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1.
Abstract— The transport, distribution and turnover of choline O -acetyltransferase (ChAc, EC 2.3.1.6) and acetylcholinesterase (AChE, EC 3.1.1.7) in the vagus and hypoglossal nerves were studied in adult rabbits. The enzymes accumulated proximally and distally to single and double ligatures on both nerves and thus indicated both a proximo-distal and retrograde flow of the enzymes. Double ligature experiments indicated that only 5–20 per cent of the enzymes were mobile in the axon. The rate of accumulation of both enzymes above a single ligature corresponded to the slow rate of axonal flow provided that all the enzymes were mobile, but to an intermediate or fast flow if only a small part of the enzymes was transported. The distribution of ChAc along the hypoglossal neurons was studied and only 2 per cent of ChAc was confined to cell bodies, 42 per cent was localized to the main hypoglossal nerve trunks and 56 per cent to the preterminal axons and axon terminals in the tongue. The ratio of AChE to ChAc was about 3 in the hypoglossal nerve and 32 in the vagus nerve.
Transection of the hypoglossal nerve was followed by a decrease in the activity of ChAc in the hypoglossal nucleus and nerve and in the axons and their terminals in the tongue. The activity of AChE decreased in the hypoglossal nucleus and nerve but not in the tongue. The half-life of ChAc in preterminal axons and terminals of the hypoglossal nerve was estimated to be 16-21 days from the results obtained on transport, axotomy and distribution of the enzyme. Intracisternal injection of colchicine inhibited the cellulifugal transport of both enzymes and led to an increase in enzyme activity in the hypoglossal nucleus.  相似文献   

2.
Calcitonin gene-related peptide-like immunoreactivity (CGRP-ir) is displayed by motoneurons that innervate striated muscle but is absent from preganglionic parasympathetic motoneurons. One hypothesis to explain this is that CGRP gene expression in motoneurons is, in part, dependent on influences from the innervated organ. To test this hypothesis, we cross-anastomosed the right hypoglossal and cervical vagal nerves of rats so that the vagal motoneurons grew to innervate the musculature of the tongue. Following a recovery period of 17 to 52 weeks, the distribution of CGRP-ir in the dorsal motor vagal nucleus was determined in both cross-anastomosed animals and self-anastomosed control animals. Successful reinnervation of the tongue musculature by vagal motoneurons was demonstrated by showing that electrical stimulation of the central vagus/peripheral hypoglossal nerve produced a twitch of the tongue muscles. Motoneurones of the dorsal motor vagal nucleus, which now innervated the tongue were found to express CGRP-ir, which was evident from the double labeling of neurons with both horseradish peroxidase and CGRP-ir. Motoneurones of the dorsal motor vagal nucleus contralateral to the cross-anastomosis remained CGRP negative. Similarly, motoneurons of the dorsal motor vagal nucleus in control animals where the vagus nerve was self-anastomosed remained CGRP negative, showing that an induction of CGRP expression is not a result of nerve section itself. We suggest that a signal from the striated muscle transported retrogradely via the motor axon regulates expression of CGRP-ir in motoneurons. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
4.
—The redistribution of rapidly migrating [3H]leucine-labelled proteins was studied using double ligatures applied to the vagus nerve and single ligatures, applied to the hypoglossal nerves. Rapidly migrating proteins accumulating for 16 h proximal to a distal ligature of the cervical vagus redistributed to give a retrograde accumulation distal to a second ligature. Within 6 h a substantial redistribution occurred indicating a rapid retrograde transport. After 21 h there was a further accumulation with 70 per cent of the labelled material accumulating at the distal end of the isolated nerve segment and 16 per cent accumulating at the proximal end. It was shown that about a half of the retrograde accumulation was dependent on the distal accumulation zone. Rapidly migrating proteins accumulated distal to a ligature applied to the hypoglossal nerve 16 h after labelling of the nerve cell bodies indicating that a rapid retrograde transport of labelled macromolecules occurs from the peripheral parts of the nerve in the tongue. Labelled proteins accumulated proximal to ligatures and transections of both the hypoglossal and vagus nerve when applied 16 h after labelling of the nerve cell bodies, indicating the presence of axonal proteins, migrating at a rate of transport intermediate to that of rapidly and slowly migrating proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The spino-occipital nerve (SO) and ventral rami of the spinal nerves (SV) in 10 tetraodontiform families and 5 outgroup taxa were examined, with special reference to pectoral and pelvic fin muscle innervation. Compared with the outgroup taxa, tetraodontiforms were characteristic in having SO3 + SV1 (SO3 in tetraodontids) that gave off several lateral subbranches to the pectoral fin base and SO participation in infracarinalis anterior innervation. SO and SV1 were connected with one another (6 patterns) before entering the pectoral fin muscles in most species, including the outgroup taxa, resulting in the participation of SV1 in the innervation of almost all of the pectoral fin muscles. SO3 + SV1 was present in all tetraodontiforms (except in 2 tetraodontids having only SO3) and the outgroup taxa, an upper dorsal branch uniformly extending dorsally into the pectoral fin base. The pectoral fin base also received a branch ventrally, but its identity differed (participation or nonparticipation of SV2). SV1 alone constituting the branch was a derived condition occurring in Aracanidae, Ostraciidae, Tetraodontidae, Diodontidae, and Molidae. No strong characters supporting a tetraodontiform sister group were recognized among the spino-occipital nerve and ventral rami of spinal nerves.  相似文献   

6.
The origin and evolution of the vertebrate skull have been topics of intense study for more than two centuries. Whereas early theories of skull origin, such as the influential vertebral theory, have been largely refuted with respect to the anterior (pre‐otic) region of the skull, the posterior (post‐otic) region is known to be derived from the anteriormost paraxial segments, i.e. the somites. Here we review the morphology and development of the occiput in both living and extinct tetrapods, taking into account revised knowledge of skull development by augmenting historical accounts with recent data. When occipital composition is evaluated relative to its position along the neural axis, and specifically to the hypoglossal nerve complex, much of the apparent interspecific variation in the location of the skull–neck boundary stabilizes in a phylogenetically informative way. Based on this criterion, three distinct conditions are identified in (i) frogs, (ii) salamanders and caecilians, and (iii) amniotes. The position of the posteriormost occipital segment relative to the hypoglossal nerve is key to understanding the evolution of the posterior limit of the skull. By using cranial foramina as osteological proxies of the hypoglossal nerve, a survey of fossil taxa reveals the amniote condition to be present at the base of Tetrapoda. This result challenges traditional theories of cranial evolution, which posit translocation of the occiput to a more posterior location in amniotes relative to lissamphibians (frogs, salamanders, caecilians), and instead supports the largely overlooked hypothesis that the reduced occiput in lissamphibians is secondarily derived. Recent advances in our understanding of the genetic basis of axial patterning and its regulation in amniotes support the hypothesis that the lissamphibian occipital form may have arisen as the product of a homeotic shift in segment fate from an amniote‐like condition.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract— The redistribution of rapidly migrating [3H]leucine-labelled proteins and [3H]fucose-labelled glycoproteins was studied in ligated regenerating hypoglossal and vagus nerves of the rabbit. When regenerating and contralateral hypoglossal nerves were ligated 16 h after labelling of the nerve cell bodies, rapidly migrating proteins and glycoproteins accumulated distal to the ligatures indicating a rapid retrograde transport from the peripheral parts of the nerves within 6 h. The retrograde accumulation of both proteins and glycoproteins was greater on the regenerating side than on the contralateral side at both 1 and 5 weeks after a nerve crush. Labelled proteins and glycoproteins also accumulated proximal to the ligatures, indicating a delayed rapid anterograde phase of axonal transport. The accumulation of this phase was also greater on the regenerating side 1 week after a nerve crush for both labelled proteins and glycoproteins. One week after a crush of the cervical vagus nerve, rapidly migrating proteins and glycoproteins redistributed between he crush zone and a proximal ligature applied 16 h after labelling of the nerve cell bodies. A retrograde accumulation occurred distal to the ligature within 6 h, indicating a rapid retrograde transport from the crush zone.  相似文献   

