Thereafter the number of cells in the extraembryonic cluster declines, and similar cells start to be seen in the mesoderm of the primitive streak and then in the endoderm. At 8 dpc, about 125 ALP-stained cells are found, mainly in the hindgut endoderm and also at the base of the allantois, their appearance and location at this stage agreeing closely with previous reports on primordial germ cells (PGCs). Embryos from which the cluster area has been removed at the 7-day stage are devoid of PGCs after culture for 48 h, whereas the excised tissue is rich in PGCs. We argue that the cells in the cluster are indeed primordial germ cells, at a stage significantly earlier than any reported previously. This would indicate that the PGC lineage in the mouse is set aside at least as early as 7 dpc, possibly as one of the first 'mesodermal' cell types to emerge, and that its differentiation, as expressed by ALP activity, is gradual.

1,009 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
29 Nov 1990-Nature
TL;DR: It is reported that raising the potassium concentration around glial cells evokes an outward current component produced by reversed glutamate uptake, which may contribute to the neurotoxic rise in extracellular glutamate concentration during brain anoxia.
Abstract: Glutamate uptake into nerve and glial cells usually functions to keep the extracellular glutamate concentration low in the central nervous system. But one component of glutamate release from neurons is calcium-independent, suggesting a non-vesicular release that may be due to a reversal of glutamate uptake. The activity of the electrogenic glutamate uptake carrier can be monitored by measuring the membrane current it produces, and uptake is activated by intracellular potassium ions. Here we report that raising the potassium concentration around glial cells evokes an outward current component produced by reversed glutamate uptake. This current is activated by intracellular glutamate and sodium, inhibited by extracellular glutamate and sodium, and increased by membrane depolarization. These results demonstrate a non-vesicular mechanism for the release of glutamate from glial cells and neurons. This mechanism may contribute to the neurotoxic rise in extracellular glutamate concentration during brain anoxia.

752 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, two alternative calibration approaches are recommended to all Fission Track workers: (1) for population method analyses of apatite only, an absolute calibration with selection of λf and measurement of neutron fluence; and (2) for all fission track techniques (including population methods) the zeta calibration constant approach.
Abstract: Problems of system calibration in fission track dating have complicated both the comparison of data from different workers and of fission track results with ages from other radioisotopic methods. Results of a Subcommission questionnaire prompted the formation of a Fission Track Working Group whose modified proposals were accepted at the 6th Fission Track Dating Workshop at Besancon France, in September 1988. Two alternative calibration approaches are recommended to all Fission Track workers: (1) for population method analyses of apatite only, an absolute calibration with selection of λf and measurement of neutron fluence; and (2) for all fission track techniques (including population methods) the zeta calibration constant approach. In both approaches, validity of calibration must be demonstrated by published analyses of age standards. A format for data presentation is recommended.

712 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 1990-Diabetes
TL;DR: The studies indicate that glycosylation and peroxidation occur concomitantly in LDL modified by glucose in vitro and may both contribute to the behavioral changes of this lipoprotein.
Abstract: It has been postulated that the etiology of the complications of diabetes involves oxidative stress, perhaps as a result of hyperglycemia. Consistent with this hypothesis, it has been shown that glucose, under physiological conditions, produces oxidants that possess reactivity similar to the hydroxyl free radical. These oxidants hydroxylate benzoic acid, fragment protein, and induce peroxidation in phosphatidylcholine liposomes and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) when LDL is incubated with hyperglycemic levels of glucose in vitro. These reactions are accelerated by transition metals and inhibited by a metal-chelating agent. The atherosclerotic potential of LDL in diabetes mellitus is often discussed in terms of protein glycosylation, which may affect cellular interactions. Our studies demonstrate, however, that peroxidative reactions also accompany LDL glycosylation in vitro. Peroxidative modification of LDL has also been implicated in LDL atherogenicity. Our studies indicate that glycosylation and peroxidation occur concomitantly in LDL modified by glucose in vitro and may both contribute to the behavioral changes of this lipoprotein.

619 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work has found that O-2A progenitors can be induced to undergo continuous self-renewal in the absence of oligodendrocytic differentiation by exposure to a combination of PDGF and basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF).
