Publication | Open Access
The Influence of Non-Neuronal Cells on Catecholamine and Acetylcholine Synthesis and Accumulation in Cultures of Dissociated Sympathetic Neurons
276
Citations
14
References
1974
Year
NeurotransmitterNeurotransmissionSympathetic GangliaRadioactive CholinePeripheral Nervous SystemSympathetic Nervous SystemNeurochemistryAcetylcholine SynthesisHealth SciencesNeuropharmacologyNervous SystemPharmacologyNeurophysiologyNon-neuronal CellsPhysiologyNeuroscienceDissociated Sympathetic NeuronsCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
The effects of several non-neuronal cell types on neurotransmitter synthesis in cultures of dissociated sympathetic neurons from the new-born rat were studied. Acetylcholine synthesis from radioactive choline was increased 100- to 1000-fold in the presence of non-neuronal cells from sympathetic ganglia. This increase was roughly dependent on the number of ganglionic non-neuronal cells present. The effect did not appear to be due to an increased plating efficiency of neurons, since the non-neuronal cells were capable of increasing acetylcholine synthesis after only 48-hr contact with neurons that had been previously grown without non-neuronal cells for 2 weeks. C6 rat glioma cells were also able to stimulate acetylcholine synthesis, but 3T3 mouse fibroblast cells had little or no effect. None of the non-neuronal cell types synthesized detectable acetylcholine in the absence of the neurons. The ganglionic non-neuronal cells had no significant effect on catecholamine synthesis (which occurs in the absence of non-neuronal cells).
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