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Journal ArticleDOI

Neuronal systems immunoreactive with antiserum to lamprey gonadotropin-releasing hormone in the brain of Petromyzon marinus.

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TLDR
The presence of fully processed, mature decapeptide is indicated within neuronal perikarya, as well as in projecting nerve fibers and terminals within the brain of the sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus.
Abstract
The role of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in mammalian reproduction has been studied extensively; however, the role of a structurally different, but related, decapeptide is not well characterized in the most primitive class of vertebrates, Agnatha. Utilizing an antiserum directed to the recently characterized lamprey GnRH, we examined immunoreactive neuronal perikarya and nerve fibers in sections from the brain of the sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus, using the unlabeled peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. Neuronal perikarya and fibers were immunopositive with antisera generated to lamprey GnRH and also to certain antisera generated to mammalian GnRH. Immunopositive neuronal perikarya were detected in an arcshaped population extending from ventral to dorsal preoptic areas. Fibers from these cells projected to the neurohypophysis via the preoptico-hypophyseal tract, but in addition also protruded into the third ventricle. Additionally, some fibers coursed along the external surface of the brain, and may also release GnRH into meningeal compartments. The presence of fully processed, mature decapeptide is indicated within neuronal perikarya, as well as in projecting nerve fibers and terminals. No reaction product was detected in sections incubated with an antiserum to the interior amino acid sequences of mammalian LHRH. This finding supports the structure reported for lamprey GnRH by Sherwood et al. (1986).

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Evolution of Vertebrate Olfactory Systems

TL;DR: A phylogenetic analysis of central olfactory projections indicates that at least three distinct olf factory subsystems may be broadly present in vertebrates and that a fourth, the accessory vomeronasal system, arose in tetrapods.
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Minireview: recent progress in gonadotropin-releasing hormone neuronal migration.

TL;DR: It is likely that the multiple external factors converge on selective signal transduction pathways to engage the mechanical mechanisms needed to modulate GnRH neuronal movement and ultimately migration.
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Evolutionary Origin of the Structure and Function of Gonadotropin-Inhibitory Hormone: Insights from Lampreys

TL;DR: Results suggest that one ancestral function of LPXRFamide peptides may be stimulatory compared with the inhibitory function seen in later-evolved vertebrates (birds and mammals).
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The centrifugal visual system of vertebrates: A comparative analysis of its functional anatomical organization ☆

TL;DR: The present review is a detailed survey of the present knowledge of the centrifugal visual system (CVS) of vertebrates, which shows a high degree of variation from one group to the next and the evolutionary significance of this variation remains to be elucidated.
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Silver lampreys (Ichthyomyzon unicuspis) lack a gonadotropin-releasing hormone- and FMRFamide-immunoreactive terminal nerve

TL;DR: It is concluded that lampreys may lack a terminal nerve, and that the previously described fiber bundle extending from the nasal sac to the ventral forebrain may constitute an extra‐bulbar olfactory pathway.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Use of cryoprotectant to maintain long-term peptide immunoreactivity and tissue morphology

TL;DR: Storage of tissue in the solution produced no adverse effects upon tissue morphology, nor was LHRH immunoreactivity diminished or accompanied by elevated non-specific staining, and ultrastructural analysis of cryoprotected tissue revealed excellent preservation of cellular morphology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isolation of the gene and hypothalamic cDNA for the common precursor of gonadotropin-releasing hormone and prolactin release-inhibiting factor in human and rat

TL;DR: Cloned cDNAs encoding the precursor protein for gonadotropin-releasing hormone and prolactin release-inhibiting factor were isolated from libraries derived from human and rat hypothalamic mRNA and showed identity between the human placental and human hypothalamic precursor proteins.
Journal ArticleDOI

A prolactin-inhibiting factor within the precursor for human gonadotropin-releasing hormone

TL;DR: The cloned complementary DNA sequence encoding the human gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) precursor protein was used to construct an expression vector for the bacterial synthesis of the 56-amino acid GnRH-associated peptide (GAP).
Journal ArticleDOI

Primary structure of gonadotropin-releasing hormone from lamprey brain.

TL;DR: A second form of GnRH (lamprey II GnRH), representing about 10% of the total GnRH immunoreactive material in the brain, was isolated; its amino acid composition differs by 3 residues from lamprey I GnRH, which elevates plasma estradiol in adult female lampreys.
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