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1.
Localization of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) was investigated in the chicken Harderian gland at the electron microscopic level. Nerve cells in the pterygopalatine ganglion showed AChE activity. They had a pale and large nucleus which was round or oval in shape. Reaction product of AChE was detected between the nuclear envelopes; in the cisterna of rough endoplasmic reticulum and the lumen of the Golgi lamellae, and on the plasma membrane of the nerve cell. In the interstitium of the gland, nerve fibers showing AChE activity were easily found. They were often seen in the perivascular space and between plasma cells. These nerve fibers had varicosities in contact with plasma cells and the endothelium or the smooth muscle fiber of the blood vessels. AChE-positive varicosities or terminals contained many small clear vesicles (about 50nm in diameter) and a few large dense-cored vesicles (about 100 nm in diameter). No contacts of nerve fibers with acinar cells or the ductal epithelium were observed in the present study. Our data indicate that cholinergic nerves play distinct roles in the regulation of the immune function of the chicken Harderian gland.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Efferent arterioles leaving juxtamedullary glomeruli in the kidneys of rats have a media comprized of a layer of closely packed smooth muscle cells. This muscle coat continues along the length of the efferent arterioles and arteriolae rectae to a level deep in the outer medullary zone, where smooth muscle cells are gradually replaced by pericytes characteristic of the non-muscular arterial vasa recta.Bundles of unmyelinated nerve fibers accompany the efferent arterioles and arteriolae rectae to the level where smooth muscle is no longer found in the media of the latter vessels. Close associations between smooth muscle cells and axons are marked by axonal dilatations which lie adjacent to muscle cells. There is no modification of either the axonal or the muscle cell membrane at these sites, nor do axons penetrate the basal lamina of muscle fibers. Large granular vesicles and small granular and agranular vesicles occur in most axons at the dilations, although the granular material in the small granular vesicles is usually sparse and in dispersed form.The nerves are considered to be primarily adrenergic because of strong catecholamine fluorescence demonstrated by other workers in association with the efferent arteries and arteriolae rectae. Poor definition of the small granular vesicles, which are commonly supposed to contain catecholamines, is ascribed to extraction of catecholamines during processing, discharge of granules prior to fixation, or inability of these axons to store catecholamines in quantity under physiological conditions.Financial assistance during the progress of this work was obtained from the Medical Research Council of Canada.  相似文献   

3.
Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) immunoreactivity was revealed by immunocytochemistry in the mouse adrenal gland at the light and electron microscopic levels. Groups of weakly or faintly GABA immunoreactive chromaffin cells were often seen in the adrenal medulla. By means of immunohistochemistry combined with fluorescent microscopy, these GABA immunoreactive chromaffin cells showed noradrenaline fluorescence. The immunoreaction product was seen mainly in the granular cores of these noradrenaline cells. These results suggest the co-existence of GABA and noradrenaline within the chromaffin granules. Sometimes thick or thin bundles of GABA immunoreactive nerve fibers with or without varicosities were found running through the cortex directly into the medulla. In the medulla, GABA immunoreactive varicose nerve fibers were numerous and were often in close contact with small adrenaline cells and large ganglion cells; a few, however, surrounded clusters of the noradrenaline cells, where membrane specializations were formed. Single GABA immunoreactive nerve fibers, and thin or thick bundles of the immunoreactive varicose nerve fibers ran along the blood vessels in the medulla. The immunoreaction deposits were observed diffusely in the axoplasm and in small agranular vesicles of the GABA immunoreactive nerve fibers. Since no ganglion cells with GABA immunoreactivity were found in the adrenal gland, the GABA immunoreactive nerve fibers are regarded as extrinsic in origin.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The zona glomerulosa of the rat adrenal gland is innervated by catecholaminergic nerves. Using histofluorescence techniques, we observed catecholaminergic plexuses surrounding adrenal capsular and subcapsular blood vessels. Individual varicose nerve fibers that branched off these plexuses were distributed among adrenal glomerulosa cells. This innervation was permanently eliminated after neonatal sympathectomy with guanethidine or 6-hydroxydopamine, but was not affected by ligation of the splanchnic nerve or extirpation of the suprarenal ganglion. At the ultrastructural level, axonal varicosities were commonly observed in close proximity to glomerulosa cells and blood vessels. Nerve fibers and varicosities were found to contain small (30–60 nm) clear vesicles as well as large (60–110 nm) and small (30–60 nm) dense-cored vesicles. In tissue fixed for the dichromate reaction with or without pretreatment with the false transmitter 5-hydroxydopamine, many nerve terminals contained numerous small dense-cored vesicles which are thought to contain catecholamines. These results establish the anatomical substrate for the catecholaminergic innervation of the rat adrenal cortex.  相似文献   

