Effect of superior cervical ganglionectomy on monoamine content in the epithalamic area of the Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus): A fluorescence histochemical study
- 1 September 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Cell and tissue research
- Vol. 201 (1), 1-9
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00238042
Abstract
Extirpation of the superior cervical ganglion was performed in a series of Mongolian gerbils. One or two weeks after the ganglionectomy the animals were injected with a monoamine oxidase inhibitor. Subsequently perfusion fixation was performed using the glyoxylic acid-paraformal-dehydemagnesium method (Lorén et al., 1976) for fluorescence histochemical investigation of the monoamines of the pineal complex. In the ganglionectomized animals all of the blue-fluorescent sympathetic fibers in the pineal complex (superficial pineal gland, deep pineal gland and the pineal stalk) completely disappeared. The yellow indolamine fluorescence of the cells in the superficial pineal and the deep pineal, as well as in the pineal stalk, was markedly reduced after ganglionectomy. No change in the morphology or number of sympathetic fibers in the medial habenular nucleus was observed. These results indicate that the presence of sympathetic nerve fibers with perikarya in the superior cervical ganglion is necessary for maintaining a high indolamine content in all three parts of the pineal complex. In addition, the results also indicate that the deep pineal gland is a functional part of the pineal complex. The presence of a functionally active deep pineal, bordering the pineal recess, suggests that part of the pineal hormones might be secreted into the cerebrospinal fluid.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Post-natal development of the pineal organ in the hamsters Phodopus sungorus and Mesocricetus auratusCell and tissue research, 1978
- Indolamine Metabolism in the Intact and Denervated Pineal, Pineal Stalk and HabenulaNeuroendocrinology, 1975
- Development of serotonin-containing cells and the sympathetic innervation of the habenular region in the rat brainCell and tissue research, 1974
- QUANTITATIVE MICROFLUORIMETRIC STUDIES ON FORMALDEHYDE-INDUCED FLUORESCENCE OF 5-HYDROXYTRYPTAMINE IN THE PINEAL GLAND OF THE RATJournal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1974
- Peripheral sympathetic innervation and serotonin cells in the habenular region of the rat brainCell and tissue research, 1972
- Monoamines and acetyl-cholinesterase in the pineal gland and habenula of the ferretCell and tissue research, 1970
- Cytochemistry of 5-hydroxytryptamine at the electron microscope levelCell and tissue research, 1968
- STUDIES ON 5‐HYDROXYTRYPTAMINE STORES IN PINEAL GLAND OF RATActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1964
- NEW ASPECTS OF THE MAMMALIAN PINEAL GLAND. I. FUNCTIONAL SIGNIFICANCE OF FETAL PINEAL GLAND OF RAT. II. MONOAMINE STORES IN MAMMALIAN PINEAL GLAND.1964
- The development, topographical relations and innervation of the epiphysis cerebri in the albino ratCell and tissue research, 1960