PMID: 8613789Jan 1, 1996Paper

Differential regulation of adrenergic receptor development by sympathetic innervation

The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience
Beth A HabeckerS C Landis

Abstract

Rat sweat glands provide an interesting model system for a developmental study of adrenergic receptor expression because their sympathetic innervation undergoes a switch from a nonadrenergic to cholinergic and peptidergic phenotype. alpha 1B, alpha 2B, and beta 2 receptors are expressed in rat footpads; alpha 1 and beta 2 receptors are localized specifically to sweat glands, and alpha 2 receptors also are expressed in other tissues. alpha 1 and, to a lesser extent, beta 2 receptors decrease during development, whereas alpha 2 levels remain relatively constant. Decreased receptor expression is accompanied by the loss of alpha 1-stimulated inositol phosphate accumulation, but no change in beta-stimulated cAMP production. The number of alpha 1 and beta 2 receptors decreases after P21, when the sympathetic innervation no longer produces catecholamines. Neonatal sympathectomy causes a partial failure of alpha 1 downregulation, but has no effect on beta 2 or alpha 2 receptor levels. Therefore, at least two distinct mechanisms regulate development of adrenergic receptors in sweat glands. Innervation-independent processes control developmental expression of alpha 1, beta 2, and alpha 2 receptors, and an additional, innervation-dependen...Continue Reading

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