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1.
An immunohistochemical study of the pig pineal gland was carried out using polyclonal rabbit antiserum raised against substance P (SP). The pineal glands were taken from the newborn, 21-day- and 7-month-old female pigs. Immunoreactive nerve fibers were observed in the pineal gland as well as in the posterior commissure and habenular areas. The bundles of SP-immunoreactive fibers were also seen in the subependymal layer of the pineal tissue. The single SP-immunoreactive nerve fibers and few small bundles of nerve fibers were located with equal density throughout the pineal gland, in the connective tissue septa and in the parenchyma. SP-immunoreactive cell bodies were observed in the medial habenular nucleus. The obtained results point to this nucleus as one of the central sources of SP innervation in the pig pineal gland. The study did not show any differences in the distribution and the density of SP-immunoreactive nerve fibers between newborn, 21-day- and 7 month-old pigs.  相似文献   

2.
Summary An immunohistochemical investigation of the mink pineal gland was performed by use of antibodies raised in rabbits against neuropeptide Y (NPY) and Cys-NPY (32–36)-amide recognizing neuropeptide Y with an amidation at position 36 (NPYamide). NPY-immunoreactive nerve fibers were located predominantly in the rostral part of the pineal gland and in the pineal stalk. Immunoreactive nerve fibers were found throughout the pineal gland, but the number of fibers in the caudal part of the gland was low. The fibers were present both in the perivascular spaces and between the pinealocytes. Many NPY-immunoreactive fibers were also located in the posterior and habenular commissures; some of these fibers were connected with the fibers in the rostral part of the mink pineal gland, indicating that at least some of the NPY-immunoreactive nerve fibers are of central origin. The nerve fibers immunoreactive to amidated NPY were distributed in a similar manner. However, the number of fibers immunoreactive to NPYamide was lower than the number of fibers immunoreactive to NPY itself. After removal of the superior cervical ganglia bilaterally 22 days or 12 months before sacrifice, NPY-immunoreactive nerve fibers remained in the gland. This immunohistochemical study of the mink pineal gland therefore shows that the NPY/NPYamide-immunoreactive nerve fibers innervating the pineal gland in this spegcies are a component of the central innervation or originnate from extracerebral parasympathetic ganglia.  相似文献   

3.
The anatomy and innervation of the mammalian pineal gland   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The parenchymal cells of the mammalian pineal gland are the hormone-producing pinealocytes and the interstitial cells. In addition, perivascular phagocytes are present. The phagocytes share antigenic properties with microglial and antigen-presenting cells. In certain species, the pineal gland also contains neurons and/or neuron-like peptidergic cells. The peptidergic cells might influence the pinealocyte by a paracrine secretion of the peptide. Nerve fibers innervating the mammalian pineal gland originate from perikarya located in the sympathetic superior cervical ganglion and the parasympathetic sphenopalatine and otic ganglia. The sympathetic nerve fibers contain norepinephrine and neuropeptide Y as neurotransmitters. The parasympathetic nerve fibers contain vasoactive intestinal peptide and peptide histidine isoleucine. Recently, neurons in the trigeminal ganglion, containing substance P, calcitonin gene-related peptide, and pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide, have been shown to project to the mammalian pineal gland. Finally, nerve fibers originating from perikarya located in the brain containing, for example, GABA, orexin, serotonin, histamine, oxytocin, and vasopressin innervate the pineal gland directly via the pineal stalk. Biochemical studies have demonstrated numerous receptors on the pinealocyte cell membrane, which are able to bind the neurotransmitters located in the pinealopetal nerve fibers. These findings indicate that the mammalian pinealocyte can be influenced by a plethora of neurotransmitters.  相似文献   

