Journal article

Innervation of tracheal parasympathetic ganglia by esophageal cholinergic neurons: Evidence from anatomic and functional studies in guinea pigs

SB Mazzone, AE McGovern

American Journal of Physiology Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC | Published : 2010

Abstract

In the present study, we describe a subset of nerve fibers, characterized by their immunoreactivity for the calcium-binding protein calretinin, that are densely and selectively associated with cholinergic postganglionic neurons in the guinea pig tracheal ganglia. Retrograde neuronal tracing with cholera toxin B, combined with immunohistochemical analyses, showed that these nerve fibers do not originate from sensory neurons in the nodose, jugular, or dorsal root ganglia or from motor neurons in the nucleus ambiguus, dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus nerve, spinal cord, stellate ganglia, or superior cervical ganglia. Calretinin-immunoreactive nerve fibers disappeared from tracheal segments aft..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers