Abstract

Antibody microprobes were used to study release of immunoreactive neurokinins in the dorsal horn of the anaesthetized spinal cat following sustained isometric contraction of ipsilateral hindlimb muscles. Microprobes had immobilized antibodies to neurokinin A (NKA) on their outer surfaces and bound a proportion of released molecules when inserted in the central nervous system. Bound molecules were detected in autoradiographs as zones of reduced binding of 125I-NKA in which microprobes were incubated after withdrawal from the spinal cord. The left hindlimb was immobilized using an epoxy bandage splint and isometric contraction of muscles induced by intermittent tetanic stimulation of a ventral root. A basal presence of immunoreactive neurokinins was detected and this was increased by sustained isometric muscle contraction. It is probable that ergoreceptors contain and release neurokinins.

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