Abstract

Electron microscopic analyses of whole pellet depths confirm the claim that large dense-core vesicles (750A) can be isolated from bovine splenic nerve at a routine purity of 80–90%. After a minimal 10 min post-mortem delay at the slaughterhouse, essentially all vesicles in cold control preparations possess a homogeneous, finely granular, electron-dense matrix. This appearance is maintained after brief incubation with ATP at 30 °C, even though a newly discovered ATP-insensitive norepinephrine (NE) pool (20%) is rapidly and completely lost. Subsequent depletion of the remaining NE (80%) in the slower ATP-sensitive pool is paralleled by proportional decrements in vesicle matrix density.

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