8.
Food-borne transmission of prions can lead to infection of the gastrointestinal tract and neuroinvasion via the splanchnic and vagus nerves. Here we report that the transmission of transmissible mink encephalopathy (TME) is 100,000-fold more efficient by inoculation of prions into the tongues of hamsters than by oral ingestion. The incubation period following TME agent (hereinafter referred to as TME) inoculation into the lingual muscles was the shortest among the five nonneuronal routes of inoculation, including another intramuscular route. Deposition of the abnormal isoform of the prion protein, PrP(Sc), was first detected in the tongue and submandibular lymph node at 1 to 2 weeks following inoculation of the tongue with TME. PrP(Sc) deposits in the tongue were associated with individual axons, and the initial appearance of TME in the brain stem was found in the hypoglossal nucleus at 2 weeks postinfection. At later time points, PrP(Sc) was localized to brain cell groups that directly project to the hypoglossal nucleus, indicating the transneuronal spread of TME. TME PrP(Sc) entry into the brain stem preceded PrP(Sc) detection in the rostral cervical spinal cord. These results demonstrate that TME can replicate in both the tongue and regional lymph nodes but indicate that the faster route of brain invasion is via retrograde axonal transport within the hypoglossal nerve to the hypoglossal nucleus. Topical application of TME to a superficial wound on the surface of the tongue resulted in a higher incidence of disease and a shorter incubation period than with oral TME ingestion. Therefore, abrasions of the tongue in livestock and humans may predispose a host to oral prion infection of the tongue-associated cranial nerves. In a related study, PrP(Sc) was detected in tongues following the intracerebral inoculation of six hamster-adapted prion strains, which demonstrates that prions can also travel from the brain to the tongue in the anterograde direction along the tongue-associated cranial nerves. These findings suggest that food products containing ruminant or cervid tongue may be a potential source of prion infection for humans.  相似文献   

9.
The vagus nerve, or the tenth cranial nerve, innervates the heart in addition to other visceral organs, including the posterior visceral arches. In amniotes, the anterior and posterior cardiac branches arise from the branchial and intestinal portions of the vagus nerve to innervate the arterial and venous poles of the heart, respectively. The evolution of this innervation pattern has yet to be elucidated, due mainly to the lack of morphological data on the vagus in basal vertebrates. To investigate this topic, we observed the vagus nerves of the lamprey (Lethenteron japonicum), elephant shark (Callorhinchus milii), and mouse (Mus musculus), focusing on the embryonic patterns of the vagal branches in the venous pole. In the lamprey, no vagus branch was found in the venous pole throughout development, whereas the arterial pole was innervated by a branch from the branchial portion. In contrast, the vagus innervated the arterial and venous poles in the mouse and elephant shark. Based on the morphological patterns of these branches, the venous vagal branches of the mouse and elephant shark appear to belong to the intestinal part of the vagus, implying that the cardiac nerve pattern is conserved among crown gnathostomes. Furthermore, we found a topographical shift of the structures adjacent to the venous pole (i.e., the hypoglossal nerve and pronephros) between the extant gnathostomes and lamprey. Phylogenetically, the lamprey morphology is likely to be the ancestral condition for vertebrates, suggesting that the evolution of the venous branch occurred early in the gnathostome lineage, in parallel with the remodeling of the head–trunk interfacial domain during the acquisition of the neck. J. Morphol. 277:1146–1158, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
Histochemical investigation on succinic dehydrogenase activity and morphometric studies have demonstrated certain differences in the dog sublingual group of muscles. The thyreohyoid and sternohyoid muscles innervated by spinal nerves possess three types of myons differing in succinic dehydrogenase activity and in the area of transversal section. The cricothyreoid muscle and the superior pharyngeal constrictor obtaining their motor innervation from the vagus nerve are composed of unitypical muscular fibres with nearly the same areas of transversal section and high enzymic activity. The differences noted should be explained by different sources of motor innervation.  相似文献   

