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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Tachykinin-like immunoreactivity in the mammalian urinary bladder: correlation with the functions of the capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerves.

The tachykinin-like immunoreactivity of the urinary bladder has been measured in various species by means of an antiserum ( K12) having negligible cross-reactivity with substance P. The rank order for bladder content of tachykinin-like immunoreactivity was guinea-pig greater than mice greater than rat, similar to that found for substance P-like immunoreactivity. In all three species, both substance P- and tachykinin-like immunoreactivities were depleted by systemic capsaicin desensitization. The time course for depletion of substance P- and tachykinin-like immunoreactivities of the rat bladder following extrinsic denervation was almost superimposable. At reverse phase high pressure liquid chromatography, the major constituent of tachykinin-like immunoreactivity of the rat bladder co-eluted with neurokinin A. In vitro, the contractile response of the rat bladder to capsaicin (1 microM) was directly proportional to bladder tachykinin-like immunoreactivity while the response to field stimulation was not. In vivo, the volume threshold for reflex micturition was inversely proportional to bladder tachykinin-like immunoreactivity while amplitude of micturition contraction was not. Similar correlations were found in a previous study for substance P-like immunoreactivity. The contractile response to capsaicin or neurokinin A of the rat isolated bladder were significantly reduced by incubation with phenoxybenzamine at a concentration reported to produce a selective alkylation of neurokinin-2 receptors, while the response to substance P or KCl was unaffected. These findings indicate that multiple neurokinins co-exist in those bladder sensory nerves which are capsaicin-sensitive in adult rats. Both substance P- and tachykinin-like immunoreactivities in the rat bladder appear to be good functional markers of the sensory and "efferent" functions mediated by capsaicin-sensitive nerves, consistent with the hypothesis of a transmitter role for the corresponding peptides.[1]

References

  1. Tachykinin-like immunoreactivity in the mammalian urinary bladder: correlation with the functions of the capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerves. Maggi, C.A., Geppetti, P., Santicioli, P., Frilli, S., Giuliani, S., Furio, M., Theodorsson, E., Fusco, B., Meli, A. Neuroscience (1988) [Pubmed]
 
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