Origin of galanin-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the rat paracervical autonomic ganglia and uterine cervix. |
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Authors: | R E Papka B W Newton D L McNeill |
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Affiliation: | Department of Anatomical Sciences, University of Oklahoma Medical Center, Oklahoma City 73190. |
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Abstract: | Retrograde axonal tracing with fluorogold in conjunction with immunohistochemistry was used to examine the source of galanin-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the paracervical ganglia and uterine cervix of the female rat. Immunohistochemistry revealed galanin-immunoreactive neuron somata in lumbosacral dorsal root ganglia and around the central canal of the lumbosacral spinal cord (lamina X). Injection of fluorogold into the paracervical ganglia resulted in labelled cells in dorsal root ganglia and the sacral parasympathetic nucleus of the spinal cord; but fluorogold-labelled, galanin-immunoreactive cells were found only in dorsal root ganglia. Injection of the tracer in the cervix resulted in labelled cells in the paracervical ganglia and dorsal root ganglia; however, fluorogold-labelled, galanin-immunoreactive cells were again evident only in dorsal root ganglia. It is suggested that the galanin-immunoreactive nerve fibers and varicosities in the paracervical ganglia and uterine cervix are sensory fibers from spinal dorsal root ganglia. The galanin-immunoreactive varicosities in the ganglia could play a role in the modulation of pelvic visceral activity, while those in the musculature of the cervix could influence contractility. |
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