Nervous regulation of the tone of the retractor penis muscle in the goat

Abstract
The nervous control of the retractor penis muscle (rp) was investigated in the anaesthetized goat. Also, isolated field stimulated strips of the muscle were studied. The noradrenaline (NA) and acetylcholine (ACh) content of the rp was determined, and histochemistry for adrenergic and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) positive nerves was performed. The muscle exhibited spontaneous activity that persisted after section of all nerves. There was, however, also a tendency of the activity to follow the general vasomotor tone, which disappeared after section of the sympathetic chains. The excitatory adrenergic nerves which innervate the muscle come from the sympathetic chains and run along the pudendal, the hypogastric and the pelvic nerves. The rp has a dense network of adrenergic fibres and is very sensitive to excitatory adrenergic stimulation. It has a fairly large NA content, which is higher in old goats (5.95 ± 0.42 μgg‐1) than in young goats (2.87 ± 0.78 μg g‐1). Inhibitory non‐adrenergic non‐cholinergic (NANC) innervation reaches it via the pelvic and the hypogastric nerves. The maximum inhibitory response is reached at low frequencies (2–4 Hz). Cholinergic prejunctional inhibition of the excitatory response to sympathetic chain stimulation was effected by simultaneous stimulation of the hypogastric nerves.In vitroexperiments confirmed the presence of endogenous cholinergic muscarinic suppression of the excitatory adrenergic neurotransmission. Significant amounts of ACh (0.81 7 plusmn; 0.18 μg g‐1) are present in the muscle, and it contains strongly AChE positive nerve fibres and nerve cell bodies. It is concluded that the goat rp is innervated by sympathetic adrenergic excitatory nerves and parasympathetic NANC inhibitory nerves. It further has a direct sympathetic inhibitory NANC innervation, and an indirect inhibitory cholinergic innervation which at least in part is sympathetic.

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