Abstract
The anatomical distribution of Substance P (SP) has been investigated since the development of antibodies against it in the 1970s. Although initial studies were performed with antibodies that also recognised the other endogenous neurokinins, most of the initial descriptions are surprisingly still valid today. In this review, we provide an integrated overview of the pathways containing SP in the central and peripheral nervous systems. The highest densities of SP immunoreactivity occur in the superficial dorsal horn of the spinal cord, in the substantia nigra and in the medial amygdaloid nucleus. In the peripheral nervous system, SP occurs in high concentrations in small diameter primary sensory fibres and in the enteric nervous system. SP is extensively co-localised with classical transmitters and other neuropeptides. In the spinal cord, SP immunoreactive axonal boutons are preferentially presynaptic to neurons expressing the SP receptor, suggesting that the neurokinin acts at a short distance from the release site. In contrast, in the periphery, the situation probably differs in the autonomic ganglia, where the targets are directly innervated by SP, and in other peripheral territories, where SP has to diffuse through the connective tissue to reach the structures expressing the receptor.
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