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1.
Y Kameda  T Amano  T Tagawa 《Histochemistry》1990,94(6):609-616
Development and distribution of chromogranin A and tyrosine hydroxylase in the carotid body and glomus cells located in and around arteries were examined in chickens at various developmental stages by an immunohistochemical staining. In 9-day-old embryos, numerous cells immunoreactive for tyrosine hydroxylase were already detected in the connective tissue surrounding the carotid body. Some of these cells also showed immunoreactivity for chromogranin A. At 10 days of incubation, a few cells immunoreactive for tyrosine hydroxylase and chromogranin A were detected within the carotid body parenchyma. At 12 days of incubation, almost all glomus cells of the carotid body were intensely immunoreactive for these substances. Furthermore, numerous tyrosine hydroxylase- and chromogranin A-immunoreactive cells were observed in the wall of the common carotid artery, along the whole length of the carotid body artery, and around the roots of the inferior thyroid artery, the ascending esophageal artery and the esophagotracheobronchial artery; the cells already exhibited adult pattern of distribution at this stage of development. Thereafter, glomus cells immunoreactive for both substances gradually increased in number and in intensity of immunoreactivity with age, although the cells located in the wall of the common carotid artery lost immunoreactivity for tyrosine hydroxylase after hatching.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Developmental patterns of immunoreactivity for serotonin and neuropeptide Y were investigated immunohistochemically in the carotid body and glomus cells in the wall of the common carotid artery and around its branches of chickens at various developmental ages. The development of peptidergic nerve fibers was also studied. Serotonin immunoreactivity began to appear in the glomus cells of the carotid body and around arteries at 10 days of incubation and became very intense from 12 days onwards. Neuropeptide Y immunoreactivity also appeared in these cells at 10 days, became intense at 14 days, and was sustained until 20 days. After hatching, neuropeptide Y immunoreactivity in the carotid body rapidly decreased with age and almost cisappeared at posnatal day 10. However, it persisted for life in the glomus cells distributed in the wall of the common carotid artery. Substance P- and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-immunoreactive fibers first penetrated into the carotid body parenchyma at 12 days of incubation. These peptidergic nerve fibers in the carotid body and glomus cell groups in and around arteries gradually increased with age, and approached the adult state at 18 days of incubation. Only a few galanin-and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)-immunoreactive fibers were observed in the late embryonic carotid bodies. They rapidly developed after hatching and reached adult numbers at postnatal day 10. During late embryonic and neonatal development, considerable numbers of met-enkephalin-immunoreactive fibers were detected in the connective tissue encircling the carotid body.  相似文献   

3.
In the chicken, the cranial and caudal parathyroid glands (parathyroid gland III and IV), which are connected to each other, are located adjacent to the carotid body. In the present study, we found that a mass of glomus cells surrounded by a thick layer of connective tissue was frequently distributed within the parathyroid gland III. The glomus cells in the parathyroid III, as well as those of the carotid body, expressed intense immunoreactivity for serotonin, chromogranin A, and tyrosine hydroxylase but no immunoreactivity for neuropeptide Y. The cells possessed long cytoplasmic processes containing dense-cored vesicles of 70–220 nm in diameter, and were in close association with sustentacular cells. In and around the glomus cell clusters of the parathyroid III, dense networks of varicose fibers showed immunostaining with the monoclonal antibody TuJ1 to a neuronspecific class III -tubulin isotype, c4. Furthermore, the distribution was also detected of numerous galanin-, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)-, substance P-, and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-immunoreactive fibers.  相似文献   

4.
The carotid body consists of chemoreceptive glomus cells, sustentacular cells and nerve endings. The murine carotid body, located at the carotid bifurcation, is always joined to the superior cervical ganglion of the sympathetic trunk. Glomus cells and sympathetic neurons are immunoreactive for the TuJ1, PGP9.5, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and neuropeptide Y (NPY) markers. Glomus cells are also immunoreactive for serotonin (5-HT). A targeted mutation of Mash1, a mouse homolog of the Drosophila achaete-scute complex, results in the elimination of sympathetic ganglia. In Mash1 null mutant mice, the carotid body primordium forms normally in the wall of the third arch artery at embryonic day (E) 13.0 and continues to develop, although the superior cervical ganglion is completely absent. However, no cells in the mutant carotid body display the TuJ1, PGP 9.5, TH, NPY and 5-HT markers throughout development. The absence of glomus cells was also confirmed by electron microscopy. The carotid body of newborn null mutants is composed of mesenchymal-like cells and nerve fibers. Many cells immunoreactive for the S-100 protein, a sustentacular cell marker, appear in the mutant carotid body during fetal development. The Mash1 gene is thus required for the genesis of glomus cells but not for sustentacular cells.  相似文献   

5.
The carotid body is a peripheral chemoreceptor that detects decreases in arterial pO2 and subsequently activates the carotid sinus nerve. The hypoxia-evoked activity of the carotid sinus nerve has been suggested to be modulated by glutamate. In the present study, we investigate the immunohistochemical localization of vesicular glutamate transporters in the carotid body of the rat. Vesicular glutamate transporter 2 (VGLUT2) labeling was closely associated with glomus cells immunoreactive to tyrosine hydroxylase but was not in the cytoplasm of these cells. The VGLUT2 immunoreactivity was observed within nerve endings that were immunoreactive to P2X3 and densely localized inside P2X3-immunoreactive axon terminals. These results suggest that VGLUT2 is localized in the afferent nerve terminals of the carotid body. Glutamate may be released from afferent nerve terminals to modulate the chemosensory activity of the carotid body.  相似文献   

6.
It has been proposed that serotonin (5-HT) facilitates the chemosensory activity of the carotid body (CB). In the present study, we investigated mRNA expression and immunohistochemical localization of the 5-HT synthetic enzyme isoforms, tryptophan hydroxylase 1 (TPH1) and TPH2, and the 5-HT plasma membrane transport protein, 5-HT transporter (SERT), in the CB of the rat. RT-PCR analysis detected the expression of mRNA for TPH1 and SERT in extracts of the CB. Using immunohistochemistry, 5-HT immunoreactivity was observed in a few glomus cells. TPH1 and SERT immunoreactivities were observed in almost all glomus cells. SERT immunoreactivity was seen on nerve fibers with TPH1 immunoreactivity. SERT immunoreactivity was also observed in varicose nerve fibers immunoreactive for dopamine beta-hydroxylase, but not in nerve fibers immunoreactive for vesicular acetylcholine transporters or nerve terminals immunoreactive for P2X3 purinoreceptors. These results suggest that 5-HT is synthesized and released from glomus cells and sympathetic nerve fibers in the CB of the rat, and that the chemosensory activity of the CB is regulated by 5-HT from glomus cells and sympathetic nerve fibers.  相似文献   

7.
The distribution and ultrastructural characteristics of calbindin D-28k immunoreactive nerve fibers were examined in the carotid body of the normoxic control rats by light and electron microscopy, and the abundance of calbindin D-28k fibers in the carotid body was compared in normoxic and chronically hypoxic rats (10% O2 and 3.0-4.0% CO2 for 3 months). Calbindin D-28k immunoreactivity was recognized in nerve fibers within the carotid body. Calbindin D-28k immunoreactive nerve fibers appeared as thin processes with many varicosities. They were distributed around clusters of glomus cells, and around blood vessels. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed that the calbindin D-28k immunoreactive nerve terminals are in close apposition with the glomus cells, and membrane specialization is visible in some terminals. Some dense-cored vesicles in the glomus cells were aggregated in this contact region. The chronically hypoxic carotid bodies were found to be enlarged several fold, and a relative abundance of calbindin D-28k fibers was lesser than in the normoxic carotid bodies. When expressed by the density of varicosities per unit area of the parenchyma, the density of calbindin D-28k fibers associated with the glomus cells in chronically hypoxic carotid bodies was decreased by 70%. These immunohistochemical findings indicate a morphological basis for involvement of calcium binding protein in the neural pathway that modulates carotid body chemoreception.  相似文献   

8.
Substance P-immunoreactive (SP-1) structures in the carotid bodies of rats and cats were examined with the light and electron microscopes. In both species SP-I varicose nerve fibers were located singly in the interstitial connective tissue in close association with blood vessels. They were small unmyelinated fibers enveloped in a common Schwann cell sheath with other SP-negative fibers. Some of SP-I fibers contained large dense-cored granules and small clear vesicles in addition to microtubules and mitochondria and probably represented nerve fiber varicosities. The latter often were found incompletely invested by Schwann cell sheaths. SP-fibers were found occasionally in the envelopes of supporting cells at the periphery of parenchymal cell groups. However, none of the nerve terminals making synaptic contacts with glomus cells exhibited SP-like immunoreactivity. In cat carotid bodies some glomus cells showed moderate to intense SP-like immunoreactivity. The intense SP-I glomus cells displayed numerous dense-cored vesicles of 85 to 140 nm in diameter and frequently showed synaptic contacts with SP-negative nerve terminals. In rat carotid bodies we were unable to detect consistent SP-immunoreactivity in glomus cells. Our results do not favor the hypothesis that SP is a neurotransmitter/modulator in the chemoreceptor afferents synapsing on glomus cells in either the cat or rat carotid body. However our results support the hypothesis that SP in cat glomus cells may play a role in the modulation of chemoreceptor activity.  相似文献   

9.
A statistically significant decrease in the intensity of catecholamine fluorescence of some carotid body glomus cells was observed after inhibition of the enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase by injection of 80 mg/kg alpha-methyl-paratyrosine. The intensity of the formaldehyde-induced fluorescence was measured in individual glomus cells. The maximum decrease in the intensity was observed 4 to 6 hr after the alpha-methyltyrosine injection. This suggests a rapid turnover in the catecholamines of the carotid body.  相似文献   

10.
The identity of the postulated excitatory transmitter released by glomus cells is not known. Since our preliminary work on paraffin sections of the cat carotid body indicated that most glomus cells were intensely immunoreactive to glutamate, we decided to investigate whether glutamate might be such a transmitter, using two approaches. One approach was to make a quantitative immunogold analysis of ultrathin sections to assess the level of glutamate immunoreactivity of glomus cells relative to glia and to afferent axon terminals. The other approach was to measure the potassium-induced release of glutamate from carotid bodies superfused in vitro. We consistently found that glomus cell profiles had 50% more immunogold particles per unit of area than glial cell or axonal profiles. However, the levels of glutamate immunoreactivity of glomus cells were lower than those expected for glutamatergic terminals. We also found that glutamate was not released from in vitro carotid bodies stimulated with high concentrations of potassium. These findings indicate that the oxygen-sensitive glomus cells have a high concentration of glutamate, which is not released by superfusion with high potassium. Thus, glutamate is not the excitatory transmitter released by glomus cells. We speculate that the high concentrations of glutamate might instead be related to the known dependence of the “in vitro” chemosensory activity on metabolic substrates.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The cellular localization of carbonic anhydrase (CAH) in the carotid body of the rat was investigated by means of Hansson's cobalt-precipitation technique in cultures of dissociated cells. In both young (2-day-old) and old (77-day-old) cultures, the parenchymal glomus (type-I) cells were selectively stained by this technique, and in addition expressed tyrosine hydroxylase and neuron-specific enolase as revealed by immunofluorescence. Enzymic reaction product of CAH appeared to be predominantly intracellular since staining was more intense and occurred more rapidly following permeabilization of the cell membranes with Triton X-100; its formation was inhibited by the CAH-inhibitor acetazolamide (1–10 M) or by increasing the pH from 5.8 to 7.5. Cryostat sections of the carotid bifurcation revealed intense CAH-reaction product in cell clusters of the carotid body, in a few cells of the nodose ganglion, and in red blood cells. Neuronal cell bodies of the petrosal ganglion and superior cervical ganglion (SCG) were largely non-reactive. The SCG is known to contain clusters of small intensely fluorescent (SIF) cells, which were also non-reactive when grown in dissociated cell culture. Thus, although glomus and SIF cells are often considered to be similar cell types, functional CAH-activity appears unique to glomus cells, and this may be important for the physiological response of the carotid body to certain chemosensory stimuli.  相似文献   