5.
Summary VIP-like immunoreactivity was revealed in a few chromaffin cells, medullary ganglion cells and a plexus of varicose nerve fibers in the superficial cortex and single varicose fibers in the juxtamedullary cortex and the medulla of the rat adrenal gland. VIP-like immunoreactive chromaffin cells were polygonal in shape without any distinct cytoplasmic processes and they appeared solitarily. Their cytoplasm contained abundant granular vesicles having a round core and the immunoreactive material was localized to the granular core. VIP-immunoreactive ganglion cells were multipolar and had large intracytoplasmic vacuoles. The immunoreactive material was localized not only in a few granular vesicles but also diffusely throughout the axoplasm. VIP-immunoreactive varicose nerve fibers in the superficial cortex were characterized by abundant small clear vesicles and some large granular vesicles, while those in the juxtamedullary cortex and medulla and the ganglionic processes were characterized by abundant large clear vesicles, as well as the same vesicular elements as contained in the nerves in the superficial cortex. The immunoreactive material was localized on the granular cores and diffusely in the axoplasm in both nerves. Based on the similarity and difference in the composition of the vesicles contained in individual nerves, it is likely that the VIP-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the medulla and the juxtamedullary cortex are derived from the medullary VIP-ganglion cells, while those in the superficial cortex are of extrinsic origin. The immunoreactive nerve fibers in both the cortex and the medulla were often in direct contact with cortical cells and chromaffin cells, where no membrane specializations were formed. The immunoreactive nerve fibers were sometimes associated with the smooth muscle cells and pericytes of small blood vessels in the superficial cortex. In addition they were often seen in close apposition to the fenestrated endothelial cells in the cortex and the medulla, only a common basal lamina intervening. Several possible mechanisms by which VIP may exert its effect in the adrenal gland are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Innervation of the ultimobranchial glands in the chicken was investigated by immunohistochemistry, fluorescence microscopy and electron microscopy. The nerve fibers distributed in ultimobranchial glands were clearly visualized by immunoperoxidase staining with antiserum to neurofilament triplet proteins (200K-, 150K- and 68K-dalton) extracted from chicken peripheral nerves. The ultimobranchial glands received numerous nerve fibers originating from both the recurrent laryngeal nerves and direct vagal branches. The left and right sides of the ultimobranchial region were asymmetrical. The left ultimobranchial gland had intimate contact with the vagus nerve trunk, especially with the distal vagal ganglion, but was somewhat separated from the recurrent nerve. The right gland touched the recurrent nerve, the medial edge being frequently penetrated by the nerve, but the gland was separated from the vagal trunk. The left gland was innervated mainly by the branches from the distal vagal ganglion, whereas the right gland received mostly the branches from the recurrent nerve. The carotid body was located cranially near to the ultimobranchial gland. Large nerve bundles in the ultimobranchial gland ran toward and entered into the carotid body. By fluorescence microscopy, nerve fibers in ultimobranchial glands were observed associated with blood vessels. Only a few fluorescent nerve fibers were present in close proximity to C cell groups; the C cells of ultimobranchial glands may receive very few adrenergic sympathetic fibers. By electron microscopy, numerous axons ensheathed with Schwann cell cytoplasm were in close contact with the surfaces of C cells. In addition, naked axons regarded as axon terminals or "en passant" synapses came into direct contact with C cells. The morphology of these axon terminals and synaptic endings suggest that ultimobranchial C cells of chickens are supplied mainly with cholinergic efferent type fibers. In the region where large nerve bundles and complex ramifications of nerve fibers were present, Schwann cell perikarya investing the axons were closely juxtaposed with C cells; long cytoplasmic processes of Schwann cells encompassed large portions of the cell surface. All of these features suggest that C-cell activity, i.e., secretion of hormones and catecholamines, may be regulated by nerve stimuli.  相似文献   

