Cells derived from the neonatal rat pineal gland were cocultured with cells derived from neonatal rat superior cervical ganglia (SCG) in an attempt to determine whether a sympathetic target organ with only adrenergic properties could enhance the development of adrenergic transmitter properties in sympathetic neurons in tissue culture. Choline acetyltransferase was measured as an index of cholinergic differentiation, and tyrosine hydroxylase was measured as an index of adrenergic differentiation. As indices of total cell number and cellular volume, DNA and protein, respectively, were also measured. We found that the pineal-SCG cocultures contained ten times greater choline acetyltransferase activity than sister neuronal cultures cultured without pineal cells, thus indicating that the pineal cells enhanced cholinergic properties in the sympathetic neurons. This cholinergic enhancement was dependent upon the presence of nerve growth factor and could not be obtained with pineal-conditioned medium. Tyrosine hydroxylase activity, measured on cultures sister to those mentioned above, was low in all cultures and decreased somewhat in SCGs cultured alone. TH activity in the pineal-SCG cocultures, however, increased slightly. Some tyrosine hydroxylating activity developed in pineals cultured alone, however, and may have been responsible for the small increase in tyrosine hydroxylase activity noted in the pineal-SCG cocultures. The implications of these results for a determination of the role that target organ plays in the development of the transmitter properties of sympathetic neurons are discussed.
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