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1.
Summary Adrenergic and cholinergic nerves innervating the cerebral arteries of the domestic fowl were examined by specific histochemical techniques.The adrenergic nerve plexuses of the cerebral carotid system are markedly denser than those of other vertebrates observed by similar techniques. They form longitudinally elongated meshworks of fine fibres in the vascular wall of the arterial branches. Those innervating the vertebro-basilar system are less dense and more elongated, and, as the size of the artery diminishes, the fibres of the plexus become coarser. In the small pial and parenchymal arteries they are reduced to a few fibres running parallel to, or spiralling around the vascular axis.The cholinergic nerve plexuses are not as dense as the adrenergic system. The acetylcholinesterase activity is very weak, except in the plexuses innervating the cerebral carotid artery and the proximal portion of the anterior and posterior rami. In the vertebro-basilar system, a few thick nerve bundles run alongside the blood vessels of the vertebral and basilar arteries. Cholinergic nerves enter the cranial cavity along the internal carotid, the vertebral and possibly the cerebro-ethmoidal arteries.Intracerebral capillaries and some arterioles are not innervated with cholinergic and adrenergic fibres of peripheral origin, but with ones arising from parenchymal nerve cells.  相似文献   

2.
Recently, we have demonstrated that guinea-pig epicardial coronary arteries are supplied by numerous nerve fibres containing neuropeptide Y (NPY) immunoreactivity. However, examination of vasomotor responses revealed that NPY did not elicit a contractile response in these arteries. In contrast, acetylcholine (ACh), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), substance P and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) all relaxed precontracted arteries. In the present study, we have used histochemical, immunohistochemical and in vitro pharmacological techniques, in order to further investigate the possible role of NPY in guinea-pig epicardial coronary arteries. A double-immunofluorescence staining technique revealed that CGRP and substance P were co-localized in nerve fibres distinct from those displaying NPY immunoreactivity. Furthermore, using a method combining immunofluorescence and histochemical techniques, we observed that putative cholinergic nerve fibres (identified by their acetylcholinesterase content) and NPY-immunoreactive nerve fibres are two different nerve populations. An in vitro pharmacological method demonstrated that NPY markedly inhibited the relaxant responses mediated by ACh, VIP, substance P and isoprenaline but had no effect on CGRP. These results suggest that NPY-containing nerves associated with guinea-pig epicardial coronary arteries may be predominantly involved in modulating the action of vasodilator agents.  相似文献   

3.
Vasoactive intestinal peptide immunoreactive (VIP-IR) nerve fibres and terminals, neurons and small granule containing cells were observed in human lumbal sympathetic ganglia. Electron-microscopically VIP-IR was localized in the large dense-cored vesicles in nerve terminals and on the membranes of the Golgi complexes in the neurons. A small population of principal ganglion cells was surrounded by VIP-IR nerve terminals. Most of these neurons contained acetylcholinesterase (AChE) enzyme but were not tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive (TH-IR). All VIP-IR ganglion cells and most of the nerve fibres contained AChE but not TH-IR. It appears that in human sympathetic ganglia VIP is localized in the cholinergic neurons and nerve fibres and that the VIP-IR nerve terminals innervate mainly the cholinergic subpopulation of the sympathetic neurons.  相似文献   

