Abstract

It has been reported previously that rat myenteric neurons have neurofilament (NF) immunoreactivity that differs from the brain. Now the result of a study of neurofilaments and intermediate filament immunoreactivity in human colon and ileum using a panel of antibodies and indirect immunofluorescence techniques is reported here. Results with polyclonal neurofilament antisera showed positive immunoreactivity in subsets of myenteric neurons. Results with peripherin and alpha-internexin showed immunoreactivity in some neurons that contained neurofilaments and in many that were neurofilament negative, similar to our observations in rat. Some monoclonal antibodies to epitopes on NF-M and NF-H demonstrated weak or negative immunoreactivity in human myenteric neurons yet showed positive immunoreactivity in brain. Some of these antibodies are phosphorylation dependent, suggesting NF-M and NF-H epitopes in myenteric neurons are not as phosphorylated as in brain; other antibodies are phosphorylation independent, suggesting other differences or masking of epitopes. In summary, neurofilaments are present in a subset of myenteric neurons. In those human myenteric neurons that contain them, the neurofilaments appear immunologically distinct from those in the brain.

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