7.
The detailed structure of nerve branches, neuromuscular junctions, and muscle fibers of a multiterminal innervation of cockroach abdominal muscle has been studied with the electron microscope. The muscle fiber is of the banded myofibril type; with paired mitochondria and abundant endoplasmic reticulum. The peripheral nerve branches are multiaxonal with large central axon and several small peripheral tunicated axons. Tracheoblasts closely accompany the nerve branches. The multiple neuromuscular junctions show typical axonal vesicles, muscle aposynaptic granules, and close plasma membrane apposition with no interposition of basement membrane material.  相似文献   

8.
The detailed structure of nerve branches, neuromuscular junctions, and muscle fibers of a multiterminal innervation of cockroach abdominal muscle has been studied with the electron microscope. The muscle fiber is of the banded myofibril type; with paired mitochondria and abundant endoplasmic reticulum. The peripheral nerve branches are multiaxonal with large central axon and several small peripheral tunicated axons. Tracheoblasts closely accompany the nerve branches. The multiple neuromuscular junctions show typical axonal vesicles, muscle aposynaptic granules, and close plasma membrane apposition with no interposition of basement membrane material.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The innervation of the pancreas of the domestic fowl was studied electron microscopically. The extrapancreatic nerve is composed mostly of unmyelinated nerve fibers with a smaller component of myelinated nerve fibers. The latter are not found in the parenchyma. The pancreas contains ganglion cells in the interlobular connective tissue. The unmyelinated nerve fibers branch off along blood vessels. Their synaptic terminals contact with the exocrine and endocrine tissues. The synaptic terminals can be divided into four types based on a combination of three kinds of synaptic vesicles. Type I synaptic terminals contain only small clear vesicles about 600 Å in diameter. Type II terminals are characterized by small clear and large dense core vesicles 1,000 Å in diameter. Type III terminals contain small clear vesicles and small dense core vesicles 500 Å in diameter. Type IV terminals are characterized by small and large dense core vesicles. The exocrine tissue receives a richer nervous supply than the endocrine tissue. Type II and IV terminals are distributed in the acinus, and they contact A and D cells of the islets. B cells and pancreatic ducts are supplied mainly by Type II terminals, the blood vessels by Type IV terminals.This work was supported by a scientific research grant (No. 144017) and (No. 136031) from the Ministry of Education of Japan to Prof. M. Yasuda  相似文献   

