Abstract
Abstract— Phenylethanolamine N‐methyltransferase (PNMT) and adrenaline (A) have been studied in organ cultures of neonatal rat sympathetic ganglia. Organ culture for 2 days without added nerve growth factor (NGF) caused a fall in noradrenaline (NA) and PNMT contents but there was no change in dopamine (DA) or A contents compared to controls. However, in the presence of dexamethasone, there was a marked increase in both PNMT activity and A content, but no change in NA or DA content. Addition of NGF to cultures stimulated with dexamethasone caused no further significant change in PNMT activity or A content, whereas both NA and DA were increased. Prolonged culture without NGF, in the presence of dexamethasone resulted in reductions in both NA and DA content, but the high levels of PNMT activity and A content were sustained. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that both PNMT and A are not contained in the noradrenergic cell bodies but are located chiefly within the small intensely fluorescent cells in sympathetic ganglia.
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