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F. A. O. Mendelsohn

Courtauld Institute of Art

Publishes on Renin-Angiotensin System Studies, Receptor Mechanisms and Signaling, Neuropeptides and Animal Physiology. 120 papers and 6.1k citations.

120Publications
6.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Autoradiographic localization of angiotensin II receptors in rat brain.
F. A. O. Mendelsohn, R. Quirion, Juan M. Saavedra et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1984
Cited by 569Open Access

The 125I-labeled agonist analog [1-sarcosine]-angiotensin II ( [Sar1]AII) bound with high specificity and affinity (Ka = 2 X 10(9) M-1) to a single class of receptor sites in rat brain. This ligand was used to analyze the distribution of AII receptors in rat brain by in vitro autoradiography followed by computerized densitometry and color coding. A very high density of AII receptors was found in the subfornical organ, paraventricular and periventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus, nucleus of the tractus solitarius, and area postrema. A high concentration of receptors was found in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus, lateral olfactory tracts, nuclei of the accessory and lateral olfactory tracts, triangular septal nucleus, subthalamic nucleus, locus coeruleus, and inferior olivary nuclei. Moderate receptor concentrations were found in the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis, median preoptic nucleus, medial habenular nucleus, lateral septum, ventroposterior thalamic nucleus, median eminence, medial geniculate nucleus, superior colliculus, subiculum, pre- and parasubiculum, and spinal trigeminal tract. Low concentrations of sites were seen in caudate-putamen, nucleus accumbens, amygdala, and gray matter of the spinal cord. These studies have demonstrated that AII receptors are distributed in a highly characteristic anatomical pattern in the brain. The high concentrations of AII receptors at numerous physiologically relevant sites are consistent with the emerging evidence for multiple roles of AII as a neuropeptide in the central nervous system.

Abundant calcitonin receptors in isolated rat osteoclasts. Biochemical and autoradiographic characterization.
Geoffrey C. Nicholson, Jane M. Moseley, Patrick M. Sexton et al.|Journal of Clinical Investigation|1986
Cited by 458Open Access

Calcitonin receptors have been characterized for the first time in isolated osteoclasts. These receptors have been demonstrated by autoradiographic and biochemical methods, and the cells have also been shown to respond to calcitonin with a dose-dependent increase in cyclic AMP. The receptors in rat osteoclasts are specific and of high affinity (dissociation constant, Kd, 1 to 6 X 10(-10) M), and are present in greater numbers than in any cell previously studied (greater than 10(6) per cell). Chemical cross-linking of 125I-labeled salmon calcitonin to osteoclasts using disuccinimidyl suberate resulted in identification of a receptor component with a relative molecular weight of 80,000-90,000. By counting grains in autoradiographic experiments, we found that greater than 80% of specifically bound radioactivity was associated with multinucleate osteoclasts and the remainder was associated with mononuclear cells that are not osteoblasts, but that may be osteoclast precursors.