Gustatory trophic action of arterial chemosensory neurones in the cat.
- 1 November 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 356 (1) , 49-64
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1984.sp015452
Abstract
The proximal stump of the carotid sinus nerve (c.s.n.) branch of cranial nerve IX was surgically cross-anastomosed to the distal stump of the lingual nerve (l.n.) branch of the same cranial nerve to test the ability of regenerating c.s.n. axons to reinnervate and induce taste buds on cat circumvallate papillae. The l.n. branch of the 9th nerve, which normallyinnervates circumvallate papillae, was directed away from the tongue by suturing it to the distal stump of the c.s.n. Animals with normal and re-anastomosed (cut, then resutured) l.n. served as control preparations. Months (2-19) following cross-anastomosis, circumvallate papillae contained 59.8 .+-. 9.1% (mean .+-. SE of mean) of the normal incidence of taste buds, indicating that axons possessing specific gustatory trophic properties had reinnervated the epithelium. Further experimentation was concerned with confirming the identity of the putative foreign axons which reinnervated the taste buds. Radiolabeled axoplasmic transport and autoradiography showed that 89 .+-. 4.4% of the taste buds in cross-anastomosed, and 97 .+-. 2.1% in normal preparations were innervated by axons from the principal sensory ganglion (petrosal) of the 9th nerve (P > 0.05). Whole-nerve recordings in cross-anastomosed preparations demonstrated gustatory activity in the transposed c.s.n., which was similar to responses present in normal and re-anastomosed l.n. preparations. The largest response was evoked by 4 M NaCl, followed by 1 M NH4Cl and 0.2 M-quinine HCl. Sucrose (0.5 M) elicited insignificant nerve activity. In normal animals, gustatory or mechanical stimulation did not alter cardiopulmonary function, but in bilaterally cross-anastomosed preparations, gustatory stimuli produced respiratory excitation while mechanical stimulation resulted in reductions in blood pressure and respiratory inhibition. Following cross-anastomosis, apparently arterial chemosensory axons innervate taste buds and barosensory axons innervate tongue mechanoreceptors (which normally evoke cardiopulmonary reflexes from the carotid body and carotid sinus, respectively). Arterial chemosensory neurons share with gustatory chemosensory neurons a trophic function essential for the development and maintenance of taste buds.This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
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