10.
The morphological features of the glandular epithelium that secretes pheromone in the polyphagous pest gypsy moth Lymantria dispar are described by light and electron microscopy. The monolayered gland cells are covered by the folded cuticle of the intersegmental membrane between the 8th and 9th abdominal segments showing neither sites of discontinuity nor distinct openings on its external surface. The cells bear a large, often irregularly shaped nucleus, and contain granules of variable amount and electron‐density. These granules are mostly located in the basal compartment of the cytoplasm, in a labyrinthine zone laying on a basement membrane. The apical membrane of the gland cells bear microvilli and cell–cell contact is established by different junctional structures. Nerve fibers enwrapped in glia are found beneath the basement membrane, in close contact with the secretory cells. This latter finding represents the first evidence of the innervation of the pheromonal gland in L. dispar. J. Morphol. 2009. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Apart from cholinergic nerve fibers, which make up the main part of efferent fibers to the avian adrenal gland (Unsicker, 1973b), adrenergic, purinergic and afferent nerve fibers occur. Adrenergic nerve fibers are much more rare than cholinergic fibers. With the Falck-Hillarp fluorescence method they can be demonstrated in the capsule of the gland, in the pericapsular tissue and near blood vessels. By their green fluorescent varicosities they may be distinguished characteristically from undulating yellow fluorescent ramifications of small nerve cells which are found in the ganglia of the adrenal gland and below the capsule. The varicosities of adrenergic axons exhibit small (450 to 700 Å in diameter) and large (900 to 1300 Å in diameter) granular vesicles with a dense core which is usually situated excentrically. After the application of 6-hydroxydopamine degenerative changes appear in the varicosities. Adrenergic axons are not confined to blood vessels but can be found as well in close proximity of chromaffin cells. Probably adrenergic fibers are the axons of large ganglion cells which are situated mainly within the ganglia of the adrenal gland and in the periphery of the organ and whose dendritic endings show small granular vesicles after treatment with 6-OHDA.A third type of nerve fiber is characterized by varicosities containing dense-cored vesicles with a thin light halo, the mean diameter (1250 Å) of which exceeds that of the morphologically similar granular vesicles in cholinergic synapses. Those fibers resemble neurosecretory and purinergic axons and are therefore called p-type fibers. They cannot be stained with chromalum-hematoxyline-phloxine. Axon dilations showing aggregates of mitochondria, myelin bodies and dense-cored vesicles of different shape and diameter are considered to be afferent nerve endings. Blood vessels in the capsule of the gland are innervated by both cholinergic and adrenergic fibers.Supported by a grant from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Un 34/1).  相似文献   

12.
Summary Fine structural and enzyme histochemical observations on ultimobranchial body and parathyroid gland of the caecilian Chthonerpeton are presented. The cell clusters and follicles of the ultimobranchial body consist mainly of granulated cells which are termed C-cells and obviously belong to the APUD cell series. In the larger follicles additional possibly exhausted degranulated cells and replacement cells occur. A rich supply of nerve fibres has been found in this gland. Frequently nerve terminals were observed to come into synaptic contact with the C-cells. Two categories of nerve fibres occur: a) fibres containing large polymorphic electron dense granules (probably purinergic fibres), b) fibres containing small electron transparent vesicles and a few electron dense granules (probably cholinergic fibres). The parathyroid gland consists of elongated cells (one cell type) poor in organelles and often containing fields of glycogen and lipid droplets. The cells are further characterized by fair amounts of lysosomal enzymes; they are interconnected by maculae adhaerentes and occludentes. No nerves and blood vessels have been found in the parathyroid gland of Chthonerpeton. This study has been supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft We 380/5.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The present immunohistochemical study reveals that a small number of chromaffin cells in the rat adrenal medulla exhibit CGRP-like immunoreactivity. All CGRP-immunoreactive cells were found to be chromaffin cells without noradrenaline fluorescence; from combined immunohistochemistry and fluorescence histochemistry we suggest that these are adrenaline cells. In addition, all CGRP-immunoreactive cells simultaneously exhibited NPY-like immunoreactivity. CGRP-chromaffin cells were characterized by abundant chromaffin granules with round cores in which the immunoreactive material was densely localized. These findings suggest the co-existence of CGRP, NPY and adrenaline within the chromaffin granules in a substantial number of chromaffin cells.Thicker and thinner nerve bundles, which included CGRP-immunoreactive nerve fibers, with or without varicosities, penetrated the adrenal capsule. Most of them passed through the cortex and entered the medulla directly, whereas others were distributed in subcapsular regions and among the cortical cells of the zona glomerulosa. Here the CGRP-fibers were in close contact with cortical cells. A few of the fibers supplying the cortex extended further into the medulla. The CGRP-immunoreactive fibers in the medulla were traced among and within small clusters of chromaffin cells and around ganglion cells. The CGRP-fibers were directly apposed to both CGRP-positive and negative chromaffin cells, as well as to ganglion cells. Immunoreactive fibers, which could not be found close to blood vessels, were characterized by the presence of numerous small clear vesicles mixed with a few large granular vesicles. The immunoreactive material was localized in the large granular vesicles and also in the axoplasm. Since no ganglion cells with CGRP-like immunoreactivity were found in the adrenal gland, the CGRP-fibers are regarded as extrinsic in origin. In double-immunofluorescence staining for CGRP and SP, all the SP-immunoreactive fibers corresponded to CGRP-immunoreactive ones in the adrenal gland. This suggests that CGRP-positive fibers in the adrenal gland may be derived from the spinal ganglia, as has been demonstrated with regard to the SP-nerve fibers.  相似文献   

