Abstract

The occurrence and distribution of 4-aminobutyrate:2 oxoglutarate transaminase (GABA-t) activity were examined in the rat thymus of normal and immunostimulated rats using biochemical and histoenzymatical methods. Specific GABA-t reactivity was confined primarily to the arteries and, to a lesser extent, to the veins. Only a few activities could be observed in association with the subcapsular and medullar part of the parenchyma and nerve fibers. GABA-t was considered a linking enzyme between the immune and the nervous system and it was studied with the aim of analyzing the relationships between these two systems. Our findings indicate that the GABA-t activity in the thymus is specifically located in the wall of the blood vessels. Moreover, our results demonstrate the presence of a GABA-t activity in the peripheral blood vessels. Treatment with interleukin 1β induces an increase of protein content of the amounts of GABA-t biochemically assayed and of the levels of histoenzymatically stained GABA-t. Furthermore, staining of the different structures of the thymus in treated or untreated rats shows that the significant modifications concern the parenchyma, the structures resembling nerve fibers and finally, the whole thymus. On the contrary, the highest activity of the GABA-t is located in the walls of arteries, veins and lymphatic vessels.

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