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Morphologies and projections of defined classes of neurons in the submucosa of the guinea‐pig small intestine

journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-19, 23:06 authored by John FurnessJohn Furness, George Alex, Melanie J Clark, Varsha V Lal
AbstractFour types of neurons have previously been identified by neurochemical markers in the submucosal ganglia of the guinea‐pig small intestine, and functional roles have been ascribed to each type. However, morphological differences among the classes have not been determined, and there is only partial information about their projections within the submucosa. In the present work, we used intracellular microelectrodes to fill neurons of each type with biocytin, which was then converted to a permanent dye, so that the shapes of the neurons could be determined and their projections within the submucosa could be followed. Cell bodies of noncholinergic secretomotor/ vasodilator neurons had Dogiel type I morphology. These neurons, which are vasoactive intestinal peptide immunoreactive, had single axons that ran through many ganglia without providing terminals around other neurons. Cholinergic secretomotor neurons with neuropeptide Y immunoreactivity had Stach type IV morphology, and cholinergic secretomotor/vasodilator neurons had stellate cell bodies. The axons of these two types ran short distances in the plexus and did not innervate other submucosal neurons. Neurons of the fourth type, intrinsic primary afferent neurons, had cell bodies with Dogiel type II morphology and their processes supplied networks of varicose processes around other nerve cells. It is concluded that each functionally defined type of submucosal neuron has a characteristic morphology and that intrinsic primary afferent neurons synapse with secretomotor neurons to form monosynaptic secretomotor reflex circuits. Anat Rec Part A 272A:475–483, 2003. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

History

Journal

The Anatomical Record Part A: Discoveries in Molecular, Cellular, and Evolutionary Biology

Volume

272A

Pagination

475-483

Location

United States

ISSN

1552-4884

eISSN

1552-4892

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

2

Publisher

Wiley