11.
Behavioral observations demonstrate that bilateral deafferentation of the hypoglossal nerves in the marine toad (Bufo marinus) prevents mouth opening during feeding. In the present study, we used high-speed videography, electromyography (EMG), deafferentation, muscle stimulation, and extracellular recordings from the trigeminal nerve to investigate the mechanism by which sensory feedback from the tongue controls the jaw muscles of toads. Our results show that sensory feedback from the tongue enters the brain through the hypoglossal nerve during normal feeding. This feedback appears to inhibit both tonic and phasic activity of the jaw levators. Hypoglossal feedback apparently functions to coordinate tongue protraction and mouth opening during feeding. Among anurans, the primitive condition is the absence of a highly protrusible tongue and the absence of a hypoglossal sensory feedback system. The hypoglossal feedback system evolved in parallel with the acquisition of a highly protrusible tongue in toads and their relatives.  相似文献   

12.
Previous studies have shown the existence of a sphincter in the efferent filament artery of the teleost gill and its constrictory response to acetylcholine (ACH) and vagal stimulation. This study deals with the muscular organization of this sphincter and the distribution of its innervation as elucidated by degeneration methods and cytochemistry. The sphincter innervation is supplied by the protrematic vagus nerves. Nerve endings filled with cholinergic-type vesicles are located in close association with the adventitial smooth muscle cells and display a strong acetylcholinesterase (ACHE) activity. Section of the protrematic vagus nerve induces a nearly complete degeneration of the sphincter innervation. ACHE-positive nerve cell bodies are present both in the sphincter area and in the protrematic vagus nerve. These results suggest that innervation of the sphincter in the efferent filament artery is cholinergic through the activity of postganglionic axons of the parasympathetic system.  相似文献   

13.
The study by the author and his co-workers of the innervation of the sheaths of extraorganic (spinal and cerebral) and intraorganic nerves has shown that their nervous apparatus is differentiated in accordance with differentiation of epi-, peri- and endoneurium. The peculiar features of the innervation of sheaths of different nerves correspond to their functions and pathoplastical individuality and manifest themselves by uneven complexity, concentration and microtopography of nerve structures in the sheaths and by distinctions in the development and reactivity. Interrelationships and correlation was established between the specific functional readiness of nerve conductors and the structural organization of their sheaths' nervous apparatus. The phenomenon of reciprocal innervation of nerves was established in experiment as well as earlier reactive and compensatory-reparative processes in the nervous apparatus of nerve sheaths as compared with their conductors.  相似文献   

14.
The relative size of the hypoglossal canal has been proposed as a useful diagnostic tool for the identification of human-like speech capabilities in the hominid fossil record. Relatively large hypoglossal canals (standardized to oral cavity size) were observed in humans and assumed to correspond to relatively large hypoglossal nerves, the cranial nerve that controls motor function of the tongue. It was suggested that the human pattern of tongue motor innervation and associated speech potential are very different from those of African apes and australopithecines; the modern human condition apparently appeared by the time of Middle Pleistocene Homo. A broader interspecific analysis of hypoglossal canal size in primates conducted in 1999 has rejected this diagnostic and inferences based upon it. In an attempt to resolve these differences of opinion, which we believe are based in part on biased size-adjustments and/or unwarranted assumptions, a new data set was collected and analyzed from 298 extant hominoid skulls, including orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos, siamang, gibbons, and modern humans. Data on the absolute size of the hypoglossal nerve itself were also gathered from a small sample of humans and chimpanzee cadavers. A scale-free index of relative hypoglossal canal size (RHCS) was computed as 100 x (hypoglossal canal area(0.5)/oral cavity volume(0.333)). No significant sexual dimorphism in RHCS was discovered in any species of living hominoid, but there are significant interspecific differences in both absolute and relative sizes of the hypoglossal canal. In absolute terms, humans possess significantly larger canals than any other species except gorillas, but there is considerable overlap with chimpanzees. Humans are also characterized by large values of RHCS, but gibbons possess an even larger average mean for this index; siamang and bonobos overlap appreciably with humans in RHCS. The value of RHCS in Australopithecus afarensis is well within both human and gibbon ranges, as are the indices computed for selected representatives of fossil Homo. Furthermore, the size of the hypoglossal nerve itself, expressed as the mass of nerve per millimeter of length, does not distinguish chimpanzees from modern humans. We conclude, therefore, that the relative size of the hypoglossal canal is neither a reliable nor sufficient predictor of human-like speech capabilities, and paleoanthropology still lacks a quantifiable, morphological diagnostic for when this capability finally emerged in the human career.  相似文献   

