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(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2001;42:2434-2441.)
© 2001 by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.

Parasympathetic Innervation of the Meibomian Glands in Rats

Mark S. LeDoux1,2, Qihong Zhou1,2, R. Bryan Murphy1, Melissa L. Greene1 and Patrick Ryan3

1 From the Departments of Neurology, 2 Anatomy and Neurobiology, and 3 Molecular Sciences, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis.

PURPOSE. To determine the location of parasympathetic neurons that innervate the meibomian glands in rats.

METHODS. The B subunit of cholera toxin (CTB), fast blue, and a retrograde transneuronal tracer, the Bartha strain of pseudorabies virus (PRV-Ba), were injected into the upper eyelids of adult Sprague-Dawley rats after sectioning the ipsilateral branches of the facial nerve and resecting the superior cervical ganglia. Brains and orbital tissues were processed for the immunohistochemical detection of PRV-Ba and CTB. In selected cases, series of brain sections were double labeled for PRV-Ba and tyrosine hydroxylase to determine the relationship between the A5 noradrenergic cell group and superior salivatory nucleus, or for PRV-Ba and choline acetyltransferase to establish the neurochemical phenotype of parasympathetic preganglionic neurons.

RESULTS. Labeled ganglionic cells were diffusely distributed within the ipsilateral pterygopalatine ganglion (PPG) and along the more proximal portions of the greater petrosal nerve (GPN). Labeled preganglionic neurons were cholinergic and were located immediately dorsolateral to the rostral-most portion of the facial nucleus and caudal superior olive, where they intermingled with A5 noradrenergic cells.

CONCLUSIONS. The meibomian glands and other structures within the lid margin are subject to parasympathetic regulation by ganglion cells diffusely distributed within the PPG and along more proximal portions of the GPN. Cholinergic parasympathetic preganglionic neurons that project to meibomian gland–innervating ganglion cells are located immediately lateral, dorsal, and rostral to the facial motor nucleus in the region commonly referred to as the superior salivatory nucleus.




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