Abstract

The present immunohistochemical study reveals that a small number of chromaffin cells in the rat adrenal medulla exhibit CGRP-like immunoreactivity. All CGRP-immunoreactive cells were found to be chromaffin cells without noradrenaline fluorescence; from combined immunohistochemistry and fluorescence histochemistry we suggest that these are adrenaline cells. In addition, all CGRP-immunoreactive cells simultaneously exhibited NPY-like immunoreactivity. CGRP-chromaffin cells were characterized by abundant chromaffin granules with round cores in which the immunoreactive material was densely localized. These findings suggest the co-existence of CGRP, NPY and adrenaline within the chromaffin granules in a substantial number of chromaffin cells. Thicker and thinner nerve bundles, which included CGRP-immunoreactive nerve fibers, with or without varicosities, penetrated the adrenal capsule. Most of them passed through the cortex and entered the medulla directly, whereas others were distributed in subcapsular regions and among the cortical cells of the zona glomerulosa. Here the CGRP-fibers were in close contact with cortical cells. A few of the fibers supplying the cortex extended further into the medulla. The CGRP-immunoreactive fibers in the medulla were traced among and within small clusters of chromaffin cells and around ganglion cells. The CGRP-fibers were directly apposed to both CGRP-positive and negative chromaffin cells, as well as to ganglion cells. Immunoreactive fibers, which could not be found close to blood vessels, were characterized by the presence of numerous small clear vesicles mixed with a few large granular vesicles. The immunoreactive material was localized in the large granular vesicles and also in the axoplasm.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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