Abstract

The coexistence of two neuronally-localised peptides, substance P and thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), in descending serotoninergic nerve fibres to the spinal cord was investigated using immunocytochemical and biochemical methods. Substance P-like material in the spinal cord was shown to be identical to the undecapeptide substance P by the criteria of gel filtration, high performance liquid chromatography and behaviour in substance P specific radioimmunoassays. Immunocytochemical staining for 5-hydroxytryptamine, substance P, and TRH showed that all three substances had a similar distribution in nerve fibres and terminals in the ventral and lateral grey matter of the spinal cord. After treatment with the serotonin neurotoxin 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine, neuronal elements containing 5-hydroxytryptamine, substance P and TRH degenerated and disappeared from these parts of the spinal cord in parallel with one another. Biochemical measurements of 5-hydroxytryptamine, substance P and TRH in the spinal cord after treatment with 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine confirmed that these three substances were all depleted from the ventral horn and, in addition, showed that there was a small depletion of substance P from the dorsal horn. Two other neuropeptides, somatostatin and methionine-enkephalin were not depleted from the spinal cord by treatment with 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine nor was substance P in other parts of the brain. Substance P in the spinal cord was unaffected by 6-hydroxydopamine, a drug known to destroy catecholamine-containing neurones. These results are consistent with coexistence of substance P and TRH together with 5-hydroxytryptamine in the descending axons and terminals of bulbospinal neurones.

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