Abstract: Bipotential oligodendrocyte-type-2 astrocyte (O-2A) progenitor cells, which give rise to oligodendrocytes and type-2 astrocytes in cultures of rat optic nerve, are one of the few cell types in which most aspects of proliferation and differentiation can be manipulated in a defined in vitro environment. Previous studies have shown that O-2A progenitors exposed to platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) divide as migratory bipolar cells a limited number of times, with a cell cycle time of 18 hr, before clonally related progenitors differentiate into nondividing oligodendrocytes with a timing similar to that seen in vivo. In contrast, O-2A progenitors grown in the absence of mitogen do not divide but instead differentiate prematurely into oligodendrocytes, and progenitors exposed to appropriate inducing factors differentiate into type-2 astrocytes. We now have found that O-2A progenitors can be induced to undergo continuous self-renewal in the absence of oligodendrocytic differentiation by exposure to a combination of PDGF and basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF). With the exception of the inhibition of differentiation, the O-2A progenitors exposed to PDGF and bFGF behaved similarly to those exposed to PDGF alone. In contrast, progenitors exposed to basic bFGF alone were multipolar, had a cell-cycle length of 45 hr, showed little migratory behavior, underwent premature oligodendrocytic differentiation, and did not cease division upon expression of oligodendrocyte marker antigens. Thus, inhibition of differentiation required the presence of both mitogens. Our results demonstrate that PDGF and bFGF act on O-2A progenitors as both inducers of division and as regulators of differentiation that modulate multiple aspects of O-2A progenitor development and, additionally, reveal a previously unrecognized means of regulating self-renewal processes, wherein cooperation between growth factors promotes continuous division in the absence of differentiation.

599 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Aug 1990-Networks
TL;DR: A criterion for conditional independence of two groups of variables given a third is given and named as the directed, global Markov property and it is argued that this criterion is easy to use, it is sharper than that given by Kiiveri, Speed, and Carlin and equivalent to that of Pearl.
Abstract: We investigate directed Markov fields over finite graphs without positivity assumptions on the densities involved. A criterion for conditional independence of two groups of variables given a third is given and named as the directed, global Markov property. We give a simple proof of the fact that the directed, local Markov property and directed, global Markov property are equivalent and – in the case of absolute continuity w. r. t. a product measure – equivalent to the recursive factorization of densities. It is argued that our criterion is easy to use, it is sharper than that given by Kiiveri, Speed, and Carlin and equivalent to that of Pearl. It follows that our criterion cannot be sharpened.

587 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
24 May 1990-Nature
TL;DR: It is shown here thatNMDA receptor responses are selectively inhibited by protons, with a 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) that is close to physiological pH, implying that NMDA receptors are not fully active under normal conditions.
Abstract: Mammalian neurons contain at least three types of excitatory amino-acid receptors, selectively activated by N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) or aspartate, (S)-alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole proprionate ((S)-AMPA) and kainate. An important aspect of NMDA receptors is their regulation by a variety of factors such as glycine, Mg2+ and Zn2+ that are present in vivo. We show here that NMDA receptor responses are selectively inhibited by protons, with a 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) that is close to physiological pH, implying that NMDA receptors are not fully active under normal conditions. (S)-AMPA and kainate responses remain unchanged at similar pH levels. Proton inhibition is voltage-insensitive and does not result either from fast channel block, a change in channel conductance, or an increase in the 50% excitatory concentration (EC50) of aspartate/NMDA or glycine. Instead, protons seem to decrease markedly the opening frequency of 30-50 pS NMDA channels, and reduce the relative proportion of longer bursts. This feature of NMDA receptors could be relevant to neurotoxic activation of NMDA receptors during ischaemia, as well as to seizure generation, as extracellular proton changes occur during both of these pathological situations. Furthermore, these results may have implications for normal NMDA receptor function as transient changes in extracellular protons occur during synaptic transmission.

549 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In vivo electrophysiology and a model of more persistent nociceptive inputs are used to monitor spinal cord neuronal activity in anaesthetised rats to reveal the pharmacology of enhanced pain signalling and a selective and preferential role of the NMDA receptor in the prolonged plastic responses was clearly seen.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the problem of estimating the component ages of a sample containing grains of different true ages was considered and formulae for estimating these parameters along with their relative standard errors, confidence intervals and appropriate diagnostics when the grains are dated by the external detector method.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A simple H2O2‐measuring technique which relies upon the rapid peroxide‐mediated oxidation of Fe2+ to Fe3+ under acidic conditions followed by reaction of the latter cation with the dye, xylenol orange is developed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results are obtained that provide a basis for predicting that, under appropriate conditions, interference between an imposed rhythm and the frequency of a temporal oscillator may cause perturbations in temporal judgment which are related to the characteristic frequency of that oscillator.
