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Effect of reserpine treatment and hypophysectomy on the nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity and NADPH-diaphorase staining in the rat adrenal gland

✍ Scribed by Afework, Mekbeb ;Burnstock, Geoffrey


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
445 KB
Volume
246
Category
Article
ISSN
0003-276X

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✦ Synopsis


Background:

The presence of nitric-oxide-synthesising neurons in the adrenal gland has recently been described by the immunohistochemical and/or enzyme histochemical demonstration of its synthesising enzyme, nitric oxide synthase (nos; afework et al. 1994. cell tissue res,276:133-141). in the present report, these neurons have been examined by studying the changes that occur during conditions known to affect the adrenal gland.

Methods:

By using nos immunohistochemistry and nadph-diaphorase histochemistry, levels of nos and/or nadph-diaphorase containing cellular elements in the adrenal gland were studied in rats subjected to either reserpine treatment or hypophysectomy as compared with the controls.

Results:

Reserpine treatment caused a significant decrease in immunoreactivity to the neuronal isoform of nos in the nerve fibres that innervate adrenal medullary cells. hypophysectomy did not cause any change in the nos immunoreactivity, although it eliminated most of the nadph-diaphorase-staining non-nos-immunoreactive cortical cells.

Conclusions:

The reduction in the level of nos in the reserpine treated rats may indicate a decrease in the production of nitric oxide in the gland; this action may be related to the increase in the biosynthesis and secretion of catecholamine, which follows treatment with the drug. the reduction in the nadph-diaphorase-positive cells may reflect the elimination of adrenal cortical cells that occurs after hypophysectomy, whereas hypophysectomy by itself appears to have no effect on the level of production of nitric oxide in the gland.