Cheng Z, Powley T L, Schwaber J S, Doyle F J
School of Chemical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907-1283, USA.
J Auton Nerv Syst. 1997 Dec 3;67(1-2):1-14. doi: 10.1016/s0165-1838(97)00085-4.
Although the aortic nerves contain vagal afferents that terminate in both the wall of the aortic arch (putative baroreceptors) and its associated glomus tissue (putative chemoreceptors) in most mammalian species, the aortic nerves of the rat have been widely assumed to contain only baro- or pressor afferents. The present study reconsidered this anomaly by characterizing vagal afferent endings and their targets in the aortic arch region of the rat, both qualitatively and quantitatively. Eight Sprague-Dawley rats received intracranial vagal motor rhizotomy unilaterally to eliminate efferents in the nerve and then, two weeks later, injections of the tracer DiI (1,1'-dioleyl-3,3,3',3'-tetramethylindocarbocyanine methanesulfonate) into the ipsilateral nodose ganglion. The aortic arch and its surrounding tissue, with the common carotid and subclavian arteries attached, were examined with both conventional epifluorescence and confocal microscopes. Consistent with earlier observations, vagal afferents formed both flower-spray and end-net terminals rather diffusely within the wall of the aortic arch. More interestingly, vagal afferents also innervated glomus or SIF (i.e., small intensely fluorescent) cell bodies at the junction areas of the common carotid and subclavian arteries. To identify the course of these fibers, six additional animals received DiI injection into the nodose unilaterally after a complete cervical vagotomy caudal to the nodose; in these animals, the aortic nerve had been separated from the vagal trunk and kept intact. There were no marked differences in innervation patterns between the nonvagotomized and the cervically vagotomized animals, indicating that the vagal axons innervating the walls of the blood vessels and the SIF cells in the aortic arch region travel through the aortic nerves. Using a stereological method, we estimated the relative number of chemo- and baroreceptor afferents innervating the aortic arch. About 16.4% (left) and 13.1% (right) of fibers in the aortic nerves innervate SIF cells. These findings challenge the general consensus that the aortic nerves of rats contain exclusively baroreceptor fibers.
尽管在大多数哺乳动物物种中,主动脉神经含有迷走传入神经,其终末分布于主动脉弓壁(假定的压力感受器)及其相关的球旁组织(假定的化学感受器),但人们普遍认为大鼠的主动脉神经仅含有压力感受器或升压感受器传入神经。本研究通过定性和定量描述大鼠主动脉弓区域迷走传入神经终末及其靶标,重新审视了这一异常情况。八只Sprague-Dawley大鼠单侧接受颅内迷走运动神经根切断术以消除神经中的传出神经,然后在两周后,将示踪剂DiI(1,1'-二油酰基-3,3,3',3'-四甲基吲哚羰花青甲磺酸盐)注射到同侧结状神经节中。使用传统落射荧光显微镜和共聚焦显微镜检查附着有颈总动脉和锁骨下动脉的主动脉弓及其周围组织。与早期观察结果一致,迷走传入神经在主动脉弓壁内相当分散地形成了花簇状和终网状终末。更有趣的是,迷走传入神经还支配颈总动脉和锁骨下动脉交界处的球旁或SIF(即小而强荧光)细胞体。为了确定这些纤维的走行,另外六只动物在结状神经节尾侧进行完全颈迷走神经切断术后单侧将DiI注射到结状神经节中;在这些动物中,主动脉神经已与迷走神经干分离并保持完整。未行迷走神经切断术的动物和颈迷走神经切断术的动物在神经支配模式上没有明显差异,表明支配主动脉弓区域血管壁和SIF细胞的迷走轴突通过主动脉神经走行。我们使用体视学方法估计了支配主动脉弓的化学感受器和压力感受器传入神经的相对数量。主动脉神经中约16.4%(左侧)和13.1%(右侧)的纤维支配SIF细胞。这些发现挑战了大鼠主动脉神经仅含压力感受器纤维的普遍共识。