4.
The presence of galanin-like immunoreactivity in nerves to the stomach of the Atlantic cod has been investigated by immunohistochemistry. The distribution of ganglion cells showing galanin-like immunoreactivity was compared with the total distribution in nerves and ganglia. Projection studies were made to determine the origin of the galanin neurons. The effect of galanin was studied in smooth muscle strip preparations of the gut wall and arteries. Galanin-like immunoreactive ganglion cells frequently occurred along the vagal branches to the stomach. Most of them projected cranially. Immunoreactive nerve fibres were present in all layers of the gut and around arterial branches on the surface of the stomach. Ligations of the vagus and splanchnic nerves produced accumulations of immunoreactive material on both sides of the ligature. Galanin produced weak contractile effects unaffected by tetrodotoxin on the gut wall and on gut arteries. It is concluded that a population of the ganglion cells along the vagus nerve in the Atlantic cod contains a galanin-like peptide. Some of these cells may be parts of autonomic parasympathetic pathways innervating the gut of the Atlantic cod, having direct excitatory effects on the smooth muscles of the gut wall and gut arteries.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The adrenergic and cholinergic nerves innervating the cerebral blood vessels of four species of Japanese chiropterids (Rhinolophus ferrumequinum, Murina leucogaster, Vespertilio superans and Miniopterus Schreibersi) have been investigated using specific histochemical techniques. In all these species of bats arteries of the internal carotid system are poorly developed, whereas those of the vertebro-basilar system are well developed. The adrenergic and cholinergic nerves innervating these cerebral arteries, however, all originate from the stem nerve bundles entering the cranial cavity along the internal carotid artery. Both nerve plexuses are among the densest of any vertebrate species so far investigated. Adrenergic nerve plexuses are usually composed of complicated meshworks of fine fibres, while cholinergic ones are composed of rather longitudinally arranging meshworks of both thick and thin fibres, exhibiting a very high acetylcholinesterase activity. Small parenchymal arteries and arterioles are also dually innervated by adrenergic and cholinergic nerve fibres of peripheral origin. Intracerebral capillaries, on the other hand, are in several places directly connected with both adrenergic and cholinergic fibres of parenchymal origin. Capillaries in the cerebral and cerebellar cortices, diencephalon and cochlear nucleus in V. superans exhibit a heavy non-nervous acetylcholinesterase activity in their walls, but in R.ferrumequinum and M. schreibersi, the response is weak or negative, except for that in the cochlear nucleus.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The relationships of immunoreactive neuropeptide Y, enkephalin and tyrosine hydroxylase, on the one hand, and acetylcholinesterase histochemical activity, on the other, were studied in human lumbar sympathetic ganglia. Two thirds of the ganglion cells contained immunoreactive neuropeptide Y. Electron microscopically the immunoreaction was localized in the Golgi apparatus and in large dense-cored vesicles in the nerve endings. Most of the neuropeptide-containing neurons and nerve fibres were also reactive for tyrosine hydroxylase. Nerve fibres reactive for neuropeptide Y were found around ganglion cells regardless of their transmitter contents, whereas enkephalin-reactive nerve terminals surrounded only acetylcholinesterase-containing neurons. The results demonstrate that neuropeptide Y is colocalized with noradrenaline in most of the human sympathetic neurons and that the nerve fibres may innervate selectively the noradrenergic and cholinergic subpopulations of ganglion cells depending on the transmitters of the nerves.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Dual innervation of snake cerebral blood vessels by adrenergic and cholinergic fibres was demonstrated with the use of histochemical methods. Although the nerve plexuses are somewhat less dense, the essential features of innervation of the blood vessels are similar to those of mammals with the exception that the adrenergic plexuses are more prominent than the cholinergic plexuses. The major arteries of the cerebral carotid system have a rich nerve supply. However, the innervation is less rich in the basilar and poor in the spinal (vertebral) arteries. Although the arteries supplying the right side of head are poorly developed, three pairs of arteries, cerebral carotids, ophthalmics and spinals, supply the snake brain. The carotids and ophthalmics are densely innervated and are accompanied by thick nerve bundles, suggesting that the nerves preferentially enter the skull along those arteries. Some parenchymal arterioles are also dually innervated. Connection between the brain parenchyma and intracerebral capillaries via both cholinergic and adrenergic fibres was observed. In addition cholinergic nerve fibres, connecting capillaries and the intramedullary nerve fibre bundles, were noticed. Capillary blood flow may be influenced by both adrenergic and cholinergic central neurons. The walls of capillaries also exhibit heavy acetylcholinesterase activity. This may indicate an important role for the capillary in the regulation of intracerebral blood flow.  相似文献   