4.
An immunohistochemical study of the cat pineal gland was performed using a rabbit polyclonal antibody directed against neuropeptide Y (NPY) and an antibody directed against the C-terminal flanking peptide of neuropeptide Y (CPON). Numerous NPY- and CPON-immunoreactive (IR) nerve fibers were demonstrated throughout the gland and in the pineal capsule. The number of IR nerve fibers in the capsule was high and from this location fibers were observed to penetrate into the gland proper via the pineal connective tissue septa, often following the blood vessels. From the connective tissue septa IR fibers intruded into the parenchyma between the pinealocytes. Many IR nerve fibers were observed in the pineal stalk and in the habenular as well as the posterior commissural areas. The number of NPY/CPON-IR nerve fibers in pineal glands from animals bilaterally ganglionectomized two weeks before sacrifice was low. The source of most of the extrasympathetic NPY/CPONergic nerve fibers is probably the brain from where they enter the pineal via the pineal stalk. However, an origin of some of the fibers from parasympathetic ganglia cannot be excluded due to the presence of a few IR fibers in the pineal capsule of ganglionectomized animals. It is concluded that the cat pineal is richly innervated with NPYergic nerve fibers mostly of sympathetic origin. The posttranslational processing of the NPY promolecule results in the presence of both NPY and CPON in intrapineal nerve fibers.  相似文献   

5.
Summary In the present study the central innervation of the guinea-pig pineal gland was investigated. The habenulae and the pineal stalk contain myelinated and non-myelinated nerve fibres with few dense-cored and electron-lucent vesicles. Some myelinated fibres leave the main nerve fibre bundles, lose their myelin-sheaths and terminate in the pineal gland. Although direct proof is lacking, the non-myelinated fibres appear to end near the site where the bulk of the myelinated fibres are located. Here a neuropil area exists where synapses between non-myelinated fibre elements are abundant. Neurosecretory fibres were also seen. The results support the concept of functional interrelationships between hypothalamus, epithalamus and the pineal gland.  相似文献   

6.
The sympathetic nerve fibers originating from the superior cervical ganglia and supplying the pineal gland play the most important role in the control of the pineal activity in mammals. NPY and CPON are also present in the majority of the pinealopetal sympathetic neurons. In this study, immunohistochemical techniques were used to demonstrate the existence and coexistence of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DbetaH) as well as NPY and CPON in the nerve fibers supplying the chinchilla pineal gland. Ten two-year-old female chinchillas housed in natural light conditions were used in the study. The pineals were fixed by perfusion. ABC immunohistochemical technique and immunofluorescence labelling method were employed. TH-immunoreactive (TH-IR) varicose nerve fibers were observed in the pineal gland as well as in the posterior commissural area. Within the chinchilla pineal gland, TH-IR nerve fibers were located in the capsule and connective tissue septa. Numerous varicose TH-IR branches penetrated into the parenchyma and formed a network showing the highest density in the proximal region of the gland. In the central and distal parts of the pineal parenchyma, a subtle network, composed of thin varicose nerve branches, was observed. Double immunostaining revealed that the majority of TH-IR nerve fibers was positive for DbetaH or NPY. TH- and DbetaH-positive neuron-like cells were observed in the proximal region of the gland. The pattern of pineal innervation immunoreactive to CPON was similar to the innervation containing NPY, TH and DbetaH. The chinchilla intrapineal innervation containing TH, DbetaH, NPY and CPON is characterized by the higher density in the proximal part of the gland than in the middle and distal ones. The specific feature of the chinchilla pineal is also the presence of single TH/DbetaH-immunoreactive neuron-like cells in the proximal part of the gland.  相似文献   

7.
Nerve fibers connecting the brain with the pineal gland of the Mongolian gerbil (central pinealopetal fibers) were investigated by means of light and electron microscopy. Several myelinated fibers penetrate from the brain into the deep pineal gland, extend further into the pineal stalk and continue to the superficial portion of the pineal gland. In the centripetal direction these fibers were traced to the stria medullaris and to the habenular nuclei, where they turned laterad and then occupied a position immediately ventral to the optic tract. As shown in electron micrographs, lesions of the habenular area led to degeneration of myelinated fibers and nerve boutons in the deep pineal gland, the pineal stalk and the superficial pineal gland. Only boutons containing clear transmitter vesicles (devoid of a dense core) were observed to degenerate after the habenular lesions. On the other hand, removal of the superior cervical ganglia resulted in degeneration of boutons containing small (40 to 60 nm in diameter) dense-core vesicles. Several of the nerve fibers that penetrate into the deep pineal directly from the brain (central fibers) exhibited a positive reaction for acetylcholinesterase (AChE). AChE-positive perikarya were located in the projections of the stria medullaris, the lateral portions of the deep pineal, the area of the posterior commissure, and the periventricular gray of the mesencephalon. Such perikarya were found neither in the pineal stalk nor in the superficial pineal gland. These results present anatomical evidence that the pineal organ of the Mongolian gerbil receives multiple nervous inputs mediated by peripheral autonomic (i.e., sympathetic) nerve fibers, on the one hand, and by central fibers, on the other.  相似文献   

