Immunohistochemical distribution of delta sleep inducing peptide in the rabbit brain and hypophysis.
Charnay. Y Y; Bouras. C C; Vallet. P G PG; Golaz. J J; Guntern. R R; Constantinidis. J J
Key Findings
- DSIP‑like signals are strongest in the basal forebrain, hypothalamus and pituitary (hypophysis).
- Only a few DSIP‑positive cell bodies are seen, mainly in the ventrolateral septum and preoptic regions.
- Dense networks of DSIP‑positive fibers run near blood vessels in the median eminence, pituitary stalk, and subfornical organ.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the paper provides basic anatomical information but no direct guidance on dosing, safety, or performance benefits. It confirms that DSIP is linked to neurosecretory regions, suggesting any effects on sleep or metabolism would likely involve hypothalamic pathways, but no actionable protocols can be derived from this study.
Summary
This study mapped where a peptide called delta sleep‑inducing peptide (DSIP) is found in the rabbit brain. It mainly shows up in parts of the hypothalamus and pituitary that control hormone release, with few actual cell bodies but many nerve fibers in those areas.
Abstract
The distribution of delta sleep inducing peptide (DSIP) in the rabbit brain has been studied with immunohistochemical techniques. DSIP-like immunoreactivity was predominantly detected in the basal forebrain, hypothalamus and hypophysis. Even in colchicine-pretreated animals, immunolabeled cell bodies were relatively few. They were mostly scattered through the ventrolateral septum, the diagonal band of Broca and preoptic areas. Clusters of positive cell bodies were also found in the arcuate nucleus and adjacent lateral hypothalamic areas. Large populations of varicose fibers and terminal-like structures were observed in the juxtaventricular zone of the ventrolateral septum, in the preoptic areas and lamina terminalis especially around the preoptic recess of the third ventricle and more caudally, in the ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus. Dense networks of immunolabeled fibers were visualized in the median eminence and pituitary stalk where many fibers could be seen in close apposition to the capillaries. Many DSIP-immunoreactive fibers were observed in the subfornical organ. Other extra-hypothalamic regions displaying a low-to-moderate density of immunoreactive fibers were the indusium griseum, the hippocampus, the fimbria of the fornix, the subcommissural organ, the medial habenula and, occasionally, the medial periaqueductal gray. Most cells of the pars intermedia and a few cells of the pars distalis of the anterior pituitary were DSIP-immunoreactive. Taken together these results in the rabbit brain emphasize the predominant localization of DSIP-like immunoreactivity in areas related to the hypothalamic neurosecretory systems.
Study Information
pubmed
1989
1989-02-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1159/000125110
21