Abstract

Five neuropeptides: Substance P (SP), Neurokinin A (NKA), Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide (CGRP), Neuropeptide Y (NPY) and Vasoactive Intestinal Polypeptide (VIP), were measured in the saliva of eight subjects. The saliva was collected using different stimulation techniques: whole resting saliva, whole paraffin stimulated saliva, whole citric acid stimulated saliva and parotid saliva of different secretion rates -0.25 mL/min, 0.50 mL/min and 1.00 mL/min, also stimulated by citric acid. The neuropeptides were analysed by radioimmunoassay. The results showed that the concentration of all neuropeptides decreased significantly, two- to four-fold (CGRP up to 16-fold) in whole saliva, when the salivary secretion rates increased six- to eight-fold due to stimulation. However, the amounts of all neuropeptides released over time into the whole saliva increased two- to five-fold (ten-fold for CGRP) as the volumes of saliva increased due to chewing-stimulation as compared to resting saliva or citric acid stimulated saliva. There was also more CGRP in the resting saliva than in the citric acid stimulated saliva. The concentration of CGRP in the parotid saliva decreased three- to ten-fold when the salivary flow increased, whereas the concentration of NKA increased three- to four-fold and that of NPY almost two-fold under the same conditions. The concentrations of SP and VIP did not change in the different flows of parotid saliva. The release of all neuropeptides in the parotid saliva over time showed significant increases (3-14-fold) when the secretion rates increased except CGRP, which showed no changes at all. We concluded that neuropeptides are continuously released into the saliva. Their amounts increase with stimulation, but they are diluted by the increased volume of saliva, and they are also affected by the mode of stimulation-muscular activity leads to a greater release than citric acid stimulation. As the neuropeptides play an important role in the control of salivary secretory mechanisms, their normal occurrence and release are of fundamental importance for the understanding of the function of the salivary glands.

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