15.
Vagal innervation of guinea pig bronchial smooth muscle   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We isolated the guinea pig right bronchus with the vagus nerves intact and evaluated the changes in isometric tension of the smooth muscle in response to nerve stimulation. Brief (10-s) trains of electrical field stimulation or vagus nerve stimulation caused a biphasic contraction: the "first phase" sensitive to atropine and the "second phase" sensitive to capsaicin. The two phases could be dissociated by adjusting the stimulus intensity; greater stimulus intensities (pulse durations or voltage) were required to evoke the capsaicin-sensitive phase. When stimulated at 30-min intervals, the magnitude of both phases of the contractions declined over a 2-h period of repeated stimulation; however, this was prevented by indomethacin. Stimulation of the left vagus nerve resulted in a monophasic contraction of the right bronchus, with little evidence of a capsaicin-sensitive phase. Blocking neurotransmission through the bronchial ganglion, as monitored by intracellular recording techniques, abolished the first-phase contraction but had no effect on the capsaicin-sensitive phase. Selective blockade of muscarinic M1 receptors had no effect on vagus nerve-mediated contractions. The results demonstrate that the left and right vagus nerves carry preganglionic fibers to the right bronchial ganglion. The right but not the left vagus nerve also carries capsaicin-sensitive afferent fibers that, when stimulated, result in a persistent contraction of the right bronchus. Finally, we provide functional and electrophysiological evidence supporting the hypothesis that capsaicin-sensitive afferent neurons communicate with postganglionic motoneurons within the bronchus.  相似文献   

16.
The medial branch (Med) of the hypoglossal nerve innervates the tongue protrudor muscles, whereas the lateral branch (Lat) innervates tongue retractor muscles. Our previous finding that pharyngeal airflow increased during either selective Med stimulation or whole hypoglossal nerve (WHL) stimulation (coactivation of protrudor and retractor muscles) led us to examine how WHL, Med, or Lat stimulation affected tongue movements and nasopharyngeal (NP) and oropharyngeal (OP) airway volume. Electrical stimulation of either WHL, Med, or Lat nerves was performed in anesthetized, tracheotomized rats while magnetic resonance images of the NP and OP were acquired (slice thickness 0.5 mm, in-plane resolution 0.25 mm). NP and OP volume was greater during WHL and Med stimulation vs. no stimulation (P < 0.05). Ventral tongue depression (measured in the midsagittal images) and OP volume were greater during Med stimulation than during WHL stimulation (P < 0.05). Lat stimulation did not alter NP volume (P = 0.39). Our finding that either WHL or Med stimulation dilates the NP and OP airways sheds new light on the control of pharyngeal airway caliber by extrinsic tongue muscles and may lead to new treatments for patients with obstructive sleep apnea.  相似文献   

