Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 5, 1522-1526, Copyright © 1985 by Society for Neuroscience
Compensatory changes in contralateral sympathetic neurons of the superior cervical ganglion and in their terminals in the pineal gland following unilateral ganglionectomy
M Dornay, VH Gilad and GM Gilad
The sympathetic noradrenergic neurons of the rat superior cervical ganglia
(SCGs) provide the major source of innervation to the pineal gland. The
present study sought to determine if this sympathetic innervation can
undergo collateral sprouting following partial denervation of the pineal by
unilateral removal of the SCG (ganglionectomy), and whether such growth of
axon terminals is associated with biochemical changes in the contralateral
SCG. In the pineal gland following partial denervation, residual
noradrenergic terminals underwent compensatory changes indicative of
collateral sprouting, as evidenced by: a rapid reduction in tyrosine
hydroxylase (TH) activity and in [3H]norepinephrine (NE) uptake, to about
50% of control by 2 days, which was followed by a gradual but sustained
increase to levels of approximately 80% of control by 10 days and a
reduction in the intensity and density but not in the distribution of
fibers containing NE-induced fluorescence by 2 days, which was followed by
a sustained increase. In the contralateral SCG, choline acetyltransferase
(CAT) activity, a marker of cholinergic preganglionic terminals, was
transiently increased to about 115% of control by 4 days and returned to
control levels by 14 days after unilateral ganglionectomy; later, TH
activity in noradrenergic cell bodies was gradually increased to about 140%
of control by 10 days where it remained for up to 52 days. Unilteral
ganglionectomy combined with decentralization of the contralateral SCG by
preganglionic nerve cut prevented the compensatory changes in noradrenergic
nerve terminals within the pineal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)