Abstract
The interaction of substance P with intact lymphatic tissue was quantified and autoradiographically visualized, using slide-mounted tissue sections of rat spleen. Radiolabeled substance P binds rapidly to an apparently single class of noninteracting high affinity sites (Kd = 2.4 nmol/L; Bmax = 9.4 fmol/mg protein). The ligand selectivity pattern suggests that substance P binding sites are similar to substance P receptors found in other tissues, including the brain, T lymphocytes, and macrophages. Substance P receptors are highly concentrated in the antigen-trapping spleen marginal zone, with low densities being found in the red pulp. No specific binding of radiolabel to T cell-dependent immunologic domains of the spleen is seen. The distribution of substance P receptors suggests that substance P is probably involved in the control of sensory functions of the immune system.
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