Abstract: Evidence for the proposition that human time perception is determined by an internal clock is largely indirect. It would strengthen the case for this hypothesis if a model for the internal clock were available from which predictions could be derived and tested, and if the basic parameter of such a model, the frequency at which the clock runs, could be estimated. A model for an internal temporal pacemaker is briefly described and its properties are explored by computer simulation. Results are obtained that provide a basis for predicting that, under appropriate conditions, interference between an imposed rhythm and the frequency of a temporal oscillator may cause perturbations in temporal judgment which are related to the characteristic frequency of that oscillator. Experimental data are reported which appear to demonstrate such an interference pattern. These results allow some estimates of the characteristic frequency of the temporal oscillator to be obtained.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 1990-Brain
TL;DR: New knowledge of the colour areas and pathways in the primate brain allows us to give a more complete account of the pathophysiology of cerebral achromatopsia in man.
Abstract: This review is an enquiry into why the early clinical evidence for a colour centre in the cerebral cortex of man was so successfully dismissed for the best part of a century. The imperfection of this evidence cannot be the reason, for the same evidence that was rejected earlier is accepted today. Instead, it was because the prevalent concepts of vision as a function, and of the role of the cerebral cortex in it, dominated facts and prevented acceptance of evidence showing a specialization for colour in the visual cortex. It was only after those concepts were overthrown by the demonstration of functional specialization in the visual cortex of the primate that the evidence for a colour centre in the human brain became acceptable. Today, our new knowledge of the colour areas and pathways in the primate brain allows us to give a more complete account of the pathophysiology of cerebral achromatopsia in man.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown here that CBV can be derived from the expression CBV = (delta[HbO2] - delta [Hb])/(2.H.R.), where H is the large vessel total hemoglobin concentration and R to the cerebral-to-large vessel hematocrit ratio.
Abstract: Current methods for measuring cerebral blood volume (CBV) in newborn infants are unsatisfactory. A new method is described in which the effect of a small change (5-10%) in arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) on cerebral oxyhemoglobin [HbO2] and deoxyhemoglobin [Hb] concentration is observed by near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy. Previous experiments in which the NIR absorption characteristics of HbO2 and Hb and the pathlength of NIR light through the brain were defined allowed changes in [HbO2] and [Hb] to be quantified from the Beer-Lambert law. It is shown here that CBV can then be derived from the expression CBV = (delta[HbO2] - delta[Hb])/(2. delta SaO2.H.R.), where H is the large vessel total hemoglobin concentration and R to the cerebral-to-large vessel hematocrit ratio. Observations on 12 newborn infants with normal brains, born at 25-40 wk of gestation and aged 10-240 h, gave a mean value for CBV of 2.22 +/- 0.40 (SD) ml/100 g, whereas mean CBV was significantly higher 3.00 +/- 1.04 ml/100 g in 10 infants with brain injury born at 24 to 42 wk of gestation and aged 4-168 h (P less than 0.05).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Radial plots as discussed by the authors are a new graphical method for comparing several age estimates which have different precisions, and they have been used in fission track dating to compare age estimates in a variety of situations.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Cell cycle regulation by calcium in sea urchin embryos to cell cycle regulation in other eggs and oocytes and in mammalian cells is compared.
Abstract: The cell division cycle of the early sea urchin embryo is basic. Nonetheless, it has control points in common with the yeast and mammalian cell cycles, at START, mitosis ENTRY and mitosis EXIT. Progression through each control point in sea urchins is triggered by transient increases in intracellular free calcium. The Cai transients control cell cycle progression by translational and post-translational regulation of the cell cycle control proteins pp34 and cyclin. The START Cai transient leads to phosphorylation of pp34 and cyclin synthesis. The mitosis ENTRY Cai transient triggers cyclin phosphorylation. The motosis EXIT transient causes destruction of phosphorylated cyclin. We compare cell cycle regulation by calcium in sea urchin embryos to cell cycle regulation in other eggs and oocytes and in mammalian cells.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of the history of studies of the biological actions of extracellular ATP is presented, as well as the recent proposal for subdivision of the ATP receptors into P2X-, P2Y, P2Z, and P2T- purinoceptor subtypes.