14.
Garfish Lepisosteus osseus olfactory nerve, because of its large size and the unusually high concentration of axonal membrane, is an excellent source of axonal membrane. A procedure is described for the isolation of two types of plasma membranes from the nerve which are obtained in yields of about 20 mg (fraction I) and 1.5 mg (fraction II) per g of wet nerve. Both membrane fractions consist mostly of rounded membrane vesicles, with a unit membrane thickness of ~7.5 nm. The two membrane fractions are different in their lipid to protein ratios, Na-K ATPase activities, polypeptide patterns on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gel electrophoresis, and fatty acid compositions. They have similar phospholipid composition. On the basis of the relative concentration of axonal and Schwann cell plasma membranes in the nerve, the Na-K ATPase activities of the two membrane fractions and a comparison of the properties of the membrane fractions to those of squid and lobster nerve membrane preparations, fraction I seems to be the axonal membrane and fraction II the Schwann cell plasma membrane. Fraction I has a low protein to lipid ratio. Its polypeptide pattern on SDS gel appears to be much more complex as compared to that of fraction II membrane.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The innervation of the endometrium of rabbit, rat, mink, mongoose and pig has been investigated electron microscopically. Large bundles of nerve fibers can be observed in the connective tissue spaces within the basal layer of the endometrium. Unmyelinated nerve fibers enter the lamina functionalis, terminal nerve fibers penetrate the basal lamina and make contact with the glandular and the cavum epithelial cells. The terminal axons contain abundant synaptic vesicles, dense core vesicles and mitochondria. To date, no specialized presynaptic or postsynaptic membranes have been found.Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Bonn-Bad Godesberg (Grants Ku 210/5 and Be 524/4).Dedicated to Prof. Dr. Drs. h.c. Wolfgang Bargmann on his 70th birthday in friendship and admiration.  相似文献   

16.
Action potential conduction in myelinated nerve fibers depends on a polarized axonal membrane. Voltage-gated Na(+) and K(+) channels are clustered at nodes of Ranvier and mediate the transmembrane currents necessary for rapid saltatory conduction. Paranodal junctions flank nodes and function as attachment sites for myelin and as paracellular and membrane protein diffusion barriers. Common molecular mechanisms, directed by myelinating glia, are used to establish these axonal membrane domains. Initially, heterophilic interactions between glial and axonal cell adhesion molecules define the locations where nodes or paranodes form. Subsequently, within each domain, axonal cell adhesion molecules are stabilized and retained through interactions with cytoskeletal and scaffolding proteins, including ankyrins and spectrins.  相似文献   

