Search Results - (Author, Cooperation:E. A. Stone)

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  1. 1
    Staff View
    Publication Date:
    2012-02-10
    Publisher:
    Nature Publishing Group (NPG)
    Print ISSN:
    0028-0836
    Electronic ISSN:
    1476-4687
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Keywords:
    Alleles ; Animals ; Centromere/genetics ; Chromosomes, Insect/genetics ; Drosophila melanogaster/*genetics ; *Genome-Wide Association Study ; *Genomics ; Genotype ; Phenotype ; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics ; Quantitative Trait Loci/*genetics ; Selection, Genetic/genetics ; Starvation/genetics ; Telomere/genetics ; X Chromosome/genetics
    Published by:
    Latest Papers from Table of Contents or Articles in Press
  2. 2
    Kainer, D., Stone, E. A., Padovan, A., Foley, W. J., Kulheim, C.
    Genetics Society of America (GSA)
    Published 2018
    Staff View
    Publication Date:
    2018-08-01
    Publisher:
    Genetics Society of America (GSA)
    Electronic ISSN:
    2160-1836
    Topics:
    Biology
    Published by:
    Latest Papers from Table of Contents or Articles in Press
  3. 3
    Stone, E. A.

    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Published 1973
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1471-4159
    Source:
    Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics:
    Medicine
    Notes:
    —Exhaustive stress in rats is followed by a temporary reduction of hypothalamic norepinephrine (NE) together with a persistent increase in turnover during recovery. To test for persistent alterations of NE storage and metabolism produced by stress, rats were subjected to 3 h of forced running and were then injected intraventricularly with [3H]NE or [3H]dopamine (DA). The hypothalamus was assayed for [3H]NE and its metabolites at various intervals after injection. The effects of stress were compared with those of reserpine (7·5 mg/kg) or α-methyltyrosine (AMT, 300 mg/kg) pretreatment. It was found that the stress-induced reduction of endogenous NE was not accompanied by a change in the accumulation of exogenous [3H]NE either 10 or 30 min after injection, whereas the NE depletions produced by reserpine or AMT were associated with decreased or increased accumulation, respectively. However, stress did produce an increased accumulation of [3H]NE endogenously synthesized from [3H]DA. These results indicate that exhaustive stress does not adversely affect the storage of NE. They also suggest that stores of NE depleted by stress are replenished chiefly with newly synthesized NE and not through an increased uptake and binding or decreased metabolism of extraneuronal NE. The latter factors may play a role in the maintenance of brain NE stores when biosynthesis is low, i.e. after AMT. The major metabolites of exogenous [3H]NE, at 30 min after injection, were identified as conjugates of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylglycol (DOPEG) and 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol (MOPEG) in approximately equal amounts. The finding of high levels of conjugated DOPEG confirms a recent report (Slgden and Eccleston, 1971) that this compound is a major metabolite of brain NE. Reserpine produced marked elevations of both conjugates; AMT slightly reduced each. Prior stress increased only conjugated MOPEG, an observation suggesting that CNS levels of this metabolite may reflect NE released by nervous activity.
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses