首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Summary Fluorescent histochemical studies have been made on the mucosa of the gut of a mammal (guinea-pig) and of some lower vertebrates (trout, eel, toad and lizard). Adrenergic nerves in the mucosa generally occur in perivascular plexuses. There appears to be no adrenergic innervation of the muscularis mucosae.Yellow fluorescent enterochromaffin cells were observed in the mucosal epithelium of all species, including fish. Autofluorescent structures in the mucosa of these animals have also been described and were particularly prominent in the large intestines of teleost fish.  相似文献   

2.
Summary In order to test the premise that non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic (NANC) autonomic nerves have a distinctive ultrastructural appearance, clearly different from that of cholinergic nerves, a detailed quantitative ultrastructural analysis has been made of the non-adrenergic innervation of 15 tissues thought from pharmacological evidence to be innervated by NANC nerves (rat and rabbit anococcygeus muscles; rabbit hepatic portal vein; extrinsically denervated toad lung); cholinergic nerves (atria of rat, rabbit, guinea-pig and toad); or both (guinea-pig cervical and thoracic trachealis muscle; rabbit rectococcygeus muscle; urinary bladder of rat, rabbit, guinea-pig and toad) in addition to their adrenergic supply. Following fixation with a modified chromaffin procedure allowing identification of adrenergic nerves, large, randomly selected samples of non-adrenergic nerve profiles from each tissue were analysed with respect to numbers, relative proportions, and size frequency distributions of different vesicle classes within the profiles. The neuromuscular relationships within each tissue were also analysed. On the basis of these analyses, it is clear that there are no consistent ultrastructural differences between cholinergic and NANC autonomic nerves: neither proportions nor sizes of the vesicles provide any clue as to the transmitter used by a particular nerve. The great majority of nerve profiles, whether cholinergic or NANC, contain predominantly small clear synaptic vesicles. Large filled peptidergic vesicles are no more common in most NANC nerves than in most cholinergic ones. It is concluded, on ultrastructural grounds, that the primary transmitter in these NANC autonomie nerves is most likely to be stored in and released from the small clear vesicles.  相似文献   

3.
The innervation of the dorsal aorta and renal vasculature in the toad (Bufo marinus) has been studied with both fluorescence and ultrastructural histochemistry. The innervation consists primarily of a dense plexus of adrenergic nerves associated with all levels of the preglomerular vasculature. Non-adrenergic nerves are occasionally found in the renal artery, and even more rarely near the afferent arterioles. Many of the adrenergic nerve profiles in the dorsal aorta and renal vasculature are distinguished by high proportions of chromaffin-negative, large, filled vesicles. Close neuromuscular contacts are common in both the renal arteries and afferent arterioles. Possibly every smooth muscle cell in the afferent arterioles is multiply innervated. The glomerular capillaries and peritubular vessels are not innervated, and only 3-5% of efferent arterioles are accompanied by single adrenergic nerve fibres. Thus, nervous control of glomerular blood flow must be exerted primarily by adrenergic nerves acting on the preglomerular vasculature. The adrenergic innervation of the renal portal veins and efferent renal veins may play a role in regulating peritubular blood flow. In addition, glomerular and postglomerular control of renal blood flow could be achieved by circulating agents acting via contractile elements in the glomerular mesangial cells, and in the endothelial cells and pericytes of the efferent arterioles. Some adrenergic nerve profiles near afferent arterioles are as close as 70 nm to distal tubule cells, indicating that tubular function may be directly controlled by adrenergic nerves.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The anatomy and intrinsic innervation of the colon, rectum, internal anal sphincter, ano-coccygeus and recto-coccygeus have been studied in the cat with cholinesterase and catecholamine-fluorescence histochemical techniques. A variable pattern of intrinsic innervation by acetylcholinesterase-positive and adrenergic nerves along the length of the large bowel is described and is related to segmental variations in motor activity. A variation in the distribution of non-specific cholinesterase within the muscle layers is also described. Adrenergic nerves in proximal colon are arranged in the usual peri-ganglionic manner but there is also a rich direct adrenergic innervation of the longitudinal muscle in distal colon and rectum, and of circular muscle in lower rectum and internal anal sphincter. This distribution has not been reported in other species. Direct adrenergic innervation of muscle cells has been confirmed at ultrastructural level after treatment with 5-hydroxydopamine. Adrenergic neurones have not been detected in cat bowel. The ano- and recto-coccygeus muscles and internal anal sphincter possess a dense innervation of adrenergic and cholinesterase-positive nerves. It is suggested that the variation in intrinsic innervation along the large bowel should be considered in the interpretation of pharmacological and physiological experiments on this part of the gut.This work was supported by a grant from the King's College Hospital Voluntary Research Trust. We wish to thank Dr. J. P. Tranzer and F. Hoffman-La Roche & Co. Ltd., Basle, for the gift of 5-hydroxydopamine.We also thank Miss M. K. Egan and Mr. K. J. Davies for their technical assistance.  相似文献   

5.
The adrenergic and cholinergic innervation of the epididymal duct in the mouse has been investigated using histochemical methods and electron microscopy. This study demonstrates that the epididymal innervation of the mouse does not really differ from that of other mammals. Cholinergic nerves are mainly vascular, even in the cauda where cholinesterase activity is increased within the tubular musculature. Catecholamine fibres ensure the motricity of the wall of the canalicular system, particularly the terminal segment where the smooth muscle fibres are specifically differentiated.  相似文献   

6.
The indirect immunofluorescence technique was used to determine the distribution of peptide-containing axons in the gall bladder of the cane toad, Bufo marinus. In addition, the adrenergic innervation of the gall bladder was examined by use of immunoreactivity to the catecholamine-synthesizing enzyme, tyrosine hydroxylase, and glyoxylic acid-induced fluorescence. On the basis of peptide coexistence, two intrinsic populations of neurones and their projecting fibres could be distinguished substance P neurones and vasoactive intestine peptide neurones. Neither of these two types of neurones contained any other colocalized neuropeptides. Four populations of nerve fibres arising from cell bodies outside the gall bladder were identified: nerves containing colocalized galanin, somatostatin and vasoactive intestinal peptide; nerves containing colocalized calcitonin gene-related peptide and substance P; adrenergic nerves containing neuropeptide Y; and nerves containing only adrenaline.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The localization and intraneuronal distribution of the monoaminergic transmitters in the nervous system of the earthworm, Lumbricus terrestris, have been investigated in detail with the aid of the histochemical fluorescence method of Falck and Hillarp.In the ventral nerve cord, many yellow fluorescent, 5-hydroxytryptamine containing neurons are found, but only few green fluorescent noradrenaline containing cell bodies, which, however, are numerous in the peripheral nervous system. There is an abundance of both fibre types in the neuropile.The 5-hydroxytryptaminergic neurons probably have a motor (possibly inhibitor) function; the adrenergic neurons in the body segments are supposed to have a receptor (exteroceptive and possibly proprioceptive) function.In the cerebral ganglion, both 5-hydroxytryptamine and noradrenaline containing neurons are found in large numbers, and there are closely packed numerous fibres of both types in the neuropile. Their function is more obscure, though an associative function can be presumed for some adrenergic neurons; smaller 5-hydroxytryptaminergic neurons might have a motor (perhaps inhibitor) function.Adrenergic sensory cells are found in the body integument, most frequently in the clitellum segments, in the prostomium, and in the roof of the buccal cavity. These cells give off varicose fibres that form a basi-epithelial network which is in communication with the green fluorescent sensory fascicles in the ventral nerve cord via the epidermal nerves, the ring nerves, and the segmental nerves. No direct adrenergic sensory-effector innervation of either circular and/or longitudinal musculature or gland cells seems to exist. No adrenergic free nerve endings in the body integument have been observed. Instead, there must be a synaptic contact with the motoneurons, either directly in the neuropile or via an interjacent neuron.No synaptic contacts have been observed in the ventral nerve cord between adrenergic or 5-hydroxytryptaminergic fibres and either the giant fibres or fluorescent or nonfluorescent perikarya.An adrenergic innervation of the pharynx musculature has been found, and sensory cells of a different type are present in and below the epithelium; here, a direct senso-motoric innervation of the pharyngeal musculature cannot be excluded. It is established that the adrenergic neurons in the stomatogastric nervous system have an exciting function on the pharynx, whereas a direct monoaminergic influence of the muscular movements of the intestine probably does not exist.Abbreviations Used A adrenaline - CA catecholamine - DA dopamine - 5-HT 5-hydroxytryptamine - MA monoamine - NA noradrenaline The research reported in this document has been sponsored by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under Grant AF EOAR 67-15 through the European Office of Aerospace Research (OAR), United States Air Force, by the Swedish Natural Science Research Council (99-34, 6627), and by the Swedish Medical Research Council (B67-12X-712-02A).  相似文献   

8.
The distribution of intrinsic enteric neurons and extrinsic autonomic and sensory neurons in the large intestine of the toad, Bufo marinus, was examined using immunohistochemistry and glyoxylic acid-induced fluoresecence. Three populations of extrinsic nerves were found: unipolar neurons with morphology and location typical of parasympathetic postganglionic neurons containing immunoreactivity to galanin, somatostatin and 5-hydroxytryptamine were present in longitudinally running nerve trunks in the posterior large intestine and projected to the muscle layers and myenteric plexus throughout the large intestine. Sympathetic adrenergic fibres supplied a dense innervation to the circular muscle layer, myenteric plexus and blood vessels. Axons containing colocalized calcitonin gene-related peptide immunoractivity and substance P immunoreactivity distributed to all layers of the large intestine and are thought to be axons of primary afferent neurons. Five populations of enteric neurons were found. These contained immunoreactivity to vasoactive intestinal peptide, which distributed to all layers of the large intestine; galanin/vasoactive intestinal peptide, which projected to the submucosa and mucosa; calcitonin gene-related peptide/vasoactive intestinal peptide, which supplied the circular muscle, submucosa and mucosa; galanin, which projected to the submucosa and mucosa; and enkephalin, which supplied the circular muscle layer.  相似文献   

9.
Reptiles, including the Burmese python, Python molurus bivittatus, that feed at infrequent intervals show a prominent increase in gastrointestinal mass, metabolism and brush border transport rates after feeding. Current knowledge and theories around these phenomena, as well as studies on the innervation of the reptilian gut, are summarised in this review. Little is known about the putative changes in the nervous and humoral control systems of the gut, and it is not known whether feeding affects innervation and motility of the stomach and intestine. Using immunohistochemistry, we have investigated possible up/down regulation of several neurotransmitters in specimens that had been fasted for a minimum of 3 weeks and specimens that had ingested a large meal 2 days before the experiments were conducted. There were no major changes in the innervation by nerves containing calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), galanin, nitric oxide synthase (NOS), pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP), somatostatin (SOM), substance P/neurokinin A (SP/NKA), or vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)-like immunoreactivity. Nor did we find any differences in the effect of substance P (stomach and intestine), galanin (intestine), or bradykinin (intestine) on motility in strip preparations from the gut wall. A significant increase in dry weight of the intestine was obtained 48 h after feeding. We conclude that although there are considerable changes in gut thickness and absorptive properties after feeding, the smooth muscle and its control appear little affected.  相似文献   

10.
Gross morphology and development of the gut in the circumtropical genus Coccorella Roule (Alepisauroidei, Evermannellidae; two species C. atrata (Alcock, 1893) and C. atlantica (Parr, 1928)) is described and the gut structure of this genus is compared with that of other alepisauroid and myctophoid fishes. Alepisauroids characteristically have an enormous sac-shaped stomach and a simple, straight intestine. It appears that this gut morphology is a specialization for the ingestion of very large food particles and is an adaptation to the food-limited midwater environment.
Coccorella is remarkable in having a medial pyloric (intestinal) appendage that extends forward from the ventroanterior margin of the intestine, passes between the cleithra, beneath the heart, dorsal to the isthmian musculature, and ends blindly beneath the first basibranchial. This caecum is surrounded by the darkly pigmented peritoneal lining of the coelomic cavity and is easily visible in the floor of the orobranchial cavity. The caecum can be seen in the smallest available larva (6.3 mm SL) but does not develop its complete cephalic extension until the larvae are 20 to 25 mm SL.
Portions of the alimentary tract in Coccorella were examined with light and scanning electron microscopy. No substantial histological differences between caecum and intestine have been found. It is hypothesized that the caecum in Coccorella has a function similar to that proposed for pyloric caeca in other fishes, viz. to increase the resportive and storage capacity of the intestine.
Although pyloric caeca vary enormously in size, number and morphology among teleosts, Coccorella is the only genus known with any appendage of the alimentary tract extending into the head. General hypotheses on the adaptive significance of pyloric caeca are reviewed but none satisfactorily explain the appearance of this unique neomorphous feature in Coccorella.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Nerve fibers containing substance P, VIP, enkephalin or somatostatin are numerous in the porcine gut wall. They are particularly numerous in the submucosal and myenteric plexuses where peptide-containing cell bodies are also observed. Peptide-containing nerve fibers occur also in the vagus nerves, suggesting that the gut receives an extrinsic supply of peptidergic nerves. The extrinsic contribution to the peptide-containing nerve supply of the gut wall has not yet been quantitatively assessed. In an attempt to clarify this question pigs were subjected to bilateral subdiaphragmatic vagotomy. Another group of animals was subjected to complete extrinsic denervation by autotransplantation of a jejunal segment. The pigs were killed at various time intervals after the operations; the longest time interval studied was four months. Following vagotomy the innervation pattern of the jejunum appeared completely unaffected. Following complete extrinsic denervation the adrenergic nerve fibers disappeared, while peptide-containing and acetylcholinesterase-positive nerve fibers remained apparently unaltered. This was confirmed chemically in the case of substance P.The motor activity of smooth muscle from the jejunum was studied in vitro. At low stimulation frequencies the smooth muscle from control jejunum responded by relaxation; upon cessation of stimulation a contraction occurred. With increasing stimulation frequencies the duration of the relaxation decreased; at high frequency stimulation only a contraction was recorded. In the autotransplant low frequency stimulation induced no or only a weak relaxation; high frequency stimulation induced contraction. After cholinergic and adrenergic blockade, the muscle responded with relaxation at all frequencies; the response was similar in innervated and denervated specimens. On the whole, the effects of extrinsic denervation on the motor activity of smooth muscle from porcine jejunum were minor, possibly reflecting the high degree of autonomy of the gut.  相似文献   

12.
Summary A detailed study of the origin and distribution of sympathetic fibres in the distal colon of the guinea-pig has been made using the fluorescent histochemical method for localizing catecholamines. The extrinsic adrenergic fibres of the colonie sympathetic nerves follow the inferior mesenteric artery and its branches to the colon. Some of the extrinsic adrenergic fibres are associated with the parasympathetic fibres of the pelvic nerves near the colon. Complete adrenergic denervation follows the removal of the inferior mesenteric ganglion or the destruction of the nerves running with the inferior mesenteric artery.No fluorescent fibres, other than those associated with blood vessels, were observed in air-dried stretch preparations of the isolated longitudinal muscle. However, a substantial number of varicose, terminal fibres, not associated with blood vessels, were observed in the circular muscle. Some varicose fibres, apart from those associated with ganglion cells, were observed in the myenteric plexus. These fibres were seen in the bundles of nerves running between the nodes of the plexus and also as single fibres which branched from the plexus to end in areas free of ganglion cells.Three plexuses of adrenergic nerve fibres have been distinguished in the submucosa: a dense plexus of terminal fibres innervating both the veins and arteries; a plexus consisting of innervated nodes of ganglion cells, connected by bundles of fluorescent and non-fluorescent nerves; and a plexus of varicose and non-varicose fibres, which is not associated with ganglion cells. Some groups of ganglion cells in the submucosa were without adrenergic innervation.A plexus of varicose fibres forms a meshwork in the lamina propria of the mucosa. The muscularis mucosae is sparsely innervated. Most of the blood vessels in the mucosa are not associated with adrenergic fibres.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The innervation of guinea-pig and rat cardiac tissue consists of thin noradrenergic axons running parallel to the myocardial fibres and producing well-developed fluorescent networks which are denser in guinea-pig tissue. Transverse sections of arterial vessels exhibit a marked polar-like disposition of adrenergic nerves, which mainly appear to be concentrated in two opposite areas. Tissue sections from daunomycin-treated animals fluoresced a striking organge-red. This drug-specific fluorescence emanated from all parts of the ventricular tissue, with particular intensity in the nuclei. Neither the density nor the shape of the adrenergic nerves were affected by treatment with the drug. Despite penetration and storage of the antibiotic into the ventricular tissue, cardiotoxicity was not found in the present study.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The distribution and abundance of nitric oxide synthase (NOS)-containing neurons and their terminals in the gastrointestinal tract of the guinea-pig were examined in detail using NADPH diaphorase histochemistry and NOS immunohistochemistry. NOS-containing cell bodies were found in the myenteric plexus throughout the gastrointestinal tract and in the submucous plexus of the stomach, colon and rectum. NOS-containing neurons comprised between 12% (in the duodenum) and 54% (in the esophagus) of total myenteric neurons. In the ileum, NOS neurons represented 19% of total myenteric neurons. Most of the NOS neurons throughout the gastrointestinal tract possessed lamellar dendrites and a single axon. NOS-containing terminals were abundant in the circular muscle, including that of the sphincters, but were rare in the longitudinal muscle, except for the taeniae of the caecum. The muscularis mucosae of the esophagus, stomach, colon and rectum received a medium to dense innervation by NOS terminals. Within myenteric ganglia, NOS-containing terminals were extremely sparse in the esophagus, stomach and duodenum, common in the ileum and distal colon and extremely dense in the proximal colon and rectum. The submucous plexus in the ileum and large intestine contained a sparse plexus of NOS-containing terminals. NOS terminals were not observed in the mucosa of any region. We conclude that throughout the gastrointestinal tract of the guinea-pig, NOS neurons are inhibitory motor neurons to the circular muscle; in the ileum and large intestine, NOS neurons may also function as interneurons.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The distribution and cellular localization of substance P in the chicken gut was studied by immunocytochemistry and immunochemistry. Substance P-containing nerve fibers are numerous in the gut wall. They occur in the smooth muscle layer as well as in the mucosa, where they are associated with blood vessels or surround the intestinal crypts. The fibers are particularly numerous in the myenteric and submucosal plexuses, where substance P-containing nerve-cell perikarya are also encountered. Substance P was found also in scattered endocrine cells of the small intestine, caeca and colon. Previously, bombesin-containing cells, which are numerous in the proventriculus, have been mistakenly identified as substance P cells due to crossreactivity of certain antisera against substance P. Immunochemistry revealed the highest concentration of substance P in the duodenum. The gel chromatographic behavior of chicken substance P differs slightly from that of synthetic bovine substance P, suggesting that chicken substance P differs structurally from mammalian substance P. Substance P-containing nerve fibers in the chicken gut develop slowly after hatching, apparently beginning in the duodenum; at approximately 20 weeks after hatching the distribution pattern is fully developed.A functional investigation was performed on the isolated chicken caecum to clarify the role of substance P in the contractile behavior of smooth muscle. Substance P contracted the caecum over a wide dose range; the contractile response was greater in 20 week-old chickens than in 4 and 10 week-old animals. Electrical field stimulation caused a relaxation of the caecum and a contraction upon cessation of stimulation. Neither of these responses, both of which are neurally mediated, were inhibited by adrenergic and cholinergic blockade. It is conceivable that the contractile response following electrical stimulation is caused by substance P released from nerve fibers in the smooth muscle.  相似文献   

17.
