Publication | Closed Access
DISTRIBUTION AND TURNOVER OF OCTOPAMINE IN TISSUES
119
Citations
17
References
1972
Year
NeurotransmitterAbstract— OctopamineCellular PhysiologyPeripheral Nervous SystemIntegrative PhysiologyAdrenal GlandSympathetic Nervous SystemNeuroendocrine MechanismNeurochemistryHealth SciencesSodium HomeostasisNeurotransmitter ReceptorsNeuropharmacologyNervous SystemEndocrinologyPharmacologyNeurotransmitter SystemsTurnover RateNeurophysiologyPhysiologyForensic ToxicologyMonoamine NeurotransmittersSympathetic Nerve EndingsNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
Abstract— Octopamine is a normally occurring amine in several species of animals. Particularly high concentrations are found in the crustacean central nerve cord. In the rat it is specifically localized to sympathetic nerve endings, has a subcellular distribution similar to that of norepinephrine, and is asymmetrically distributed in the CNS. It has a turnover rate in heart about six times that of norepinephrine. The physiological role of octopamine has not been established but it appears likely that it is a cotransmitter together with norepinephrine in the peripheral sympathetic nervous system.
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