“…Acetylcholinesterase (AChE), the glycoprotein enzyme that hydrolyses the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh), has important functional implications in the nervous system and is particularly well known for its role in the termination of cholinergic transmission. The concentration and distribution of AChE in normal and injured nerves have been studied more or less along the entire neuronal axis, including peripheral endings, both sensory endings and motor end-plates (Gautron et al, 1983; McConnell and Simpson, 1976), pre-and postganglionic fibers (Malatova et al, 1985), cell bodies (Malatova et al, 1985; Pannese et al, 1974), and in terminal synaptic regions (Broderson et al, 1974; McDonald and Rasmussen, 1971; Westrum and Broderson, 1976).…”