Literature DB >> 6152033

Somatostatin is present in a subpopulation of noradrenergic nerve fibres supplying the intestine.

M Costa, J B Furness.   

Abstract

Somatostatin and dopamine beta-hydroxylase have been localized in the coeliaco-mesenteric ganglia, in mesenteric nerves and in the wall of the guinea-pig small intestine. Nerve lesions were used to determine the sources of the nerves. Nerve cell bodies in the coeliaco-mesenteric ganglia with immunoreactivity for both somatostatin and dopamine beta-hydroxylase project to the intestine via the mesenteric nerves. Most of their terminals are in the submucous ganglia, where they make up the full complement of noradrenergic terminals, and in the mucosa where other noradrenergic terminals, not containing somatostatin immunoreactivity, are also present. The small number of noradrenergic fibres present in the tertiary component of the myenteric plexus and in the circular muscle all show immunoreactivity for somatostatin. The noradrenergic fibres supplying the mesenteric and intestinal blood vessels and those ramifying in the myenteric ganglia do not contain somatostatin. The numerous somatostatin-immunoreactive nerves in the enteric plexuses that do not contain dopamine beta-hydroxylase come from enteric nerve cell bodies. These results, considered in the context of other published work, indicate that post-ganglionic sympathetic noradrenergic neurons are chemically coded according to the target tissue they supply and suggest that neurons that were hitherto thought to be neurochemically equivalent, but which serve different functions, are in fact chemically distinct.

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6152033     DOI: 10.1016/0306-4522(84)90105-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroscience        ISSN: 0306-4522            Impact factor:   3.590


  52 in total

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2.  Selective control of sympathetic pathways to the kidney, spleen and intestine by the ventrolateral medulla in rats.

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3.  Immunohistochemistry of biogenic polypeptides in nerve cells and fibres of the guinea pig inferior mesenteric ganglion after perturbations.

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4.  Dynamics of fast synaptic excitation during trains of stimulation in myenteric neurons of guinea-pig ileum.

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5.  Synaptic transmission at functionally identified synapses in the enteric nervous system: roles for both ionotropic and metabotropic receptors.

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6.  5-HT(1A), SST(1), and SST(2) receptors mediate inhibitory postsynaptic potentials in the submucous plexus of the guinea pig ileum.

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7.  Localization of neuropeptide Y in human sympathetic ganglia: correlation with met-enkephalin, tyrosine hydroxylase and acetylcholinesterase.

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8.  Coexistence of multiple peptides in small intensely fluorescent (SIF) cells of inferior mesenteric ganglion of the guinea pig.

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9.  Antidiarrhoeal properties of a novel sigma ligand (JO 2871) on toxigenic diarrhoea in mice: mechanisms of action.

Authors:  V Theodorou; M Chovet; H Eutamene; H Fargeau; M Dassaud; M Toulouse; C Bihoreau; F J Roman; L Bueno
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10.  Nitric oxide enhances inhibitory synaptic transmission and neuronal excitability in Guinea-pig submucous plexus.

Authors:  Joel C Bornstein; Kathryn A Marks; Jaime Pei Pei Foong; Rachel M Gwynne; Zhi Hong Wang
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2010-05-21       Impact factor: 4.677

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