8.
This light-microscopic (LM) immunohistochemical study has evaluated the presence and distribution of the pan-neural and neuroendocrine marker protein gene product (PGP) 9.5 in pinealocytes and nerve fibres of guinea-pig pineal gland. The pattern of PGP 9.5-immunoreactive (ir) nerve fibres has been compared with that of fibres staining for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) or neuropeptide Y (NPY). The vast majority of pinealocytes stained for PGP 9.5, although with variable intensity. PGP 9.5 immunoreactivity was localized in pinealocytic cell bodies and processes. Double-immunofluorescence revealed that PGP 9.5 immunoreactivity was absent from glial cells identified with a monoclonal antibody against glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), PGP 9.5 immunoreactivity was also present in a large number of nerve fibres and varicosities distributed throughout the pineal gland. The number of TH-ir and NPY-ir nerve fibres was lower compared with those containing PGP 9.5 immunoreactivity. All fibres staining for NPY also stained for TH. NPY-ir nerve fibres were found to be much more numerous than previously reported for this species. The double-immunofluorescence analysis indicated that almost all TH-ir nerve fibres of the pineal gland contained PGP 9.5 immunoreactivity. However, few PGP 9.5-ir nerve fibres, located in the periphery and the central part of the gland, were TH-negative. A large number of PGP 9.5-ir fibres was concentrated in the pineal stalk. In contrast, TH-ir and NPY-ir nerve fibres were rare in this part of the pineal gland. Our data provide evidence that immunohistochemistry for PGP 9.5 may be a useful tool further to differentiate central and peripheral origins of pineal innervation. Furthermore, the staining of pinealocytes for PGP 9.5 may be exploited to study the three-dimensional morphology and the architecture of pinealocytes and their processes under various experimental conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The intergeniculate leaflet of the lateral geniculate nucleus is considered to modulate circadian activity rhythms probably mediated by a direct neuronal connection to the suprachiasmatic nucleus. The present study in the gerbil demonstrates, by anterograde tracing with Phaseolus vulgaris-leucoagglutinin (PHA-L), the existence of an additional neuronal projection from a subportion of the lateral geniculate nucleus, involving the intergeniculate leaflet, directly to the pineal gland. PHA-L-immunoreactive nerve fibers originating from perikarya at the injection site were located under the optic tract projecting towards the midsagittal plane. Delicate PHA-L-immunoreactive nerve fibers were observed in the posterior paraventricular thalamic nucleus, precommissural nucleus, olivary pretectal nucleus, anterior and posterior pretectal nuclei, and posterior commissure. Single fibers could be followed from the caudal part of the medial habenular nucleus and the pretectal area into the rostral part of the deep pineal gland. Other fibers continued through the posterior commissure into the contralateral hemisphere to terminate in the same structures as on the ipsilateral side. From the posterior commissure, small bundles of thick fibers entered the deep pineal gland where they arborized among the endocrine cells. A few nerve fibers were observed in the habenular commissure and the pineal stalk, but no fibers were identified in the superficial pineal. This direct geniculo-pineal connection suggests that the pineal gland is directly influenced by the optic system.  相似文献   