12.
In this study we use dissociated cell cultures of the rat carotid body to investigate the adaptive capabilities of endogenous oxygen chemoreceptors, following chronic stimulation by various environmental factors. These oxygen chemoreceptors are catecholamine-containing glomus cells, which derive from the neural crest and resemble adrenal medullary chromaffin cells. Using double-label immunofluorescence, we found that chronic exposure of carotid body cultures to hypoxia (2% to 10% oxygen) caused a significant fraction of tyrosine hydroxylase-positive (TH+) glomus cells to acquire detectable immunoreactivity for growth-associated protein gap-43. The effect was dose-dependent and peaked around an oxygen tension of 6%, where approximately 30% of glomus cells were GAP-43 positive. Treatment with agents that elevate intracellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) (i.e., dibutyryl cAMP or forskolin) also markedly stimulated GAP-43 expression. Since hypoxia is known to increase cAMP levels in glomus cells, it is possible that the effect of hypoxia on GAP-43 expression was mediated, at least in part, by a cAMP-dependent pathway. Unlike hypoxia, however, cAMP analogs also stimulated neurofilament (NF 68 or NF 160 kD) expression and neurite outgrowth in glomus cells, and these properties were enhanced by retinoic acid. Nerve growth factor, which promotes neuronal differentiation in related crest-derived endocrine cells, and dibutyryl cGMP were ineffective. Thus, it appears that postnatal glomus cells are plastic and can express neuronal traits in vitro. However, since hypoxia stimulated GAP-43 expression, without promoting neurite outgrowth, it appears that the two processes can be uncoupled. We suggest that stimulation of GAP-43 by hypoxia may be important for other physiological processes, e.g., enhancing neurotransmitter release or sensitization of G-protein–coupled receptor transduction. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
14.
TREK-1 is one of the important potassium channels for regulating membrane excitability. To examine the distribution of TREK-1 in the rat carotid body, we performed RT-PCR for mRNA expression and in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry for tissue distribution of TREK-1. RT-PCR detected mRNA expression of TREK-1 in the carotid body. Furthermore, in situ hybridization revealed the localization of TREK-1 mRNA in the glomus cells. TREK-1 immunoreactivity was mainly distributed in the glomus cells and nerve fibers in the carotid body. TREK-1 may modulate potassium current of glomus cells and/or afferent nerve endings in the rat carotid body.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Immunohistochemical localization of substance P (SP), CGRP, VIP, neuropeptide Y (NPY), and somatostatin (SOM) in the carotid labyrinth were compared in some species of amphibians using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. Immunoreactivity of SP, CGRP, VIP, and NPY was found in the nerve fibers distributed in the intervascular stroma of the carotid labyrinth. SP, CGRP, and VIP immunoreactive varicose fibers were densely distributed in the peripheral portion of the carotid labyrinth. Some SP-immunoreactive fibers were distributed similarly to CGRP-immunoreactive fibers. The density of NPY and SOM immunoreactive varicose fibers was low. No immunoreactivity of enkephalins was observed in the labyrinth. The intensities of these peptides were varied from species to species. No glomus cells showed immunoreactivity for any of the 7 peptides studied. These results suggest that the vascular regulatory function, which is one of the possible functions of the carotid labyrinth, is controlled by the peptidergic mechanisms in addition to regulation through intimate apposition of glomus and smooth muscle cells (g-s connection).  相似文献   

16.
Immunohistochemical localization of substance P (SP), CGRP, VIP, neuropeptide Y (NPY), and somatostatin (SOM) in the carotid labyrinth were compared in some species of amphibians using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. Immunoreactivity of SP, CGRP, VIP, and NPY was found in the nerve fibers distributed in the intervascular stroma of the carotid labyrinth. SP, CGRP, and VIP immunoreactive varicose fibers were densely distributed in the peripheral portion of the carotid labyrinth. Some SP-immunoreactive fibers were distributed similarly to CGRP-immunoreactive fibers. The density of NPY and SOM immunoreactive varicose fibers was low. No immunoreactivity of enkephalins was observed in the labyrinth. The intensities of these peptides were varied from species to species. No glomus cells showed immunoreactivity for any of the 7 peptides studied. These results suggest that the vascular regulatory function, which is one of the possible functions of the carotid labyrinth, is controlled by the peptidergic mechanisms in addition to regulation through intimate apposition of glomus and smooth muscle cells (g-s connection).  相似文献   

