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Title: Galanin nerve fibers in the rat gut: distribution, origin and projections. Author: Ekblad E, Rökaeus A, Håkanson R, Sundler F. Journal: Neuroscience; 1985 Oct; 16(2):355-63. PubMed ID: 2417157. Abstract: Galanin, a 29 amino acid peptide, was recently isolated from the porcine gut. Immunocytochemistry revealed a dense network of galanin-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the submucosa, smooth muscle layers and intramural ganglia throughout the rat gastrointestinal tract. In the smooth muscle the density of innervation was lower in the colon than in the small intestine. In the mucosa galanin-immunoreactive fibers were quite numerous in the small intestine, less numerous in the large intestine and rare in the stomach. A moderate number of galanin-immunoreactive nerve cell bodies could be detected in the myenteric ganglia throughout the digestive tract and in the submucous ganglia of the intestines. Enteric galanin-immunoreactive fibers seem to be intrinsic to the gastrointestinal tract since their distribution and frequency were unaffected after extrinsic denervation (chemical sympathectomy, vagal denervation or clamping of nerves running within the mesenterium). Myectomy at the mid-jejunal level resulted in a total loss of galanin-immunoreactive nerve fibers 5 mm anally to the lesion with a gradual return of galanin-immunoreactive fibers up to 15-20 mm further anally; there was no overt loss of fibers orally. The findings indicate that myenteric galanin-immunoreactive neurones issue long descending projections that terminate either within the myenteric ganglia or in the smooth muscle.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]