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Volume 17, Number 11,
Issue of June 1, 1997
pp. 4275-4281
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Norepinephrine Facilitates the Development of the Murine Sweat
Response But Is Not Essential
Received Oct. 15, 1996; revised March 3, 1997; accepted March 19, 1997.
A. Tsahai Tafari,
Steven A. Thomas, and
Richard D. Palmiter
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Biochemistry,
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195-7370
During development, the sympathetic neurons innervating sweat
glands undergo a neurotransmitter switch from noradrenergic to
cholinergic between postnatal day (P) 4, when the sympathetic neurons
first contact the sweat glands, and P21. Several in
vitro experiments suggest that norepinephrine (NE), produced by
sympathetic neurons, stimulates sweat glands to produce a factor that
then induces the phenotypic switch. We tested this hypothesis in
vivo using dopamine -hydroxylase-deficient mice (DBH / ),
which are unable to synthesize NE and epinephrine, and tyrosine
hydroxylase-deficient mice (TH / ), which are unable to synthesize
any catecholamines. The cholinergic agonist pilocarpine and
electrostimulation of the sciatic nerve both elicited a sweat response
in adult DBH / mice that was indistinguishable from the response of
controls, and the cholinergic antagonist atropine effectively blocked
these responses. We did note, however, a 1- to 2-week delay in the
acquisition of the sweat response in DBH / mice. Although
diminished in magnitude, a sweat response to pilocarpine was also noted
in TH / mice at P21. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated that TH and vasoactive intestinal peptide were detectable at P14 and increased to
adult levels by P21 in DBH +/ and DBH / mice. These observations indicate that NE is not essential for the acquisition of the
cholinergic phenotype, but it may facilitate its postnatal
development.
Key words:
norepinephrine;
acetylcholine;
sweat gland factor;
mouse;
sweating;
dopamine -hydroxylase;
tyrosine hydroxylase;
vasoactive
intestinal peptide
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