Abstract

The lumbar sympathetic ganglia and the interganglionic interconnecting nerves of untreated rats and rats treated with Colchicine (COL) or Vinblastine (VIN) were studied with the help of the Falck-Hillarp fluorescence technique and electron microscopy. Both in untreated and drug treated rats there was a good correlation between the distribution of noradrenaline (NA) specific fluorescence and granular vesicles supporting the previous view that the granular vesicles represent the main intraneuronal NA storage sites. The granular vesicles were present both in the cell bodies—mainly in the peripheral part of the cytoplasm— and in the axons of untreated rats. After local application of COL or VIN on the ganglia there was a marked increase in fluorescence intensity and number of granular vesicles in many cell bodies. Often increased number of granular vesicles were found in the neighbourhood of the Golgi apparatus, in which region only few such vesicles are found in untreated rats. In some cell bodies high numbers of granular vesicles could be found all over the cytoplasm.

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