17.
We recently showed respiratory-related coactivation of both extrinsic and intrinsic tongue muscles in the rat. Here, we test the hypothesis that intrinsic tongue muscles contribute importantly to changes in velopharyngeal airway volume. Spontaneously breathing anesthetized rats were placed in a MRI scanner. A catheter was placed in the hypopharynx and connected to a pressure source. Axial and sagittal images of the velopharyngeal airway were obtained, and the volume of each image was computed at airway pressures ranging from +5.0 to -5.0 cm H2O. We obtained images in the hypoglossal intact animal (i.e., coactivation of intrinsic and extrinsic tongue muscles) and after selective denervation of the intrinsic tongue muscles, with and without electrical stimulation. Denervation of the intrinsic tongue muscles reduced velopharyngeal airway volume at atmospheric and positive airway pressures. Electrical stimulation of the intact hypoglossal nerve increased velopharyngeal airway volume; however, when stimulation was repeated after selective denervation of the intrinsic tongue muscles, the increase in velopharyngeal airway volume was significantly attenuated. These findings support our working hypothesis that intrinsic tongue muscles play a critical role in modulating upper airway patency.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The innervation of the pancreatic islets of a teleost fish, Gillichthys mirabilis, was investigated with various techniques including axonal iontophoresis of cobalt, light microscopy, and electron microscopy. Two types of postganglionic neurons, the splanchnic and the vagus, innervate the islet parenchyma. The splanchnic fibers originate from the single coeliac ganglion, situated near the third spinal nerve on the right side, and pass caudally to the islet. Postganglionic vagal fibers reaching the islets arise from ganglion cells located at irregular intervals along the vagus nerve.Iontophoresis of cobaltous chloride revealed that both types of nerves send large numbers of fibers to the islet cells. Electron microscopy showed that the granules of the vagal fibers are polymorphic, large (130 mm diameter) and markedly electron dense, whereas the splanchnic granules are smaller (100 nm diameter) and less electron dense than those of the vagus.These granules do not correspond to those seen in postganglionic autonomic neurons of other vertebrates. Rather, they are more like classical neurosecretory granules. Although their chemical nature is unknown, the extent of islet innervation suggests that it must play an important regulatory role.Supported by a grant (AM 17161) from the National Institutes of Health  相似文献   

19.
The developmental morphology of the hypoglossal nerve and associated structures were studied in the chick embryo (Hamburger and Hamilton stages 16-27) stained by the immunohistochemical technique. Ventral rootlets of the occipital nerves, including O1, were seen at stage 16. The distal ends of these nerves anastomosed to form the hypoglossal nerve at stage 20. At stage 23, four occipital and the first three cervical nerves were observed to be involved. The transient contribution of C3 at this stage seemed to be correlated with the formation of the longitudinal anastomosis of the distal end of the spinal nerves which begins around stage 23. The anterior hypoglossal roots appeared between O1 and the abducens nerve at stage 20. These rootlets were observed to arise as the rostral continuation of the occipital sequence and were found to be arranged in a straight line from O1 to the abducens nerve. The recurrent branch of the abducens was also observed. The posterior end of the ganglion crest produced dorsal root ganglion (DRG)-like structures transiently at the level of C2, and sometimes at the level of C1 also. The ganglion crest developed descending processes in the occipital region seemingly related to the spinal dorsal root formation. These phenomena seemed to represent the potential of the ganglion crest to produce the spinal nerve components which are depressed in the occipital region.  相似文献   

20.
Branchial innervation   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Inspection of the dorsal end of fish gills reveals an impressive set of nerve trunks, connecting the gills to the brain. These trunks are branches of cranial nerves VII (the facial) and especially IX (the glossopharyngeal) and X (the vagus). The nerve trunks carry a variety of nervous pathways to and from the gills. A substantial fraction of the nerves running in the branchial trunks carry afferent (sensory) information from receptors within the gills. There are also efferent (motor) pathways, which control muscles within the gills, blood flow patterns and possibly secretory functions. Undertaking a more careful survey of the gills, it becomes evident that the arrangement of the microanatomy (particularly the blood vessels) and its innervation are strikingly complex. The complexity not only reflects the many functions of the gills but also illustrates that the control of blood flow patterns in the gills is of crucial importance in modifying the efficiency of its chief functions: gas transfer and salt balance. The "respiratory-osmoregulatory compromise" is maintained by minimizing the blood/water exchange (functional surface area of the gills) to a level where excessive water loss (marine teleosts) or gain (freshwater teleosts) is kept low while ensuring sufficient gas exchange. This review describes the arrangement and mechanisms of known nervous pathways, both afferent and efferent, of fish (notably teleosts) gills. Emphasis is placed primarily on the autonomic nervous system and mechanisms of blood flow control, together with an outline of the afferent (sensory) pathways of the gill arches.  相似文献   

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