Abstract

The pattern of distribution and co-localization of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and quinacrine fluorescence (indicative of vesicular adenosine 5'-triphosphate, ATP), and co-localization of NADPH-diaphorase (NADPH-d) activity and NOS-immunoreactivity in the myenteric plexus of pre-term human fetal (6-17 weeks of gestation) stomach and small intestine was examined using immunohistochemical and histochemical techniques. In all stages of gestation investigated, NOS-immunoreactive and NADPH-d-reactive myenteric neurons and nerve fibres were seen in the fetal intestine and stomach. However, in fetuses of 6-10 weeks of gestation, only 15% of the NADPH-d-positive myenteric neurons were NOS-immunoreactive, whereas a 100% co-localization was found in samples of 12-17 weeks of gestation. Quinacrine fluorescent myenteric neurons and nerve fibres were found only in the fetal intestine of 12-17 weeks of gestation, of which 25% of the NADPH-d-positive myenteric neurons in these samples were quinacrine fluorescent. These findings demonstrate the presence and co-localization of markers for nitric oxide (NO)- and ATP-utilizing myenteric neurons and nerve fibres in the early stages of gestation, suggesting possible co-transmitter and/or trophic roles of ATP and NO in the process of development and maturity of human myenteric neurons. In addition, the fact that only a small percentage of NADPH-d-reactive myenteric neurons express NOS immunoreactivity at 6-10 weeks of gestation confirms that NADPH-d-reactivity does not always represent NOS activity.

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