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Immunohistochemical localization of enkephalin in rat brain and spinal cord

817

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45

References

1978

Year

TLDR

The distribution of immunoreactive enkephalin in rat brain and spinal cord was mapped by immunoperoxidase staining using antiserum to Leu‑5 and Met‑5 enkephalins. Immunoreactive enkephalin was detected in nerve fibers, terminals, and cell bodies throughout many CNS regions, with staining patterns closely matching opiate receptor distribution, thereby supporting roles in pain modulation and neuroendocrine regulation, while cell bodies were sparsely distributed in several areas.

Abstract

Abstract The distribution of immunoreactive enkephalin in rat brain and spinal cord was studied by immunoperoxidase staining using antiserum to leucine‐enkephalin ([Leu 5 ]‐enkephalin) or methionine‐enkephalin ([Met 5 ]‐enkephalin). Immunoreactive staining for both enkephalins was similarly observed in nerve fibers, terminals and cell bodies in many regions of the central nervous system. Staining of perikarya was detected in hypophysectomized rats or colchicine pretretated rats. The regions of localization for enkephalin fibers and terminals include in the forebrain: lateral septum, central nucleus of the amygdala, area CA2 of the hippocampus, certain regions of the cortex, corpus striatum, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, hypothalamus including median eminence, thalamus and subthalamus; in the midbrain: nucleus interpeduncularis, periaqueductal gray and reticular formation; in the hind brain: nucleus parabrachialis, locus ceruleus, nuclei raphes, nucleus cochlearis, nuclear tractus solitarii, nucleus spinalis nervi trigemini, motor nuclei of certain cranial nerves, nucleus commissuralis and formatio reticularis; and in the spinal cord the substantia gelatinosa. In contrast enkephalin cell bodies appear sparsely distributed in the telencephalon, diencephelon, mensencephalon and rhombencephalon. The results of the histochemical staining show that certain structures which positively stain for enkephalin closely correspond to the distribution of opiate receptors in the brain and thus support the concept that the endogenous opiate peptides are involved in the perception of pain and analgesia. The localization of enkephalin in the preoptic‐hypothalamic region together with the presence of enkephalin perikarya in the paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei suggest a role of enkephalin in the regulation of neuroendocrine functions.

References

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