8.
The objective of the study was to investigate the morphology, distribution, and electrophysiological profile of the autonomic fibers that innervate the ligament of Marshall (LOM). Gross anatomical dissections were performed in 10 dogs. Sections of the left vagus nerve, left stellate ganglion, and the LOM were immunostained to identify adrenergic and cholinergic nerves. Hearts were also stained for acetylcholinesterase to identify epicardial cholinergic nerves. In vivo electrophysiological studies were performed in another 10 dogs before and after LOM ablation. The anatomical examination revealed that the LOM is innervated by a branch of the left vagus. Immunohistochemistry confirmed that these nerve bundles are predominantly cholinergic (cholinergic-to-adrenergic ratio of 12.6 +/- 3.9:1). Cholinergic nerves originating in the LOM were found to innervate surrounding left atrial structures, including the pulmonary veins, left atrial appendage, coronary sinus, and posterior left atrial fat pad. Ablation of the LOM significantly attenuated effective refractory period shortening at distant sites, such as pulmonary veins and left atrial appendage, in response to vagal stimulation (vagal-induced ERP decrease in the left atrium: baseline vs. postablation = 17 vs. 4%; P = 0.0056). In conclusion, the LOM contains a predominance of cholinergic nerve fibers. Cholinergic fibers arising from the LOM innervate surrounding structures and contribute to the electrophysiological profile of the left atrium. These findings may provide a basis for the role of the LOM in the genesis and maintenance of atrial fibrillation.  相似文献   

9.
M Fujiwara  K Kurahashi 《Life sciences》1976,19(8):1175-1180
The superior cervical ganglion was reinnervated by vagal afferent fibers following heterologous cross anastomosis between the superior cervical preganglionic trunk and the vagal trunk at the level of the supranodose ganglion in cats. The contractions of the nictitating membrane and the postganglionic action potentials from the external carotid sinus nerve in response to electrical stimulation of the vagal artificial preganglionic trunk in these operated cats were inhibited by treatment with tetraethylammonium and atropine. The choline acetyltransferase activities were measured by the radiometric method. The activities in cross anastomosed superior cervical ganglion were lower than those of normal superior cervical ganglion, but higher than those of chronically decentralized superior cervical ganglion. The activities in cross anastomosed nodose ganglion were lower than those of normal nodose ganglion, but higher than those of chronically decentralized superior cervical ganglion. These results further support the view that the primary afferent vagus artificially synapsed in the superior cervical ganglion is cholinergic.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The proximal truncus arteriosus of the lizard Trachydosaurus rugosus was studied with light-, fluorescence and electron-microscopical techniques. Three vessels comprised the truncus: the pulmonary, left aortic, and caroticoaortic arteries. Right and left truncal nerves, each derived from the ipsilateral vagus nerve, innervated the truncus, particularly its proximal 3 mm.Ultrastructurally, the nerves had a variety of appearances: some were clearly adrenergic, c-type or p-type. A number of profiles contained large numbers of mitochondria and were classified as sensory. Some profiles defied exact classification, having characteristics common to two different types of profile.Within the outer medial layers, profiles up to 7 m in diameter were found. These contained large numbers of mitochondria, myelin bodies and structures intermediate between the two. In addition, the profiles contained large amounts of glycogen and small numbers of vesicles. These nerve fibres were classified as baroreceptors, since they closely resemble carotid sinus and aortic arch baroreceptors in mammals.Large numbers of chromaffin cells were found, particularly in the common wall of the pulmonary and left aortic arteries. Many of these cells emitted a long tapering process, which sometimes entered a nearby nerve bundle. Sensory, p-type and c-type profiles, but not adrenergic profiles, made extensive close contacts with chromaffin cells.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
In 20 anesthetized dogs the thoracic autonomic nerves were carefully exposed in order to determine which produced cardiovascular responses when the afferent or efferent component of each was stimulated. Efferent parasympathetic and sympathetic fibers arise from the caudal cervical ganglion regions bilaterally as well as from the vagus caudally to that ganglion. The majority of negative chromotropic, dromotropic and inotropic fibers arise from the vagus or near the recurrent laryngeal nerves; however, some small parasympathetic fibers also arise from the vagi down to the level of the pulmonary vessels. Efferent sympathetic nerves are relatively large with the exception of the stellate cardiac nerves, and produce specific positive chronotropic or inotropic responses. Afferent fibers are numerous in the recurrent cardiac, innominate, ventromedial and dorsal nerves and not very numerous in both stellate cardiac nerves as well as in the nerves at the level of the pulmonary vessels; thus there are numerous cholinergic and adrenergic efferent fibers which exhibit specific chronotropic or inotropic responses. The correlation between neural anatomy and specific physiological cardiodynamics illustrates beautifully the interrelationship of structure and function which exists within the autonomic nervous system.  相似文献   

