Abstract

The present study describes the distribution of carbonic anhydrase isozyme II (CA II) in the lingual periodontal ligament of the rat incisor. Some thick nerve fibers in the nerve bundle displayed CA II-like immunoreactivity (LI) as well as non-neuronal elements such as osteoclasts. At the alveolar half of the lingual periodontal ligament of the incisor, thick CA II-like immunoreactive (-IR) nerve fibers showed a tree-like raminification, but thin and beaded CA II-IR nerve fibers were rare. Under the electron microscope, CA II-LI were diffusely localized in the axoplasm of the axon terminals surrounded by Schwann sheaths which were immunonegative for CA II. The cell bodies of the terminal Schwann cells associated with the periodontal Ruffini endings did not exhibit CA II-LI. The present immunohistochemical evidence indicates that CA II may participate in the regulation of the intra-neuronal ion in the periodontal Ruffini endings which are thought to be in a state of high neuronal activity.

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