High amounts of acetylcholine (ACh) and its synthesising enzyme choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) have been detected in the placenta. Since the placenta is not innervated by extrinsic or intrinsic cholinergic neurons, placental ACh and ChAT originate from non-neuronal sources. In neurons, cytoplasmic ACh is imported into synaptic vesicles by the vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT), and released through vesicular exocytosis. In view of the coordinate expression of VAChT and ChAT from the "cholinergic gene locus" in neurons, we asked whether VAChT is coexpressed with ChAT in rat placenta, and investigated this issue by means of RT-PCR, in situ hybridisation, western blot and immunohistochemistry. Messenger RNA and protein of the common type of ChAT (cChAT), its splice variant peripheral ChAT (pChAT), and VAChT were detected in rat placenta with RT-PCR and western blot. ChAT in situ hybridisation signal and immunoreactivity for cChAT and pChAT were observed in nearly all placental cell types, while VAChT mRNA and immunolabelling were detected in the trophoblast, mesenchymal cells and the visceral yolk sac epithelial cells. While ChAT is nearly ubiquitously expressed in rat placenta, VAChT immunoreactivity is localised cell type specifically, implying that both vesicular and non-vesicular ACh release machineries prevail in placental cell types.
Sensory ganglia (trigeminal, jugular, nodose, cervical and lumbar dorsal root ganglia) of the guinea-pig were investigated for the presence of a constitutive carbon monoxide-generating enzyme, heme oxygenase-2 (HO-2). A 36-kDa HO-2 immunoreactive protein was identified by Western blotting in protein extracts from dorsal root ganglia and localized by immunohistochemistry to all neuronal perikarya, including both substance P-positive and substance P-negative neurons, in all ganglia investigated. This ubiquitous distribution points to a general requirement for HO-2 in primary afferent neurons rather than to an association with a specific functionally defined subpopulation. Neither the axons of the sensory neurons nor their peripheral terminals in the skin and around visceral arteries were HO-2 immunoreactive. Explants of dorsal root ganglia with crushes placed on the dorsal roots showed accumulation of the neuropeptide, substance P, at the ganglionic side of the crush, but these axons were non-reactive to HO-2, indicating that there is no substantial transport of HO-2 towards the central ending of these sensory neurons. Collectively, the findings suggest that HO-2 exerts it major effects within the sensory ganglia themselves.
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