Lymph node nerve endings have been studied in 1- to 48-day-old mice. Serial sections of Epon-embedded lymph nodes were observed under the electron microscope to find the nerve endings. Most lymph node nerve fibers finally reach the smooth muscle cells of arterioles and muscular venules. Both kinds of vascular endings are similar, although endings are less numerous on venules. Nerve endings consist of one or more nerve processes surrounded by a usually incomplete Schwann cell sheath; frequently, axons show wide areas directly facing the muscle cells. The distance between such a naked axon and a myocyte ranges from 100 to 800 nm. Small granulated and clear vesicles are especially abundant in varicosities of nerve processes that are located very close to muscle cells. Nerve endings of lymph node vasculature probably correspond to vasomotor sympathetic adrenergic endings, regulating the degree of contraction of vessels which have a muscular layer. Other kinds of nerve endings also exist in lymph nodes: some axons appear free in the stroma and contact the surfaces of reticular cells; the latter also extend delicate cytoplasmic processes that surround the axons. The functional significance of nerve cell-reticular cell contacts is unknown.
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