13.
Experiments were carried in 42 mature white male rats. We investigated into the projections of different organs of gastrointestinal tract on afferent neurones of ganglia of the vagus nerve in white rats. Horseradish peroxidase-conjugated lectins were used as a tracer. We investigated into metric parameters (diameter of an equivalent circle) and shape parameters (circular factor of the shape) of marked neurocytes using a method of computer video-analysis. To evaluate reliability of the received data, methods of non-parametric statistics were used. It was determined that the largest neurocytes in afferent ganglions are involved in innervation of the root of the long and ileocecal angle, the smallest ones--in innervation of a cervical department of esophagus and liver. The viscero- and somatosensory neurocytes in caudal ganglion of vagus nerve involved in innervation of different organs in white rat, are characterized by selectivity of the shape and by metric parameters.  相似文献   

14.
The neural fibres of cerebral arteries in humans, rats, guinea-pigs, rabbits, cats, dogs, swine, cows and horses have been studied using the methods of Flack-Hillarp and Koelle. The large arteries of the carotid and vertebral systems bear dense cholinergic and adrenergic plexuses formed by transversal and longitudial neural fibres, which are located in the superficial and deep adventitial layers. The highest density of cholinergic and adrenergic fibres was observed on the arteries of humans and large mammals. Depending on the density of cholinergic and adrenergic fibres in the said arteries, the animals may be listed in the following order: rats, guinea-pigs, rabbits, cats, dogs, swine, cows and horses. Basic differences in the structure of neural plexuses of humans and animals were not observed.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Plexuses of cholinergic nerve terminals were demonstrated (acetylcholinesterase staining) in pial arteries (down to a diameter of about 15) at the base of the brain and on the brain convexities of mice, rats, rabbits, hamsters, guinea-pigs, and cats. The pial veins were less well supplied than the arteries. Consecutive formaldehyde gas treatment (to visualize adrenergic nerves) and acetylcholinesterase staining revealed that the adrenergic and cholinergic plexuses followed each other closely, the axon terminals running together in the same Schwann cell strands. This was confirmed by electron microscopy after KMnO4 fixation or 5-hydroxydopamine treatment. The varicosities of cholinergic and adrenergic axons were sometimes seen as close as 250 Å. In the neuro-effector area, the terminals of both nerve types (naked or surrounded by an incomplete Schwann cell covering) approached the smooth muscle cells as close as 800–1100 Å, and they were separated from the latter only by the fused neuronal and muscular basement membranes. In this area axo-axonal contacts were observed. The adrenergic, but not the cholinergic, nerves disappeared after bilateral removal of the superior cervical sympathetic ganglia. Isolated cat middle cerebral artery contracted strongly with acetylcholine, and the effect was inhibited by atropine.With regard to the cholinergic neural control of the intracranial arteries, it may have particular functional implications: (1) that these vessels do have a cholinergic parasympathetic innervation in contrast to most other vascular systems, for example, in the mesenterium, (2) that this cholinergic nerve supply was found to be about equally prominent as the adrenergic (sympathetic) innervation which, in some pial vessels, is even better developed than in the mesenteric arteries, and (3) that the adrenergic and cholinergic systems in the intracranial arteries may interact, even at the level of the neuro-muscular contacts, a complex situation which may be partly responsible for the previous difficulties in defining the autonomic neural influence on the brain circulation.Part of the findings were reported at Journées Internationales de Circulation Cérébrale, Toulouse, April 21–22, 1972.  相似文献   

16.
Choline acetyltransferase and acetylcholinesterase activities were measured in samples taken at 7-micron increments through the inner plexiform layer of rat retina. These enzyme activities were not uniformly distributed through the depth of the inner plexiform layer. Peaks of choline acetyltransferase activity occurred at about one-third and peaks of acetylcholinesterase activity at about one-fifth of the depth into the inner plexiform layer from either side. The positions of the two peaks of choline acetyltransferase activity most likely correspond to the locations of processes from cholinergic amacrine somata in the inner nuclear layer, which spread in sublamina a, and processes from cholinergic amacrine somata "displaced" in the ganglion cell layer which spread in sublamina b of the inner plexiform layer. The peaks of acetylcholinesterase activity may in addition correspond to the processes of cholinoceptive amacrine and ganglion cells. The magnitudes of choline acetyltransferase and acetylcholinesterase activities are as high as found anywhere in rat brain, emphasizing the important role of cholinergic mechanisms in visual processing through the rat inner plexiform layer.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Numerous nerve fibres containing acetylcholinesterase and noradrenaline, as well as avian pancreatic polypeptide-, vasoactive intestinal peptide-, or substance P-like immunoreactivity are observed around arteries in the external carotid rete of the cat. The nerves are located in the adventitial layer close to the media. It is possible that adrenergic, cholinergic and peptidergic nerve fibres may have a strong neurogenic influence on the rete blood vessels.  相似文献   

18.
Synopsis Newborn albino rats were injected daily for 8 days with 50 g/g of 6-hydroxydopamine. They were killed 3 weeks after the last injection together with untreated litter mate controls. Monoamines were demonstrated histochemically in the pineal body, in the iris and in the superior cervical ganglion with the formaldehyde-induced fluorescence method. Acetylcholinesterase was demonstrated in the pineal using acetylcholine as substrate and tetraisopropy-pyrophosphoramide (iso-OMPA) to inhibit non-specific cholinesterases.Treatment with 6-hydroxydopamine caused a complete disappearance of amine-containing fibres from the pineal, whereas some fluorescent ganglion cells remained in the superior cervical ganglion and in some rats a few amine-containing fibres in the iris. Acetylcholinesterase activity, located in fine nerve fibres of the pineal body, disappeared completely after treatment with 6-hydroxydopamine.Since 6-hydroxydopamine causes a selective destruction of the aminergic sympathetic fibres, it is concluded that the disappearance of the acetylcholinesterase activity indicates that in the pineal body this enzyme activity is located exclusively in truly aminergic nerve fibres.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of nerve stimulation on inositol phospholipid hydrolysis in autonomic tissue was assessed by direct measurement of [3H]inositol phosphate production in ganglia that had been preincubated with [3H]inositol. Within minutes, stimulation of the preganglionic nerve increased the [3H]inositol phosphate content of the superior cervical sympathetic ganglion indicating increased hydrolysis of inositol phospholipids. This effect was blocked in a low Ca2+, high Mg2+ medium. It was also greatly reduced when nicotinic and muscarinic antagonists were present together in normal medium. However, neither the nicotinic antagonist nor the muscarinic antagonist alone appeared to be as effective as both in combination. In other experiments, stimulation of the vagus nerve caused dramatic increases in [3H]inositol phosphate in the nodose ganglion but did not increase [3H]inositol phosphate in the nerve itself. This effect was insensitive to the cholinergic antagonists. Thus, neuronal activity increased inositol phospholipid hydrolysis in a sympathetic ganglion rich in synapses, as well as in a sensory ganglion that contains few synapses. In the sympathetic ganglion, synaptic stimulation activated inositol phospholipid hydrolysis and this was primarily due to cholinergic transmission; both nicotinic and muscarinic pathways appeared to be involved.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The Falck-Hillarp technique has been used to demonstrate the neuronal and extra-neuronal localisations of biogenic amines in the cervical region of the domestic fowl. Adrenergic cell bodies were found in the superior cervical ganglion and in the ganglia of the cervical paravertebral chain. The axons of the latter ran into the corresponding spinal nerves and thus to the periphery. Very few adrenergic fibres were found in the interganglionic portions of the cervical paravertebral chain. The precarotid branch of the glossopharyngeal nerve, and the vagus nerve, below its junction with the former, contained numbers of adrenergic fibres. The retrocarotid nerve-trunk from the superior cervical ganglion was composed of adrenergic fibres. With the exception of the parathyroid gland, the adrenergic nerves seen in the branchial derivatives (thymus, thyroid and ultimobranchials) appeared to be associated with blood vessels. Under normal conditions the cells of the ultimobranchial body were nonfluorescent, but after injection of 6-hydroxydopamine the cells were brightly fluorescent. The carotid body was devoid of adrenergic nerves other than those with blood vessels, but the cells of the carotid body were brightly fluorescent. Various fluorescent cell types were found throughout the cervical region, particularly in association with the vasculature. I should like to thank Prof. G. Burnstock (Department of Zoology, Melbourne University) in whose department this work was carried out and Dr. R. D. Hodges (Wye College, London University) for his indispensable advice on the disposition of the avian ultimobranchial body. The author held a Postdoctoral Research Fellowship of the National Heart Foundation of Australia during part of this study.  相似文献   

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