10.
Summary A light microscopic investigation of the rabbit pineal gland with the aid of silver-stained sections gave the following results. In the gland a medulla and a cortex can be distinguished, the medulla containing so-called light and dark pinealocytes, the cortex only light ones. Autonomic nerve fibres reach the pineal organ by two routes: (1) via the perivascular spaces of pineal blood vessels and (2) via two distinct nerve bundles, the nervi conarii. Bilateral superior cervical ganglionectomy revealed that these pinealo-petal nerve fibres are mainly orthosympathetic postganglionic. Intramural pineal neurones with synaptic-like structures on their cell bodies and dendrites point to the presence of a parasympathetic innervation next to the orthosympathetic one. Direct afferent or efferent neural connections with the brain appeared to be absent. Acknowledgements. The author wishes to thank Professor Dr. J. Ariëns Kappers for encouragement and help, Mr. H. K. Koerten for his technical assistance and Miss A. M. Feddema for typing the manuscipt.  相似文献   

11.
In the rabbit pineal gland two types of postganglionic nerve endings were found which are characterized by the presence of small dense-core vesicles or small clear vesicles. Pharmacological and cytochemical experiments showed then to be noradrenergic and cholinergic, respectively. Both types were often present in the same nerve bundle, occasionally in close opposition. Intrapineal neurons were only rarely observed. They showed cholinergic synapses on their perikaryon and dendrites as well as noradrenergic axo-dendritic close contacts. Bilateral extirpation of the superior cervical ganglia revealed the postganglionic sympathetic origin of the pineal noradrenergic nerve fibres. Moreover, it appeared that these ganglia are hardly, if at all, involved in the pathway of pineal cholinergic innervation. The results obtained from lesions of both facial nerves, taken together with the results reported in the literature, led to the conclusion that the postganglionic cholinergic nerve fibers in the pineal are of parasympathetic origin. A model for the sympathetic and parasympathetic pineal innervation is proposed.  相似文献   

12.
The pineal functions are modulated by some neuropeptides including PHI and VIP. The presence of PHI-immunoreactive and VIP-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the pineal gland has been shown in several mammalian species. Both peptides influence the pineal serotonin N-acetyltransferase activity and melatonin synthesis. The aim of the present study was to examine the localization of PHI- and VIP-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the pig pineal gland. Four three-month old female pigs housed in natural light conditions, with free access to food and water, were used in the study. The pineals were fixed by perfusion with 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer. An immunohistochemical ABC streptavidin-biotin-complex method was used for the demonstration of PHI and VIP. PHI- and VIP-immunopositive nerve fibers were found in the pineal gland as well as in the habenular and posterior commissural areas. In the pineal gland, the density of PHI-immunoreactive nerve fibers was considerably higher than that of the fibers containing VIP. PHI- and VIP-immunopositive nerve fibers were more abundant in the cortical than in the medullary part of the gland. The nerve fibers formed bundles in the pineal capsule, from where they penetrated to the connective tissue septa and formed a dense meshwork surrounding blood vessels. In the parenchyma, PHI- and VIP-immunoreactive nerve terminals created baskets around clusters of pinealocytes. No PHI- or VIP-immunopositive cells were found in the pig pineal gland.  相似文献   

13.
Arginine vasopressin (AVP) is the main antidiuretic hormone in mammals and arginine vasotocin (AVT) in submammalian vertebrates. The possibility that the genetic material encoding AVT is maintained in mammals is controversial. In this study, we investigated by radioactive in situ hybridization the possible presence of the mRNA encoding AVP and AVT, and using immunocytochemistry the presence of structures immunoreactive for AVP and AVT in the bovine pineal gland. In situ hybridization was performed by use of 35S-labelled oligoprobes. Immunocytochemistry was performed using specific polyclonal rabbit antibodies and the avidin-biotin-complex method. In situ hybridization revealed positive signals for both AVP mRNA and AVT mRNA in a few cells scattered throughout the pineal body. Immunocytochemistry revealed thin AVP-immunoreactive fibres in the pineal stalk and the pineal gland. It also revealed staining of several AVT-immunoreactive nerve fibres in both the pineal stalk and the gland. In addition, polyhedral, neuron-like cell bodies from which two to three processes emerged were also AVT-immunoreactive. Thus, our investigation shows the presence of AVP/AVT-immunoreactive cellular structures in the bovine pineal gland. Our data further show the presence of mRNAs encoding both AVT and AVP. We therefore suggest that AVT mRNA is translated into an AVT-like peptide in the bovine pineal.  相似文献   