17.
The immunohistochemical study revealed tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), dopamine -hydroxylase (DBH), phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PNMT), serotonin, glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) and -aminobutyric acid (GABA) immunoreactivities in the mouse carotid body. TH and DBH immunoreactivities were found in almost all chief cells and a few ganglion cells, and in relatively numerous varicose nerve fibers of the carotid body. The histofluorescence microscopy showed catecholamine fluorescence in almost all chief cells. However, no PNMT immunoreactivity was observed in the carotid body. Serotonin, GAD and GABA immunoreactivities were also seen in almost all chief cells of the carotid body. From combined immunohistochemistry and fluorescence histochemistry, catecholamine and serotonin or catecholamine and GABA were colocalized in almost all chief cells. Thus, these findings suggest that noradrenaline, serotonin and GABA may be synthesized and co-exist in almost all chief cells of the mouse carotid body and may play roles in chemoreceptive functions.  相似文献   

18.
In a previous study, DBA/2J and A/J inbred mice showed extremely different hypoxic ventilatory responses, suggesting variations in their carotid bodies. We have assessed the morphological and functional differences of the carotid bodies in these mice. Histological examination revealed a clearly delineated carotid body only in the DBA/2J mice. Many typical glomus cells and glomeruli appeared in the DBA/2J but not in the A/J mice. The size of the carotid body in the DBA/2J and A/J mice was 6.3 +/- 0.5 x 10(6) and 1.5 +/- 0.3 x 10(6) micro m(3), respectively. The area immunostained for tyrosine hydroxylase, an estimation of the glomus cell quantity, was four times larger in the DBA/2J mice than in the A/J mice. The individual data points in the DBA/2J mice segregated from those in the A/J mice. ACh increased intracellular Ca(2+) in most clusters (81%) of cultured carotid body cells from the DBA/2J mice, but only in 18% of clusters in the A/J mice. These data suggest that genetic determinants account for the strain differences in the structure and function of the carotid body.  相似文献   

19.
The docking protein FRS2α is an important mediator of fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-induced signal transduction, and functions by linking FGF receptors (FGFRs) to a variety of intracellular signaling pathways. We show that the carotid body is absent in FRS2α2F/2F mice, in which the Shp2-binding sites of FRS2α are disrupted. We also show that the carotid body rudiment is not formed in the wall of the third arch artery in mutant embryos. In wild-type mice, the superior cervical ganglion of the sympathetic trunk connects to the carotid body in the carotid bifurcation region, and extends thick nerve bundles into the carotid body. In FRS2α2F/2F mice, the superior cervical ganglion was present in the lower cervical region as an elongated feature, but failed to undergo cranio-ventral migration. In addition, few neuronal processes extended from the ganglion into the carotid bifurcation region. The number of carotid sinus nerve fibers that reached the carotid bifurcation region was markedly decreased, and baroreceptor fibers belonging to the glossopharyngeal nerve were absent from the basal part of the internal carotid artery in FRS2α2F/2F mutant mice. In some of the mutant mice (5 out of 14), baroreceptors and some glomus cells were distributed in the wall of the common carotid artery, onto which the sympathetic ganglion abutted. We propose that the sympathetic ganglion provides glomus cell precursors into the third arch artery derivative in the presence of sensory fibers of the glossopharyngeal nerve.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The coexistence of histamine, histidine decarboxylase (the enzyme synthesizing histamine), 5-hydroxytryptamine and tyrosine hydroxylase (the rate-limiting enzyme in catecholamine synthesis), was studied in the rat superior cervical ganglion with the indirect immunofluorescence method. Possible colocalization was examined by staining consecutive sections with two different antibodies, or alternatively in the same section by eluting the first antibody with a mild solution containing potassium permanganate and sulphuric acid, and by staining the same section with another antibody. It was shown that tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity was found both in large principal nerve cells and in small cells, which on the basis of their size and high nucleus—cytoplasm ratio corresponded to small intensely fluorescent (SIF) cells. Histamine, histidine decarboxylase and 5-hydroxytryptamine immunoreactivities were observed only in SIF cells. Those SIF cells which were immunoreactive for histamine, histidine decarboxylase or 5-hydroxytryptamine also contained tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity. On the other hand, all tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive SIF cells were also immunoreactive for histidine decarboxylase or 5-hydroxytryptamine. Some of the SIF cells, which were non-reactive for histamine, were immunoreactive for tyrosine hydroxylase.  相似文献   

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