Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)
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Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. Med. · Sep 1988
Comparative StudyComparison of effects of surgical and chemical sympathectomy on beta adrenergic and muscarinic receptors of parotid gland of young and adult rats.
Surgical (removal of a superior cervical ganglion) or chemical [(administration of a single dose of 6 hydroxydopamine (6 OHDA) (50 mg/kg dose body wt)] sympathectomy of rats at 2 or 8 days of age resulted in an increase in [3H]DHA binding of membranes of parotid gland of young rats (age range 21 days to 48 days). The increase progressed with postnatal age; at 21 days of age (surgical sympathectomy), it was 13%; at 32 days of age with 6 OHDA, it was as much as 34%, but only 26% at 42 days of age with surgical sympathectomy. No change in [3H]QNB binding was observed at any postnatal ages following neonatal sympathectomy. ⋯ In the adult, however, the duration of the denervation was of no importance since change in number of beta adrenoceptors did not occur at 1, 2, 3, or 4 weeks after surgical denervation but did occur after only 1 week after of reserpine-induced denervation. QNB binding was decreased with surgical sympathectomy as well as reserpine-induced sympathectomy of adult parotid gland; norepinephrine concentration was decreased to levels of a few percent of innervated glands. The relation between development of glandular supersensitivity and increase in beta adrenoceptors is discussed.