14.
Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP)-immunoreactive nerve fibres were demonstrated in the rat pineal gland. These fibres entered the pineal gland through the conarian nerve at the distal tip of the gland. A high density of the fibres was observed in the capsule of the gland, from where the immunoreactive elements penetrated into the pineal perivascular spaces and parenchyma. The majority of PACAP-immunoreactive nerve fibres also contained calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP). Some PACAP-immunoreactive nerve fibres contained neuropeptide Y (NPY), but only occasionally was PACAP colocalized with vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP). After removal of both superior cervical ganglia, a high number of PACAP-containing nerve fibres were still present in the gland. In the nervous system PACAP is present in two isoforms, PACAP-38 and PACAP-27. The concentration of PACAP-38 in the superficial pineal gland was determined by radioimmunoassay to be 20.4 pmol/g tissue at midday and 18.9 pmol/g tissue at midnight. The concentration of PACAP-27 was only about 3% of the concentration of PACAP-38. In summary, this study is the first demonstration of a PACAP-containing innervation of the rat pineal gland. The PACAP concentration in the pineal gland does not exhibit a day-night difference. The colocalization of PACAP with calcitonin gene-related peptide in the pincalopetal nerve fibres indicates that the majority of PACAP-immunoreactive nerve fibres might originate from the trigeminal ganglion.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The distribution of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)- and neuropeptide Y (NPY)-immunoreactive(IR) nerve fibers in the pineal complex was investigated in untreated rats and rats following bilateral removal of the superior cervical ganglia. In normal animals, a large number of TH- and NPY-IR nerve fibers were present in the pineal capsule, the perivascular spaces, and intraparenchymally between the pinealocytes throughout the superficial pineal and deep pineal gland. A small number of TH-IR and NPY-IR nerve fibers were found in the posterior and habenular commissures, a few fibers penetrating from the commissures into the deep pineal gland. To elucidate the origin of these fibers, the superior cervical ganglion was removed bilaterally in 10 animals, and the pineal complex was examined immunohistochemically. Two weeks after the ganglionectomy, the TH-IR and NPY-IR nerve fibers in the superficial pineal gland had almost completely disappeared. On the other hand, in the deep pineal and the pineal stalk, the TH-IR and NPY-IR fibers were still present after ganglionectomy. These data show that the deep pineal gland and the pineal stalk possess an extrasympathetic innervation by TH-IR and NPY-IR fibers. It is suggested that the extrasympathetic TH-IR and NPY-IR nerve fibers innervating the deep pineal and the pineal stalk originate from the brain.  相似文献   

16.
Summary In the mammalian pineal gland, serotonin (5-HT) is located both in the pinealocytes and in the noradrenergic nerve terminals. Pineal 5-HT can be metabolized by three different routes, one of these being its deamination, catalized by monoamine oxidase (MAO). MAO is known to exist as two isozymes, MAO-A and MAO-B. Using two different cytochemical methods at the ultrastructural level, we have localized the presence of MAO in the pineal gland of the rat. The use of selective inhibitors of A-type (clorgyline) and B-type (deprenyl) has shown that MAO-A is localized in the noradrenergic nerve terminals, while pinealocytes contain MAO-B. Taking into account that 5-HT is only deaminated by MAO-A, the specific association of each MAO isozyme with a defined cell type implicates that two cellular compartments are needed in the pineal gland for the biosynthesis of 5-methoxytryptophol and 5-methoxyindole acetic acid, while for the synthesis of melatonin and 5-methoxytryptamine just one cellular compartment, the pinealocyte, is appropriate.  相似文献   

