Abstract

The aim of the present study was to determine the distribution of methionine-enkephalin (ME) and leucine-enkephalin (LE) immunoreactivity in the sympathetic prevertebral ganglia (coeliac plexus and inferior mesenteric ganglion) and in the myenteric plexus-muscular layer complex of the digestive tract in guinea-pigs and rats. This study was performed using the same immunological approaches including radioimmunoassays and HPLC characterization as those used previously on cats in order to be able to make inter-region and inter-species comparisons. In rat and guinea-pig prevertebral ganglia, the distributions of the enkephalin immunoreactivities were comparable and were characterized by a low ME/LE concentration ratio, of less than 1. In the digestive tract of rats, the enkephalin immunoreactivities were homogeneously distributed, whereas in guinea-pigs, they were found to be very low in the lower oesophageal sphincter and high in the duodenum. In both species, the ME/LE concentration ratio was around 2. The ME/LE concentration ratio determined in the present study in peripheral nervous structures was much lower than that determined previously in the rat brain. Radioimmunoassay and biochemical data might indicate that different mechanisms are responsible for the processing and/or degradation of enkephalins in the central and peripheral nervous systems. The present study provides further evidences that there are tissue- and species-dependent differences in the distribution of enkephalin immunoreactivities. These differences should be taken into consideration when dealing with the effects and the role of enkephalins in the nervous control of intestinal motility in mammals.

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