Abstract

Helospectin and pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide (PACAP), both recently isolated from the poisonous saliva of the American lizard or from ovine hypothalamus respectively, belong to the same peptide family as vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), peptide histidine methionine (PHM) and glucagon. In the present study, occurrence and distribution patterns of nerve fibers containing helospectin- and PACAP-like immunoreactivity in the human vagina were investigated by immunohistochemistry. Double immunofluorescent labeling showed that helospectin or PACAP are co-expressed with VIP and PHM within subpopulations of VIP-immunoreactive nerve fibers. Nervous structures containing helospectin and VIP were particularly numerous in the internal mucous lining of the vagina and in free epithelial nerve endings, and an abundant network of nerve fibers surrounding blood vessels was detected. Nerve fibers co-expressing PACAP and VIP were more numerous than those expressing helospectin and VIP and were mainly found in close association with blood vessels as well as beneath and within the epithelium. Due to the lack of non-rabbit helospectin or PACAP antibodies, possible co-localizations between these two peptides could not be investigated at this time. The localizations demonstrated suggest possible roles of the two peptides in the regulation of local blood flow and lubrication of the vagina.

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