Publication | Closed Access
Insulin and C-peptide in human brain neurons (insulin/C-peptide/brain peptides/immunohistochemistry/radioimmunoassay).
40
Citations
0
References
1983
Year
Brain InsulinCellular LocalizationInsulin SignalingSocial SciencesHypothalamic PeptideNeurologyInsulin DeliveryNeuroimmunologyInsulin ManagementHuman Brain NeuronsNervous SystemEndocrinologyPeroxidase-antiperoxidase TechniqueNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyPhysiologyDiabetesNeuroscienceMedicineNeuropeptides
The regional distribution and cellular localization of insulin and C-peptide immunoreactivities were studied in human cadaver brains using the indirect immunofluorescence method, the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique, and radioimmunoassay. Products of the immune reactions to both polypeptides were observed in most nerve cells in all areas of the brain examined. Immunostaining was mainly restricted to the cell soma and proximal dendrites. Radioimmunoassay revealed that human brain contains insulin and C-peptide in concentrations much higher than the blood, the highest being in the hypothalamus. These findings support the hypothesis that the "brain insulin" is--at least in part--produced in the CNS.