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MICROSCOPIC ANALYSIS OF SYMPATHETIC AND PARASYMPATHETIC DISTRIBUTION, TERMINAL MORPHOLOGY, AND INTERACTION IN WHOLE-MOUNT ATRIA OF C57BL/6 MICE

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Date Issued:
2009
Abstract/Description:
The sympathetic (SNS) and parasympathetic (PSNS) branches of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) innervate the heart, exerting excitatory and inhibitory influences (respectively) over cardiac functions (heart rate, AV conduction velocity, and contractility). However, the distribution and structure of SNS and PSNS innervation has not yet been well studied. Detailed characterization of the distributional organization and structural morphology of the SNS and PSNS in normal states is essential to the study of pathological autonomic remodeling. The present study utilized double immunohistochemical labeling techniques to examine tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunoreactive (IR) SNS and vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT) IR PSNS axons and terminal structures in whole-mount atria of C57BL/6 mice. We found that: (1) The atria contain a dense network of ANS axons. TH-IR, VAChT-IR, and dual cholinergic/dopaminergic TH+VAChT-IR axons travel together in bundles on the epicardium before branching into differentiated terminal structures. (2) Parallel TH-IR and VAChT-IR axons often diverge from epicardial bundles and travel in parallel (less than 1μm apart) before forming terminal structures in the epicardium and myocardium. Such parallel SNS/PSNS axons interdigitize and have large alternating varicosities along their length adjacent to one other, suggesting possible antagonistic communication between both branches of the ANS at the prejunctional level. (3) Intrinsic cardiac ganglia (ICG) are targets for extrinsic sympathetic nerves which travel through ICG without forming large synaptic varicosities around cardiac principal neurons (PNs). (4) Small intensely fluorescent (SIF) cells (presumably chemoreceptors and/or interneurons) exist near SNS bundles, inside ICG, and in the epicardium unaccompanied by ganglia and nerve bundles. (5) The subpopulation of TH+VAChT-IR PNs within ICG form loose terminals in the atria and do not project to other PNs. (6) Both TH-IR and VAChT-IR axons innervate atrial vasculature. (7) TH-IR axons innervate fat pads adjacent to the heart. (8) SNS/PSNS parallelism is not exclusive to the atria. Similar structures exist in the esophagus, right ventricle, and small intestine. This study provides a novel and overall view of the innervation and interaction of the SNS and PSNS in the atria. This will underlie a foundation for future physiological, pharmacological, and anatomical studies of SNS/PSNS innervation, interaction, and remodeling in pathological states (such as aging, intermittent hypoxia and diabetes).
Title: MICROSCOPIC ANALYSIS OF SYMPATHETIC AND PARASYMPATHETIC DISTRIBUTION, TERMINAL MORPHOLOGY, AND INTERACTION IN WHOLE-MOUNT ATRIA OF C57BL/6 MICE.
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Name(s): Harden, Scott, Author
Cheng, Zixi (Jack), Committee Chair
University of Central Florida, Degree Grantor
Type of Resource: text
Date Issued: 2009
Publisher: University of Central Florida
Language(s): English
Abstract/Description: The sympathetic (SNS) and parasympathetic (PSNS) branches of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) innervate the heart, exerting excitatory and inhibitory influences (respectively) over cardiac functions (heart rate, AV conduction velocity, and contractility). However, the distribution and structure of SNS and PSNS innervation has not yet been well studied. Detailed characterization of the distributional organization and structural morphology of the SNS and PSNS in normal states is essential to the study of pathological autonomic remodeling. The present study utilized double immunohistochemical labeling techniques to examine tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunoreactive (IR) SNS and vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT) IR PSNS axons and terminal structures in whole-mount atria of C57BL/6 mice. We found that: (1) The atria contain a dense network of ANS axons. TH-IR, VAChT-IR, and dual cholinergic/dopaminergic TH+VAChT-IR axons travel together in bundles on the epicardium before branching into differentiated terminal structures. (2) Parallel TH-IR and VAChT-IR axons often diverge from epicardial bundles and travel in parallel (less than 1μm apart) before forming terminal structures in the epicardium and myocardium. Such parallel SNS/PSNS axons interdigitize and have large alternating varicosities along their length adjacent to one other, suggesting possible antagonistic communication between both branches of the ANS at the prejunctional level. (3) Intrinsic cardiac ganglia (ICG) are targets for extrinsic sympathetic nerves which travel through ICG without forming large synaptic varicosities around cardiac principal neurons (PNs). (4) Small intensely fluorescent (SIF) cells (presumably chemoreceptors and/or interneurons) exist near SNS bundles, inside ICG, and in the epicardium unaccompanied by ganglia and nerve bundles. (5) The subpopulation of TH+VAChT-IR PNs within ICG form loose terminals in the atria and do not project to other PNs. (6) Both TH-IR and VAChT-IR axons innervate atrial vasculature. (7) TH-IR axons innervate fat pads adjacent to the heart. (8) SNS/PSNS parallelism is not exclusive to the atria. Similar structures exist in the esophagus, right ventricle, and small intestine. This study provides a novel and overall view of the innervation and interaction of the SNS and PSNS in the atria. This will underlie a foundation for future physiological, pharmacological, and anatomical studies of SNS/PSNS innervation, interaction, and remodeling in pathological states (such as aging, intermittent hypoxia and diabetes).
Identifier: CFE0002561 (IID), ucf:47647 (fedora)
Note(s): 2009-05-01
M.S.
Burnett College of Biomedical Sciences, Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology
Masters
This record was generated from author submitted information.
Subject(s): cardiac
autonomic
neuron
sympathetic
parasympathetic
innervation
morphology
immunohistochemistry
confocal
mouse
Persistent Link to This Record: http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0002561
Restrictions on Access: campus 2014-04-01
Host Institution: UCF

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