Dopamine D1-D5 receptor protein immunoreactivity was investigated in different sized pial, renal and mesenteric artery branches using immunohistochemical techniques and anti-dopamine D1-D5 receptor protein antibodies. Faint dopamine D1 receptor protein immunoreactivity was observed in smooth muscle of tunica media of pial, renal and mesenteric artery branches. Dopamine D2 receptor protein immunoreactivity was located in the adventitia and adventitia-media border of pial and renal artery branches and to a lesser extent of mesenteric artery branches. No dopamine D3 receptor protein immunoreactivity was observed in pial and mesenteric arteries. In renal arteries a moderate dopamine D3 receptor immunoreactivity was detectable in the adventitia and adventitia-media border. A strong dopamine D4 receptor protein immunoreactivity displaying the same localization of dopamine D2 receptor protein was observed in pial and mesenteric arteries, but not in renal artery branches. Moderate dopamine D5 receptor protein immunoreactivity was observed in smooth muscle of the tunica media of pial, renal and mesenteric artery branches. Bilateral removal of superior cervical ganglia, from which sympathetic supply to cerebral circulation originate abolished dopamine D2 and D4 receptor protein immunoreactivity in pial arteries but was without effect on dopamine D1 and D5 receptor protein immunoreactivity. These findings indicate that systemic arteries express dopamine D1-like (D1 and D5) and D2-like (D2, D3 and D4) receptor subtypes displaying respectively a muscular (postjunctional) and prejunctional localization. The specific distribution of dopamine D2-like receptor subtypes in systemic arteries suggests that they may have a different role in regulating blood flow through the vascular beds investigated.
In the dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) of vitamin-E-deficient rats, we previously found an increase in the number of neurons during the first 5 months of life (Cecchini et al., 1993, 1994). This neurogenetic event seems to bring forward in time the increase in the number of primary sensory neurons that Devor et al. (1985) found in normal rats aged more than 1 year, but that other authors have not confirmed. The present study had two aims: first, to verify whether neurogenesis spontaneously occurs in DRGs of 14-month-old Sprague-Dawley rats; and, second, to determine whether the neurogenesis enhanced by vitamin E deficiency continues further in the long run, or whether it stops or reverses into neuron loss. A quantitative and morphometric analysis was performed on neurons of L3-L6 DRGs in 14-month-old normal and vitamin-E-deficient rats: the results obtained were compared to those previously obtained in 1-month-old and 5-month-old animals of both dietetic treatment groups, in order to observe the effects of aging on these neuronal populations. The total number of DRG neurons in the control group was higher in older than in younger animals, whereas the value in the vitamin-E-deficient group was lower in older than in younger animals. The present data confirm that neurogenesis occurs in DRGs of normal rats during adult life. Moreover, they show that once the premature neurogenesis in the deficient rats is completed, no further increase in the number of neurons takes place.
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