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. 1981 Nov 1;1(11):1304–1311. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.01-11-01304.1981

Use of an experimental autoimmune model to define nerve growth factor dependency of peripheral and central substance P-containing neurons in the rat

M Ross, S Lofstrandh, PD Gorin, EM Johnson, JP Schwartz
PMCID: PMC6564222  PMID: 6171632

Abstract

Rats exposed to maternal antibodies against nerve growth factor (NGF) in utero and in milk have been used to investigate the developmental dependency of various substance P-containing neurons on NGF. Substance P and other peptides were measured by radioimmunoassays. The substance P content of sensory ganglia, spinal cord, and skin was depleted 40 to 60% in anti-NGF-treated rats. These results demonstrate the NGF dependence of substance P-containing neurons in sensory ganglia. Opiate binding in the spinal cord was not changed despite the large depletion in substance P: the Bmax and KD were the same in control and treated animals. The results suggest that opiate receptors may not be located presynaptically on substance P-containing primary afferents. Among the peripheral tissues which were assayed (ileum, submaxillary gland, retina, and adrenal), substance P decreased only in the adrenal, suggesting innervation by a NGF-dependent substance P-containing neuron. No changes were detected in the substance P content of nine different brain regions, in agreement with previous observations on the lack of effect of NGF on central neurons.


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