The present studies in the rat employed a combined retrograde transport-immunocytochemical technique to determine the origin in the brainstem of enkephalin (Enk) projections to spinal sympathetic nuclei, including the intermediolateralis nucleus, pars principalis (ILp). We found that Enk projections to the ILp nucleus are found in such serotonergic-containing areas as the raphe obscurus; raphe pallidus; gigantocellular reticular nucleus, pars alpha; paragigantocellular lateral nucleus; raphe magnus; and the rostral extension of the raphe magnus nucleus. The adrenergic-containing rostroventrolateral reticular nucleus as well as the noradrenergic-containing areas A5, A7, ventral locus coeruleus, subcoeruleus, and fiber pathway linking the locus coeruleus and A5/A7 send Enk projections to ILp. In the pons, a large contralateral Enk projection to spinal sympathetic nuclei was found medial to the facial nerve and medial to the motor nucleus of the trigeminal nerve. These observations show the existence of a large number of Enk brainstem regions that can influence spinal autonomic centers via descending supraspinal projections.
Enkephalin distribution was examined in autonomic areas of the rat thoracic spinal cord. The localization of enkephalin fibers coincided with nuclear regions containing sympathetic preganglionic neurons. Horizontal sections revealed a pattern for enkephalin fibers resembling Laruelle's description of the localization of sympathetic preganglionic neurons as rungs of a ladder.
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