Abstract

The objective of the present study was to characterize further the vagal afferent fibers in the rat esophagus, particularly those in its uppermost part, their cell bodies in vagal sensory ganglia, and their central projections. We applied immunohistochemistry for calretinin, calbindin, and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP); retrograde tracing with FluoroGold; and transganglionic tracing with wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase in combination with neurectomies. Vagal terminal structures in the muscularis propria of the whole esophagus consisted of calretinin-immunoreactive intraganglionic laminar endings that were linked to cervical vagal and recurrent laryngeal nerve pathways. The mucosa of the uppermost esophagus was innervated by a very dense net of longitudinally arranged, calretinin-positive fibers that were depleted by section of the superior laryngeal nerve. Distal to this area, the mucosa was virtually devoid of calretinin-immunoreactive vagal afferents. Calretinin-positive mucosal fibers in the upper cervical esophagus were classified into four types. One type, the finger-like endings, was sometimes immunoreactive also for CGRP. About one-third of cell bodies in vagal sensory ganglia retrogradely labeled from the upper cervical esophagus expressed CGRP, whereas two-thirds coexpressed calretinin and calbindin but not CGRP. In addition to the central subnucleus of the nucleus of the solitary tract, vagal afferents from the upper cervical esophagus also projected heavily to the interstitial subnucleus. This additional projection was attributed to mucosal afferents traveling through the superior laryngeal nerve. The present study provides a possible morphological basis for bronchopulmonary and aversive reflexes elicited upon stimulation of the esophagus.

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