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. 1988 Jun 28;454(1-2):11-30.
doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(88)90799-8.

Neuronal and endothelial sites of acetylcholine synthesis and release associated with microvessels in rat cerebral cortex: ultrastructural and neurochemical studies

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Neuronal and endothelial sites of acetylcholine synthesis and release associated with microvessels in rat cerebral cortex: ultrastructural and neurochemical studies

S P Arnerić et al. Brain Res. .
Free article

Abstract

We sought to establish what proportion of the cholinergic innervation of the cerebral cortex (CX) is associated with intraparenchymal blood vessels by using immunocytochemical and neurochemical techniques, and whether [3H]acetylcholine ([3H]ACh) is synthesized and released by elements associated with cortical microvessels (MV). MVs and, for comparison, tissue homogenates were prepared using sucrose gradient/differential ultracentrifugation methods. Efficacy of the separation technique was indicated by the activity of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (up to 29.2-fold enrichment), an endothelial cell marker enzyme, in the MV fraction and microscopy. The size of isolated microvessels ranged from 5 to 40 micron (o.d.) with 67.7% of the vessels less than 10 micron and 32.2% between 11 and 40 micron (690 vessels measured from 4 animals). By electron microscopy immunoreactive choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), the biosynthetic enzyme for ACh, was localized to: (a) axons and axon terminals opposed to the basal laminae of capillaries and small arterioles, and (b) capillary endothelial cells. ChAT-labeled elements associated with MVs were most prominent in layers I, III and V of the CX consistent with the local pattern of cholinergic innervation. The absolute amount of ACh synthesized (pmol Ach/100 mg wet wt.) by elements associated with cortical MVs was relatively small (2.3% total cortical homogenate activity). Inhibition of MV ChAT activity to 5% of control by the specific ChAT inhibitor, 4-naphthylvinylpyridine, and HPLC analysis of the product, indicated that authentic ACh was measured. Other tissues similarly synthesized small amounts of ACh relative to the CX, caudate nucleus (CN, 2.4%), cerebellum (CRB, 1.4%) and liver (LIV, 3.9%). Consistent with the known extent of the cholinergic innervation of the tissues examined, the rank order of ChAT associated for both MVs and homogenate were: CN greater than CX much greater than CRB greater than LIV. However, based on the specific activities of ChAT, cortical MVs have the remarkable capacity to synthesize ACh at rates 95% greater than cortical (S1 fraction) homogenate (59.0 +/- 3.5 nmol/mg protein/40 min; n = 7), which is enriched in nerve terminals. Except for LV (+11%), other tissues also had remarkably high ChAT activity in MV (% above corresponding homogenate; P less than 0.05, n = 5): CN (+269) and CRB (+313). Release of [3H]ACh from MVs and, for comparison, nerve terminals were graded to K+ depolarization stimulus (5-55 mM), maximal with 55 mM K+ and Ca2+ dependent.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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