17.
This paper reports observations on the innervation of gill filaments of the lamprey, Lampetra japonica. Nerve fibers run on each side of the afferent filament artery (AFA nerve) and in the connective tissue compartment along the efferent filament artery (EFA nerve). The AFA nerve supplies vasomotor fibers to the afferent filament artery and arteriovenous anastomoses and special visceral motor fibers to branchial muscle fibers (musculus compressor branchialis circularis). Nerve endings of the vasomotor fibers contain large, cored vesicles (60–180 nm in diameter) with a variable number of small, clear vesicles (30–70 μm in diameter), whereas those of the visceral motor fibers have many small, clear vesicles with few large, cored vesicles. The EFA nerve supplies vasomotor fibers to the efferent filament artery. Their endings, containing mixtures of predominantly large, cored vesicles and small, clear vesicles make close synaptic contacts with reticular cells. The latter in turn are connected with each other or with smooth muscle cells in the wall of the efferent filament artery by nexuses. No nerves are found in the axial plate between the afferent and efferent filament arteries nor in the secondary lamellae of individual gill filaments. No afferent nerve supply to the gill filament has been found.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The pineal gland of adult golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) was studied by various cytochemical methods at the electron microscopic level: (1) the modified chromaffin reaction specific for 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), (2) argentaffin reaction, (3) zinc-iodide-osmium (ZIO) mixture reaction and (4) acid phosphatase reaction. In the pinealocytes, the dense-cored vesicles (80–160 nm in diameter) show both chromaffinity and argentaffinity, while the population of dense bodies (150–400 nm in diameter) is reactive to ammoniacal silver solution and ZIO mixture but not to the modified chromaffin reaction. After incubation for demonstration of acid phosphatase activity, reaction products are localized in some, but not all, of the dense bodies, in some of the small vesicles in the Golgi region and in one or two inner Golgi saccules. In nerve fibers in the pineal gland, small granulated vesicles are also reactive to the modified chromaffin reaction and ZIO mixture. Based upon these cytochemical results the following conclusions have been reached: (1) dense cored vesicles in the pinealocytes and small granulated vesicles in the nerve fibers of the hamster pineal gland contain 5-HT, and (2) the population of dense bodies in the pinealocytes is heterogenous, some are lysosomes and the others are possibly the granules responsible for the secretion of pineal peptides.Supported in part by a grant from the National Science Council, Republic of ChinaDedicated to Professor Doctor Huoyao Wei on the occasion of his 70th birthday  相似文献   

19.
Summary The stages of growth of the acoustic pathway (peripheral branch) were studied with the electron microscope in serial sections of the acoustic organs of 3 to 7 day chick embryos.Migration of cells from the acoustic epithelium was found at three days of incubation. These cells are presumably the futur ganglion cells. Fascicles of nerve fibers penetrate the epithelium through gaps of the basement membrane at 4–5 days of incubation. A dilatation develops in the intraepithelial fibers at about six days and thin and long prolongations grow from these dilatations and distribute among the cells. In the course of the next day the fibers embrace the foot of the sensory cell and the prolongations become shortened. Many of these extensions are charged with vesicles. At this stage (seven days) specialized structures (synaptic bars) differentiate in the region of the sensory cell contacting the large nerve ending (calix) or its short extensions. Each cell may show several synaptic bars, and each prolongation may contact with more than one cell.Research sponsored by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Office of Aerospace Research, United States Air Force, under AFOSR Grant Nr. 313-67.  相似文献   

20.
The bladder of adult female rats receives ~16,000 axons (i.e., is the target of that many ganglion neurons) of which at least half are sensory. In nerves containing between 40 and 1200 axons cross-sectional area is proportional to number of axons; >99% of axons are unmyelinated. A capsule forms a seal around nerves and ends abruptly where nerves, after branching, contain ~10 axons. A single blood vessel is present in many of the large nerves but never in nerves of <600 axons. The number of glial cells was estimated through the number of their nuclei. There is a glial nucleus profile every 76 axonal profiles. Each glial cell is associated with many axons and collectively covers ~1,000 μm of axonal length. In all nerves a few axonal profiles contain large clusters of vesicles independent of microtubules. The axons do not branch; they alter their relative position along the nerve; they vary in size along their length; none has a circular profile. All the axons are fully wrapped by glial cells and never contact each other. The volume of axons is larger than that of glial cells (55%–45%), while the surface of glial cell is twice as extensive as that of axons; there are ~2.27 m2 of axolemma and ~4.60 m2 of glial cell membrane per gram of nerve. Of the mitochondria of a nerve ~3/4 are in axons and ~1/4 in glial cells.  相似文献   

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