Abstract

Levels of substance P (sP), peptide-histidine-isoleucine (PHI), vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), cholecystokinin (CCK), neurotensin (NT), bombesin (BOM) and methionine-enkephalin (Met-Enk) like immunoreactivity were measured in cat, dog, primate and sloth cervical, thoracic, lumbar and sacral dorsal and ventral horns and dorsal root ganglia. The levels of peptides in the cat sacral cord and the principal peaks of immunoreactivity on a 10–60% acetonitrile gradient on a C 18 reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) were sP (sP 1–11: 369 ng/g), PHI (PHI: 271 ng/g), VIP (VIP 1–28: 210 ng/g), Met-Enk (Met 1–5 and extended forms: 257 ng/g), BOM (BOM 1–10 and GRP 1–27: 20 ng/g), CCK (CCK-8: 15 ng/g) and NT (NT 1–13: 10 ng/g). Consideration of the rostrocaudal levels revealed an approximately even distribution with the exception of VIP and PHI which showed sacral/cervical ratios of 79 and 63. For sP, Met-Enk and BOM dorsal/ventral ratios were > 1 at all spinal levels. For VIP, PHI and CCK these ratios were > 1 only in the sacral cord. Dorsal root ganglion (DRG) levels of sP, VIP, PHI were readily measurable in single ganglia and covaried with the respective levels in the dorsal cord. Pooled samples of spinal ganglia and the trigeminal ganglia revealed that the relative levels of peptide immunoreactivity were: sP (25 ng/g); VIP (26 ng/g); PHI (28 ng/g); Met-Enk (6 ng/g); CCK (2 ng/g); NT (1 ng/g); and BOM (1 ng/g).

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