Vascular sympathetic neuroeffector associations have been examined
in
rat iris arterioles using serial section
electron microscopy and reconstruction techniques. Examination of random
sections showed that, of all
profiles of varicosities (199) seen to lie closer than 4 μm to vascular
smooth muscle cells, only a small
proportion (29/199) were found in close association with vascular smooth
muscle cells, where adjacent
membranes were separated by less than 100 nm. However, serial section
examination, from intervaricose
region to intervaricose region, of 79 varicosities similarly observed
lying within 4 μm of vascular smooth
muscle cells showed that 54 formed close associations with vascular
smooth muscle cells. In serial sections,
all these varicosities were also closely associated with melanocytes and
of the 25 remaining varicosities, 22
formed close associations with melanocytes alone, whilst 3 did not come
into close association with any
effector cell. The increased observation of close associations with vascular
smooth muscle cells in serial
sections, compared with random sections, is consistent with the demonstration
that the area of contact only
occupies, on average, a small percentage (5%) of the total surface area
of the varicosity as seen in the 3-dimensional reconstructions. In both
random and serial sections, close associations were observed between
varicosities and vascular smooth muscle cells or melanocytes irrespective
of whether fibres were present
singly or in small nerve bundles. Three-dimensional reconstruction of
associations of varicosities and
vascular smooth muscle cells demonstrated several common features, such
as accumulations of synaptic
vesicles and loss of Schwann cell covering at the region of membrane
facing the effector cell. The similarity
in the appearance of the neuroeffector association seen in this study and
those described in previous studies
provides evidence for the existence of a common sympathetic neuroeffector
association, irrespective of the receptor subtype involved in neurotransmission.