نتایج جستجو برای: glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibodies gad65

تعداد نتایج: 768647  

Journal: :JAMA neurology 2015
Amy L Jones Eoin P Flanagan Sean J Pittock Jay N Mandrekar Scott D Eggers J Eric Ahlskog Andrew McKeon

IMPORTANCE Classic Purkinje cell cytoplasmic antibody type 1 (PCA-1, or anti-Yo) paraneoplastic cerebellar ataxia has a poor prognosis, yet little has been published otherwise regarding treatment responses and outcomes among patients with autoimmune cerebellar ataxia. OBJECTIVES To investigate treatment responses and outcomes in adults with autoimmune cerebellar ataxia. DESIGN, SETTING, AND...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2001
A Quinn M F McInerney E E Sercarz

CD4(+) T cell responses to glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65) spontaneously arise in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice before the onset of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and may be critical to the pathogenic process. However, since both CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells are involved in autoimmune diabetes, we sought to determine whether GAD65-specific CD8(+) T cells were also present in prediab...

2005
Lucien M. Levy Marinos C. Dalakas

Background: Patients with stiff-person syndrome (SPS) have circulating antibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme responsible for the synthesis of -aminobutyric acid (GABA). Although the patients’ symptoms of stiffness and unexpected spasms can be explained on the basis of reduced or impaired inhibitory neurotransmitters, such as GABA, it is unclear whether the lev...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2007
Paolo Monti Miriam Scirpoli Andrea Rigamonti Anya Mayr Annika Jaeger Riccardo Bonfanti Giuseppe Chiumello Anette G Ziegler Ezio Bonifacio

Identifying beta cell autoantigen-reactive T cells that are involved in the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes has been troublesome for many laboratories. Disease-relevant autoreactive T cells should be in vivo Ag experienced. The aim of this study was to test this hypothesis and then use this principle as a strategy for identifying diabetes-relevant autoreactive T cells. In this study, a CSFE dil...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 1994
M Esclapez N J Tillakaratne D L Kaufman A J Tobin C R Houser

Two isoforms of glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD67 and GAD65) and their mRNAs were localized in the rat brain by immunohistochemistry and nonradioactive in situ hybridization methods with digoxigenin-labeled cRNA probes. In most brain regions, both GAD isoforms were present in neuronal cell bodies as well as axon terminals. A few populations of neurons, such as those in the reticular nucleus of...

2015
D.E. Korzhevskii E.G. Sukhorukova O.V. Kirik I.P. Grigorev

Tissue fixation is critical for immunohistochemistry. Recently, we developed a zinc-ethanol-formalin fixative (ZEF), and the present study was aimed to assess the applicability of the ZEF for the human brain histology and immunohistochemistry and to evaluate the detectability of different antigens in the human brain fixed with ZEF. In total, 11 antigens were tested, including NeuN, neuron-speci...

Journal: :Brain research 1998
S M Baca B K Lipska M F Egan S E Bachus J N Ferguson T M Hyde

In the rat, neurochemical, behavioral, and anatomical investigations suggest that medial prefrontal cortical input modulates the activity of the basal ganglia. To understand how prefrontal dysfunction might alter striatal-accumbens function, in situ hybridization histochemistry with S35-labeled oligonucleotide probes was used to assess changes in striatal-accumbens gene expression following bil...

2015
Yoko Hanno-Iijima Masami Tanaka Takatoshi Iijima Michal Hetman

Homeostatic synaptic plasticity, or synaptic scaling, is a mechanism that tunes neuronal transmission to compensate for prolonged, excessive changes in neuronal activity. Both excitatory and inhibitory neurons undergo homeostatic changes based on synaptic transmission strength, which could effectively contribute to a fine-tuning of circuit activity. However, gene regulation that underlies homeo...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 1995
R Somogyi X Wen W Ma J L Barker

GABA (gamma-amino butyric acid), a fast-acting synaptic transmitter in the mature CNS, is synthesized from glutamate by GAD (glutamic acid decarboxylase). We have developed an ultrasensitive PCR technique to quantify the expression of GAD-related mRNAs during the development of the rat cervical spinal cord and have localized them using in situ hybridization. GAD65, GAD67, and an alternatively s...

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