Abstract
Abstract—A surgical technique for sympathetically denervating the vas deferens has been evaluated biochemically. A slight fall in soluble muscle protein content and no significant change in DNA content of the operated vas deferens were found. This indicates that the surgical procedure causes only a slight degree of tissue damage and may be useful for investigating the cellular localization and properties of noradrenaline metabolizing enzymes. In three species examined (rat, guinea pig and rabbit), monoamine oxidase activity of the vas deferens fell by approximately 50 per cent after denervation. The time course of the fall in monoamine oxidase activity of rat vas deferens was parallel to that of the disappearance of noradrenaline suggesting that this proportion of the total enzyme activity had a neuronal localization. The remaining enzyme activity is presumably located extraneuronally.Significant falls in catechol‐O‐methyl transferase activity were found in rat and rabbit vas deferens after denervation but not in guinea pig. The rabbit and rat vas deferens had respectively approximately 60 and 30 per cent of the catechol‐O‐methyl transferase activity associated with the sympathetic nerves. A complete loss of DOPA decarboxylase and tyrosine hydroxylase activities occurred in rat vas deferens after denervation, suggesting that these noradrenaline synthesizing enzymes have an entirely neuronal localization.
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