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Decrease of Atrial Natriuretic Peptide Content in Rat Superior Cervical Sympathetic Ganglion After Denervation and Axotomy
Authors:Yutaka Nagata  Hiroshi Ebisu  Masao Tamaru  Kimikazu Fujita  Tadashi Koide
Affiliation:Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Fujita-Gakuen Health University; Aichi, Japan.
Abstract:We found atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), known as a humoral factor in regulating body fluid volume and blood pressure, in considerable quantities in rat superior cervical sympathetic ganglion (SCG) by radioimmunoassay after separation with reverse-phase HPLC. Although the ANP content of the immature rat 1 week after birth was low, it doubled at 2 weeks and then increased gradually, until it reached the adult level. Denervation caused a rapid decrease in the ANP content to half of the intact SCG level after 3 h, which then fell to 10% of the control value on day 2 after operation. The time course of ANP content reduction after denervation was similar but rather faster than that of activity of the acetylcholine-synthesizing enzyme, choline acetyltransferase, an observation suggesting that ANP may partly contribute to cholinergic synaptic transmission. On the other hand, axotomy produced a rather slower decrease in the ANP content than did denervation. Enucleation and sialoadenectomy also caused a considerable reduction of the ANP content. Thus, part of the ANP found in the ganglion is apparently transported from sympathetically innervated extraganglionic organs via retrograde axoplasmic flow.
Keywords:Atrial natriuretic peptide    Denervation    Axotomy    Superior cervical sympathetic ganglion    Choline acetyltransferase
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