Popis: |
For decades the magnocellular neurons of the hypothalamo-neurophypophyseal system (HNS), in which either vasopressin or oxytocin are produced and released into the bloodstream, have been playing a pivotal role in fundamental discoveries in the nervous system. The primary structure of vasopressin and oxytocin was the first of all neuropeptides to be published, i.e., in the 1950s by the Nobel prize laureate Du Vigneaud. Moreover, many trend-setting discoveries have their origin in the HNS, which abundantly expresses vasopressin and oxytocin, clearly displays its function and is relatively easily to manipulate. Examples are the phenomenon of coexpression of neuropeptides, patch-clamping of nerve endings, axonal transport of RNA, neuroglia interactions and the behavioral effects. An extraordinarily intriguing example is the homozygous Brattleboro rat, which lacks vasopressin by a germ-line mutation, and has disclosed many of the fundamental characteristics of peptidergic neurons, and neurons in general. In this chapter we will discuss a few of them, in particular the recent data on mutations in vasopressin RNA. It is to be expected that the HNS will retain its informative role in the next decades. |