Abstract

We report the presence of two regulatory peptides, substance P and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), in the ureter and their localisation by both light- and electron-microscopy to autonomic nerves. VIP- and substance P-like immunoreactive nerves showed, in general, a similar anatomical distribution in the various layers of the ureter. Immunoreactive nerves were observed running along the smooth muscle coat, parallel to muscle bundles, around blood vessels and in the submucosa, particularly beneath the epithelium. In addition, scattered VIP-like immunoreactive ganglion cells and nerve fibres were seen in adventitial ganglia around the most distal part of the ureter and ureter-bladder junction in the cat. The guinea-pig ureter contained principally substance P-like immunoreactivity, whereas the cat ureter possessed mainly VIP-like material. The distribution of adrenergic and cholinergic nerves was compared with those containing peptides. Peptide-containing nerves had a more extensive distribution than adrenergic ones, which were mainly associated with blood vessels; however, cholinergic nerves were often localised in the same areas as those possessing peptides. Conventional electron microscopy revealed that separate p-type (peptidergic) and cholinergic nerve terminals were frequently present in the same nerve bundles, although in the cat ureter some 50% of the p-type profiles contained a mixed population of vesicles, characteristic of both cholinergic and p-type nerves. VIP- and substance P-like immunoreactivity were also localised at the ultrastructural level by means of a gold-labelled goat-antirabbit serum.

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