Abstract

Adenosine deaminase (ADA) was detected immunohistochemically in neuronal cell bodies of dorsal root ganglia (DRG) of the rat. ADA-immunoreactivity was confined exclusively to small type B ganglion neurons in cervical, thoracic and lumbar sensory ganglia; large type A neurons in sensory ganglia were devoid of immunostaining for ADA. It was consistently found that only a small proportion of type B neurons in DRG contain immunohistochemically detectable ADA. It is suggested that the expression of high ADA levels is a distinguishing feature of a subpopulation of type B DRG neurons and, further, that ADA in these neurons may reflect their utilization of purines (adenosine or adenine nucleotides) as transmitters or cotransmitters.

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