Abstract

Retrograde tracing with a fluorescent dye (Fast Blue) combined with immunohistochemistry was used to identify putative neurotransmitter(s) at the phrenic motor nucleus in the cat. Fast Blue was injected bilaterally into the diaphragm of five cats, where each phrenic nerve enters the muscle. Seven days later the animals were perfusion fixed and tissue sections from the fourth, fifth, and sixth cervical spinal cord segments were analyzed using a fluorescence microscope. Retrogradely labeled fluorescent phrenic motor neuron cell bodies appeared in all of the segments but primarily in sections from the fifth segment. The same or adjacent transverse sections were then used for the demonstration of the distribution of the neurotransmitters 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), substance P, and thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) in the area of the phrenic motor nucleus using the indirect immunofluorescence technique. The most conspicuous neurotransmitters found at the phrenic motor nucleus were 5-HT and substance P. We observed dense and diffuse fiber networks throughout the ventral horn which contains the phrenic motor nucleus. These fibers contained varicosities in close proximity to phrenic motor neurons. In addition to 5-HT- and substance P-containing nerve endings, some fibers containing TRH were also found in the area of the phrenic motor nucleus. These results are consistent with earlier physiological data suggesting that 5-HT, substance P, and TRH are important neurotransmitters and/or neuromodulators involved in central control of respiration.

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