Summary In the guinea-pig uterus, by use of an indirect immunofluorescence method, S-100 immunoreactivity was found to be restricted to nerves that corresponded in number, distribution and type to adrenergic axons and preterminals. With advancing pregnancy S-100 immunoreactivity completely disappeared in uterine tissue adjacent to a fetus, in parallel with an ultrastructural degeneration of the adrenergic innervation. In the cervix and the uterine horn devoid of a fetus, however, the number and distribution of S-100-immunoreactive nerves was seemingly unchanged and no ultrastructural changes were found in adrenergic nerves. In contrast, chemical sympathectomy produced by 6-hydroxydopamine did not change S-100 immunoreactivity of uterine nerves. These findings suggest that there are differences in the denervation effected by chemical and by pregnancy-induced sympathectomy. The latter probably represents a special type of adrenergic denervation by inducing a degeneration of Schwann cells in addition to destruction of neuronal structures. This may explain the differences in the speed of regeneration of uterine adrenergic nerves following the two types of denervation.  相似文献   

18.
The innervation of Rana ridibunda esophagus myenteric plexuses has been studied by the following methods: demonstration of cholinesterase activity; FIF method for catecholamines; immunohistochemistry for VIP, SP and SOM, and conventional electron microscopy. The cholinergic innervation is important in the esophagus wall where, in addition to the well known extrinsic component, there is a rich intrinsic plexus with cells and fibres widely distributed. The esophagus, together with the intestine, are the Rana gut portions where the adrenergic component is more broadly expressed. The adrenergic innervation seems to be almost entirely of extrinsic origin. We have shown that, for the tested peptides, there is an intrinsic innervation represented by VIP, SP and SOM like plexuses. We do not discard nonetheless an extrinsic component. The ultrastructure reveals the morphological characteristics of the enteric neurons as well as the fine inter-relationships between the nervous elements and the functional components of the esophagic wall.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Somatostatin-immunoreactive nerves and endocrine cells were localized by use of immunohistochemistry in human stomach, small and large intestine. The nature of the immunoreactivity in acid extracts of separated layers of intestine was determined with separation by high pressure liquid chromatography followed by detection with radioimmunoassay; authentic somatostatin-14 was found in the external musculature, which contains nerves, and in the submucosa and mucosa, which contain both nerve fibres and endocrine cells.The distribution of somatostatin nerves in the gastric antrum, duodenum, jejunum, ileum, ascending and sigmoid colon, and rectum is described. In the intestine many positive perikarya and fine varicose fibres were seen. Mucosal fibres formed a sub-epithelial plexus and a looser network in the lamina propria; this nerve supply was less dense in the large intestine. Submucous ganglia contained positive perikarya and terminals; many terminals formed pericellular baskets, mainly around non-reactive cells. A small number of nerve fibres were associated with submucosal blood vessels. The innervation of the circular and longitudinal muscle was sparse. Positive nerve terminals were seen in the myenteric plexus, although fewer than in the submucous ganglia; positive perikarya were scarce in myenteric ganglia. Somatostatin-immunoreactive nerves were found in the muscle layers and myenteric plexus of the gastric antrum, but were not detected in the antral mucosa and all layers of the gastric body.The distribution of human enteric somatostatin nerves is compared to that in small laboratory animals, and possible roles for these nerves are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Morphologic studies of renal innervation have utilized the methods of histochemistry and electron microscopy. Much information has been derived from examination of the renal cortex in monkey and rat. Fluorescence histochemistry shows a rich adrenergic innervation. Acetylcholinesterase can be demonstrated histochemically in the renal nerves by light and electron microscopy. Studies in the rat using 6-hydroxydopamine, a drug that selectively destroys adrenergic nerves, indicate that the glomerular arterioles and surrounding tubules are innervated by adrenergic nerves containing acetylcholinesterase. Distinct neurovascular and neurotubular junctions are observed the electron microscope. They are anatomically consistent with being the sites of synaptic transmission. Ultrastructural analysis of serial sections reveals that single individual axons contact multiple vascular cells and renal tubules. We now have a considerable body of information concerning the morphology of renal innervation are are beginning to appreciate the role of the renal nerves in kidney function.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号