Ahlman H, Lundberg J, Dahlström A, Kewenter J
Acta Physiol Scand. 1976 Nov;98(3):366-75. doi: 10.1111/j.1748-1716.1976.tb10321.x.
The intracellular concentrations of serotonin (5-HT) in enterochromaffin cells (EC) in the cat small intestine have been studied by a cytofluorimetric method before and after long-lasting efferent vagal nerve stimulation in the neck. Such stimulation induces a decrease of 5-HT in EC of the gut as observed previously. Pretreatment with atropine could not block this decrease, suggesting a noncholinergic mechanism. Pretreatment with a beta-blocking agent, propranolol, or bilateral removal of the superior cervical ganglia could, however, block this 5-HT decrease. Pretreatment with an alpha-blocking agent, phenoxybenzamine, caused an increase in the 5-HT content of EC both with and without nerve stimulation; the reason for this is obscure. The results indicate, that vagal nerve stimulation induces a neurogenic 5-HT release from EC in the gut, and that adrenergic fibres, originating in the superior cervical ganglia, mediate this release probably via a beta-receptor mechanism. Whether or not an alpha-receptor mechanism is also involved cannot be judged at present.