Literature DB >> 7505778

Development of the peptidergic innervation of human heart.

L Gordon1, J M Polak, G J Moscoso, A Smith, D M Kuhn, J Wharton.   

Abstract

The aim of the present investigation was to study the developing peptidergic innervation of the human fetal heart of 7-24 wk gestational age. An immunohistochemical approach was adopted and the total innervation visualised with antisera to general neuronal and Schwann cell markers, while the onset and development of specific neuropeptide-containing subpopulations were investigated using antisera to neuropeptide Y (NPY), somatostatin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and substance P (SP). Cardiac ganglia and nerves were demonstrated from 7 wk of gestation whereas peptide-immunoreactive nerves were not observed until the 10th week of gestation. NPY-immunoreactive nerve fibres constituted the major subpopulation of peptide-containing nerves identified in the fetal heart, exhibiting a descending atrial to ventricular density gradient, and were first identified during the 10th wk of gestation. Somatostatin- and VIP-immunoreactive nerves appeared at 10-12 wk of gestation and were mainly distributed in the atria. Somatostatin immunoreactivity was localised to cell bodies in cardiac ganglia, as well as to nerve fibres, indicating an intrinsic origin for this nerve subpopulation. Conversely, the other peptide-containing nerves appear to be of extrinsic origin, including those immunoreactive for VIP. Intracardiac neurons exhibit a transient expression of tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity. Putative sympathetic nerve fibres, displaying tyrosine hydroxylase and NPY immunoreactivity, were demonstrated before the adrenergic innervation has previously been shown to be present by formaldehyde-induced fluorescence staining of catecholamines. The onset of the CGRP- and SP-immunoreactive innervation, at 18-24 wk of gestation, followed the appearance of other peptide-containing nerves, suggesting that the sensory, afferent innervation occurs later than the autonomic. The differential appearance and distribution of peptide-containing nerve subpopulations indicate that there is a chronological order to the development of the autonomic and sensory components of human cardiac innervation.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 7505778      PMCID: PMC1259861     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anat        ISSN: 0021-8782            Impact factor:   2.610


  27 in total

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Authors:  W G Dail; G C Palmer
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Journal:  Anat Anz       Date:  1971

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5.  Development of the nerve supply to the human heart.

Authors:  V Navaratnam
Journal:  Br Heart J       Date:  1965-09

6.  The ontogenesis of cholinesterase activity within the heart and cardiac ganglia in man, rat, rabbit and guinea-pig.

Authors:  V Navaratnam
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7.  Somatostatin: an inhibitory parasympathetic transmitter in the human heart?

Authors:  A Franco-Cereceda; J M Lundberg; T Hökfelt
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Review 9.  Peptides in the mammalian cardiovascular system.

Authors:  J Wharton; S Gulbenkian
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6.  The innervation of the human myocardium at birth.

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7.  A quantitative study of nerve distribution in the conduction system of the guinea pig heart.

Authors:  S J Crick; M N Sheppard; R H Anderson; J M Polak; J Wharton
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8.  Neuropeptide Y induces ischemic angiogenesis and restores function of ischemic skeletal muscles.

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