6533b7dcfe1ef96bd1272ba3

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Distribution of origin of nitric oxide synthase-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the rat epididymis.

Chih-chia LaiU. FörstermanS.l. DunP.y.d. WongE.c. DunN.j. DunR. Huang

subject

MaleStilbamidinesTyrosine 3-MonooxygenaseVasoactive intestinal peptidePopulationBiologyRats Sprague-DawleyNerve FibersDorsal root ganglionGanglia SpinalmedicineAnimalseducationMolecular Biologyreproductive and urinary physiologyFluorescent DyesEpididymisNeuronseducation.field_of_studyNeurotransmitter AgentsHypogastric PlexusGeneral NeuroscienceVas deferensSmooth muscle contractionAnatomyEpididymisCholine acetyltransferaseImmunohistochemistryEpitheliumRatsbody regionsmedicine.anatomical_structurePhenotypenervous systemNeurology (clinical)Nitric Oxide SynthaseDevelopmental BiologyVasoactive Intestinal Peptide

description

Abstract Distribution of neuronal nitric oxide synthase-immunoreactive (nNOS-IR) nerve fibers and somata in the rat epididymis and major pelvic ganglia was studied by immunohistochemical methods. In the epididymis, the supply of nNOS-IR fibers was highest in the cauda and became progressively fewer toward the caput. In the cauda and corpus, nNOS-IR fibers were distributed throughout the subepithelial tissues and around the epithelium. The pattern of distribution of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)- and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-immunoreactive fibers in the epididymis was similar but the latter was generally more numerous in a given region as compared to that of nNOS-IR fibers. A population of neurons in the major pelvic ganglia were nNOS-, TH- or VIP-IR. Double-labeling studies revealed that few neurons in the major pelvic ganglia contained both nNOS-IR and TH-IR. Whereas nNOS-IR and VIP-IR appeared to co-localize in the same population of pelvic ganglion cells. Similarly, nNOS-IR fibers in the epididymis were mostly VIP-positive and TH-negative. Unilateral injection of the fluorescent tracer Fluorogold into the junction between the vas deferens and the cauda labeled a population of neurons in the right and left major pelvic ganglia, some of which were also nNOS-IR. A small number of dorsal root ganglion cells contained Fluorogold and very few expressed NOS-IR. It may be concluded that nNOS-IR nerve fibers in the rat epididymis arise mainly from neurons in the major pelvic ganglia the major of which express VIP-IR but not TH-IR. The extensive supply of nNOS-immunoreactive fibers around the epithelium and throughout the subepithelial tissues suggests that NO may be closely associated with smooth muscle contraction.

10.1016/s0006-8993(96)00795-0https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8955525