Abstract: An overview of the history of studies of the biological actions of extracellular ATP is presented. The basis of the subdivision of receptors for purines into P1-purinoceptors for adenosine and P2-purinoceptors for ATP and ADP are considered, as well as the recent proposal for subdivision of the ATP receptors into P2X-, P2Y-, P2Z-, and P2T- purinoceptor subtypes. These purinoceptor subtypes are discussed with respect to their transduction mechanisms, their distribution, and their physiological roles, including their roles in cotransmission and neuromodulation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results lend support to the search for drug treatments that protect against further nigrostriatal cell loss and that could be exhibited as soon as the disease manifests clinically, if successful, to ensure that a sufficient striatal nerve terminal pool would remain so that the effectiveness of levodopa as a dopamine repletor could persist.
Abstract: • A group of healthy control subjects and patients with Parkinson's disease were investigated using positron emission tomography and two tracers as indicators of different specific properties of the presynaptic dopaminergic system in caudate nucleus and putamen. The first tracer, 6-l-( 18 F)-fluorodopa, was used as an analog of levodopa to assess its regional brain uptake, conversion into, and retention as dopamine and further metabolites. The second tracer, ( 11 C)-nomifensine was employed as an indicator of striatal monaminergic reuptake sites that are principally dopaminergic. We have used this tracer to assess dopaminergic nerve terminal density. In patients with Parkinson's disease, striatal uptake of both tracers was decreased, putamen being significantly more affected than caudate. Side-to-side differences of uptake in putamen, but not caudate, correlated with corresponding left-right differences of scored clinical motor performance. Both 6-l( 18 F)-fluorodopa and ( 11 C)-nomifensine tracer uptake in putamen was decreased on average to 40% of normal values, suggesting that a substantial part of the cellular elements of the dopaminergic nigrostriatal system is still intact in living parkinsonian patients. This is in contrast to the generally extreme depletion of endogenous dopamine in the putamen of patients found at postmortem. Our results lend support to the search for drug treatments that protect against further nigrostriatal cell loss and that could be exhibited as soon as the disease manifests clinically. If successful, a sufficient striatal nerve terminal pool would remain so that the effectiveness of levodopa as a dopamine repletor could persist.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the basic procedures and the development of a general purpose computer program (SWANDYNE-X) for solving deformations in geomaterials.
Abstract: The behaviour of all geomaterials, and in particular of soils, is governed by their interaction with the pore fluid. The mechanical model of this interaction when combined with suitable constitutive discription of the solid phase and with efficient, discrete, computation procedures, allows most transient and static problems involving deformations to be solved. This paper describes the basic procedures and the development of a general purpose computer program (SWANDYNE-X). The results of the computations are validated by comparison with experimental results obtained on physical models tested in the Cambridge Centrifuge.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The sensitivity and predictive value of islet-cell antibodies for the future onset of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) were determined in 719 first-degree relatives of IDDM patients, and IDDM developed within follow-up of 7 years.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A human small intestinal lambda gt11 cDNA library was screened with antibodies to deglycosylated small intestinal mucin and four partial cDNA clones were isolated that define a novel human mucin gene.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 1990-Ecology
TL;DR: It is argued that a wide range of environmental factors affect primate population densities, and that nutrient-poor soils and high tannin levels in tree foliage do not necessarily produce a low primate (or colobine) biomass, as some earlier studies had suggested.
