The presence of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)-like immunoreactivity (IR) was studied in the rat female reproductive system using polyclonal antibodies directed against 5-HT. Moreover, 5-HT levels in the ovary, oviduct, uterus, and cervix were measured by high-pressure liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection. The highest 5-HT concentrations were found in the oviduct, followed in descending order by the cervix, the ovary, and the uterus. Most 5-HT-like IR was observed in the cytoplasm of mast cells. These cells were found in the connective tissue around the fimbria, in the oviduct, in the uterus, and in the ovary. Mast cells are clustered in the proximity of the parenchymal blood vessels. Moreover, a few 5-HT-like nerve fibers were found distributed mainly perivascularily in the uterine cervix and in the uterine horns as well as in the oviduct. IR nerve fibers were rarely seen within the ovary. The present data provide direct evidence that 5-HT in the female reproductive system not only is associated with mast cells but is located in nerve fibre-like structures as well. The functional significance of this probable 5-HT-ergic innervation of the female reproductive tract discovered in the present study should be clarified in future investigations.
The occurrence and distribution of specific 3H-muscimol binding sites, most probably identical with A type gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptors, were studied in sections of the rat adrenal gland by light microscope autoradiography. Specific binding was found primarily in the adrenal medulla, in association with chromaffïn cells. A limited number of binding sites was also observed within the adrenal cortex. In urethane-anaesthetized hexamethonium-pretreated rats, intravenous GABA produced a set of ‘excitatory’ cardiovascular effects (increase in heart rate, force of contraction and blood pressure) which were mimicked by intravenous muscimol but not by intravenous baclofen, and were antagonized by pretreatment with bicuculline. The cardiovascular excitatory effects of intravenous GABA were unaffected by reserpine pretreatment, markedly reduced by administration of phentolamine plus propranolol, and almost completely abolished by adrenalectomy. Our findings indicate the presence of GABA receptor sites on adrenal chromaffin cells, whose excitation can produce changes in cardiovascular function.
1. Dopamine (DA) and DA receptor agonists exert a variety of effects on the cardiovascular system through interaction with specific DA receptors, including decreases in blood pressure and heart rate. 2. The decrease in blood pressure is due primarily to arterial vasodilation. This phenomenon is due to the stimulation of both postjunctional (D1-like or DA1) and prejunctional (D2-like or DA2) receptors causing respectively relaxation of arterial smooth muscle and decrease of the sympathetic vasoconstriction tone. 3. In view of the lack of detailed information on the existence of DA receptors in venous tissue, we have analysed D1-like and D2-like receptors in the rat portal vein using radioligand binding techniques associated with light microscope autoradiography. 4. No D1-like receptors were demonstrated in sections of the rat portal vein, whereas the D2-like receptor ligand, [3H]-spiroperidol, was bound to sections of the vein in a manner consistent with the labelling of D2-like sites. Anatomically, D2-like sites were located within the tunica adventitia, including the adventitia-media border, and in the endothelium. 5. These findings suggest the existence of D2-like but not D1-like receptor sites in the rat portal vein. D2-like sites of the tunica adventitia are probably prejunctional and involved in the modulation of sympathetic outflow. The functional significance of endothelial D2-like sites, if any, should be clarified in future studies.
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