17.
H Schr?der 《Acta anatomica》1987,129(1):22-26
Pineal melatonin synthetic activity shows distinct diurnal characteristics. The circadian regulation of melatonin synthesis is provided by noradrenaline-releasing sympathetic nerves. The pineal noradrenaline content shows a circadian rhythmicity tidally related to the changes in melatonin synthesis rate. To evaluate possible circadian changes of pineal noradrenergic fibre arrangement, the nerve distribution in rat and guinea pig pineal glands was visualized by means of glyoxylic acid-induced histofluorescence. Histochemical findings at 08.00 h and 24.00 h did not exhibit any differences: in both species a dense, mainly perivascularly located network of fluorescent fibres was encountered. As indicated by the simultaneous intraneural presence of green-bluish and yellow fluorophores these fibres most likely contain noradrenaline and serotonin. Obviously circadian melatonin synthesis changes are not paralleled by changes in the distribution pattern of pineal sympathetic nerve fibers. Like other sympathetic innervation-related morphological parameters, histofluorescence does not accurately reflect circadian biochemical changes in the pineal gland.  相似文献   

18.
Two rabbit arylamine N-acetyltransferases (NAT1 and NAT2, EC 2.3.1.5) have been cloned and characterized recently in this laboratory. They catalyze the acetylation of primary arylamine and hydrazine drugs and other substrates in the liver, including sulfamethazine, p-aminosalicylic acid, and p-aminobenzoic acid. In the pineal gland, serotonin is metabolized to N-acetylserotonin by an unknown N-acetyl-transferase. Similarity of the liver enzymes and the pineal gland arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (AA-NAT) has been suggested, because pineal gland homogenates were shown to metabolize arylamine substrates as p-phenetidine, aniline, or phenylethylamine, and liver homogenates or partially purified liver enzyme preparations catalyzed the N-acetylation of serotonin. The present study was undertaken to elucidate the possible role of NAT1 or NAT2 in serotonin acetylation in the pineal gland. We transiently expressed rNAT1 and rNAT2 genes in COS cells, studied the kinetics of the enzymes produced with various substrates, and compared these data with activities of rabbit pineal glands and livers. These enzymatic studies were complemented with western blot analysis with antibodies against NAT1 and NAT2. Cross-hybridization of rNAT1 or rNAT2 to the gene for the pineal gland AA-NAT was tested by Southern blot studies of genomic rabbit DNA. Our results indicate that although NAT1 is expressed in the pineal gland, it is not involved in the physiologically important step of N-acetylation of serotonin.  相似文献   

19.
In order to establish that the pineal gland is innervated by pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP)-immunoreactive nerve fibers originating in the trigeminal ganglion, ophthalmic and maxillary nerves were transected by using a subtemporal fossa approach. The number of PACAP-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the pineal gland of rats with a total transection of the nerve was compared with that of rats without surgery. In the operated rat, PACAP-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the superficial pineal decreased remarkably, indicating that the trigeminal ganglion was the origin of these nerve fibers. This research provides evidence supporting the hypothesis that PACAP-immunoreactive nerves regulate the synthesis and/or secretion of melatonin in the pineal gland.  相似文献   

20.
A prominent innervation of the pineal gland of the European hamster with nerve fibres containing neuropeptide Y (NPY) and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) was demonstrated by means of immunohistochemistry. Nearly all the TH- and NPY-immunoreactive nerve fibres in the superficial pineal gland disappeared after bilateral superior cervical ganglionectomy, showing that the majority of NPY- and TH-immunoreactive nerve fibres belonged to the sympathetic nervous system. Since, in the European hamster, preliminary studies of the NPY-fibre density in the pineal gland had indicated seasonal changes, the density of NPY-immunoreactive nerve fibre profiles was ascertained in the superficial pineal gland in a series of animals between the first part of November and late April. The highest density of NPY-immunoreactive nerve fibre profiles was observed during midwinter. On the other hand, during the same period of the year, the number of sympathetic TH-immunoreactive sympathetic nerve fibre profiles did not exhibit seasonal variation, nor did substitution of testosterone, during the sexually inactive period, affect the density of NPY-containing nerve fibres in the gland. Our results show the presence of a testosterone-independent annual variation in the content of NPY in the sympathetic nerve fibres innervating the pineal gland of the European hamster. This variation can be correlated with the changes in the daily pattern of melatonin production observed by others in the same species at this period of the year.  相似文献   

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