Abstract: To explore sources of variation in tropical forest primate biomass, and, in particular, to test the hypothesis that soil conditions are a major ultimate determinant of the biomass of colobine monkeys and other primates, we compared data on the soils, vegetation, and primate community at a site in West Africa (Tiwai Island, Sierra Leone) with information from other sites, especially two other African sites (Douala-Edea in Cameroon, and Kibale Forest in Uganda). The biomass of eight anthropoid primate species in old secondary high forest on Tiwai was estimated from data on population densities assessed by transect samples combined with data on social group densities and individual body masses. Samples of soil and tree foliage were collected at the same site, and subjected to a variety of chemical and mechanical analyses. Our estimate of anthropoid biomass at Tiwai is 1229-1529 kg/kM2, including 682-889 kg/km2 of colobines. This is one of the highest primate biomasses recorded anywhere. The soils at Tiwai were found to be relatively high in sand content and low in pH, and to have low levels of mineral nutrients. Levels of condensed tannins in the mature foliage of the trees comprising a major part of the forest canopy were higher than at other sites, but the ratio of protein to fiber in this foliage was also higher than at any other site except Kibale. It is argued that a wide range of environmental factors affect primate population densities, and that nutrient-poor soils and high tannin levels in tree foliage do not necessarily produce a low primate (or colobine) biomass, as some earlier studies had suggested. Fur-

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the CNS the elevated GAP-43 levels may contribute to an inappropriate synaptic reorganization of afferent terminals that could play a role in the sensory disorders that follow nerve injury.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Over the last ten years a new approach to psychiatric knowledge has developed under the influence of social anthropology, its origins, assumptions, methods, achievements, and limitations are reviewed.
Abstract: Over the last ten years a new approach to psychiatric knowledge has developed under the influence of social anthropology. Its origins, assumptions, methods, achievements, and limitations are reviewed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Suramin at concentrations above 10 μm blocked actions mediated via P2X‐ and P2Y‐purinoceptors in the guinea‐pig urinary bladder and taenia coli respectively, and was selective for P2‐ purinoceptor‐mediated activity rather than that mediated via cholinoceptor, adrenoceptors or histamine receptors.
Abstract: 1. Suramin, an inhibitor of several types of ATPase, was investigated for its ability to antagonize responses mediated via P2X-purinoceptors in the guinea-pig urinary bladder and P2Y-purinoceptors in the guinea-pig taenia coli. 2. In isolated strips of bladder detrusor muscle, suramin (100 microM-1 mM) caused a non-competitive antagonism of responses to alpha, beta-methylene ATP with an estimated pA2 of approximately 4.7, and inhibited responses to stimulation of the intramural purinergic nerves, with a similar pA2 value. At a concentration of 10 microM, suramin had little effect, but at a concentration of 1 microM, suramin potentiated responses to alpha,beta-methylene ATP, and potentiated responses to electrical stimulation of intramural purinergic nerves. 3. In isolated strips of taenia coli, in which a standard tone had been induced by carbachol (100 nM), suramin at 100 microM and 1 mM significantly antagonized relaxant responses to ATP (at an EC50 concentration) with an estimated pA2 of 5.0 +/- 0.82 and relaxant responses to electrical stimulation of the intramural non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic inhibitory nerves, either single pulses or trains of 8 Hz for 10 s, with estimated pA2 values of 4.9 +/- 0.93 and 4.6 +/- 1.01, respectively. Suramin had no significant effect at 1 or 10 microM. 4. Suramin, at any of the concentrations tested, did not affect contractile responses to histamine (10 microM) or carbachol (10 microM) in the bladder detrusor preparations. In the taenia coli, suramin did not affect either the relaxant responses to noradrenaline (at an EC50 concentration) or the contractile responses to carbachol (100 nM). 5. Thus, suramin at concentrations above 10 microM blocked actions mediated via P2x- and P2y-purinoceptors in the guinea-pig urinary bladder and taenia coli respectively. Potentiation of purinoceptor-mediated activity was seen only at a low concentration of suramin (1 microM) and only in the urinary bladder (P2x-purinoceptor). For its antagonistic activity suramin did not discriminate between P2X- and P2y-purinoceptors, but it was selective for P2-purinoceptor-mediated activity rather than that mediated via cholinoceptors, adrenoceptors or histamine receptors.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Taking into account the results with the two antagonists it appears that both A and C fibre-evoked responses of dorsal horn nociceptive neurones are mediated by non-NMDA receptors whilst the C fibre wind-up of deep dorsal horn cells involves the NMDA receptor which also seems to mediate C fibre responses of intermediate, presumed substantia gelatinosa neurones.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 1990-Neuron
TL;DR: A reaggregated cell culture system in which retinal neuroepithelial cells from embryonic rats proliferate extensively and give rise to rod photoreceptors on the same schedule in vitro as they do in vivo is described, suggesting that both cell-cell interactions and an intrinsic program in neuroep ithelial cells determine cell fate in the developing rat retina.