Abstract: | The effect of chemical deafferentation, vagotomy(VGX), and gangliosympathectomy (GSX) on the density offibers containing calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)and substance P (Sub.P) in the rat gastric wall was studied. Chemical deafferentation bycapsaicin abolished the density of CGRP-immunoreactive(IR) fibers, not Sub.P-IR fibers. Ten days after VGX,the density of CGRP-IR or Sub.P-IR fibers in the mucosa was largely reduced, while no reductionof CGRP-IR and Sub.P-IR fibers was seen in submucosaland muscular layers. GSX significantly reduced thedensity of CGRP-IR fibers in the mucosa and caused a moderate decrease in the fibers in submucosaland muscular layers. Pretreatment with6-hydroxydopamine, a neurotoxin for noradrenergicnerves, did not affect the density of CGRP-IR fibers inthe gastric wall. The density of Sub.P-IR fibers in thegastric wall was not affected by GSX. These studiesindicate that the CGRP-IR and Sub.P-IR fibers in themucosa are susceptible to extrinsic nerve denervation compared with those in the submucosa and musclelayers, that a major portion of the CGRP-IR fibers inthe mucosa is of both vagal and spinal origin, and thata major portion of the Sub.P-IR fibers in the mucosa is of vagal origin. Furthermore, thepresent results support that CGRP-IR fibers, notSub.P-IR fibers, in the rat stomach arecapsaicin-sensitive. |