Autonomic control of submandibular protein secretion in the anaesthetized calf.
The autonomic control of submandibular secretion has been investigated in fully weaned, anaesthetized calves 7 weeks after birth. Stimulation of the parasympathetic (chorda-lingual) innervation invariably produced a flow of saliva, the rate of which was frequency dependent over the range 2-8 Hz continuously. Neither the rate of flow nor the output of protein was enhanced by stimulating in bursts at relatively high frequencies. Stimulation of the sympathetic innervation (20 Hz for 1 s at 10 s intervals) alone produced a much slower flow of saliva but with a considerably higher protein content. Stimulation of both together produced no greater flow of saliva than occurred with either alone at the lower frequencies (2 and 4 Hz) but there was a pronounced synergy in respect of the secretion of protein. Following pre-treatment with propranolol (1.0 mg kg-1 i.v.), during on-going chorda-lingual stimulation at 4 Hz, intra-arterial injections of 1 nmol of either vasoactive intestinal peptide ( VIP) or pituitary adenylate cyclase activating peptide (PACAP) elicited an increase in the flow and protein output of about the same order of magnitude. Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) also produced these same effects with roughly half the efficacy of VIP and PACAP but substance P had no detectable effect. It is concluded that VIP, PACAP and possibly CGRP are candidates for neurotransmitters with a role in the control of secretion in this gland.[1]References
- Autonomic control of submandibular protein secretion in the anaesthetized calf. Calvert, P.A., Heck, P.M., Edwards, A.V. Exp. Physiol. (1998) [Pubmed]
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