首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Electron microscopy and immunocytochemistry with a monoclonal antibody against parvalbumin (PV) were combined to analyze the distribution and morphology of PV-immunoreactive (PV-IR) neurons and the synaptology of PV-IR processes in the principal sulcus of the macaque prefrontal cortex. Parvalbumin-IR neurons are present in layers II-VI of the macaque principal sulcus (Walker's area 46) and are concentrated in a band centered around layer IV. PV-IR cells are exclusively non-pyramidal in shape and are morphologically heterogeneous with soma sizes ranging from less than 10 microns to greater than 20 microns. Well-labeled neurons that could be classified on the basis of soma size and dendritic configuration resembled large basket and chandelier cells. A novel finding is that supragranular PV-IR neurons exhibit dendritic patterns with predominantly vertical orientations, whereas infragranular cells exhibit mostly horizontal or oblique dendritic orientations. PV-IR cells within layer IV exhibit a mixture of dendritic arrangements. Vertical rows of PV-IR puncta, 15-30 microns in length, resembling the "cartridges" of chandelier cell axons were most dense in layers II, superficial III, and the granular layer IV but were not observed in the infragranular layers. Cartridges were often present beneath unlabeled, presumed pyramidal cells. PV-IR puncta also formed pericellular nests around pyramidal cell somata and proximal dendrites, suggestive of basket cell innervation. PV-IR axons were occasionally observed in the white matter underlying the principal sulcus. Electron microscopic analysis revealed that PV-IR somata and dendrites are densely innervated by nonimmunoreactive terminals forming asymmetric (Gray type I) synapses as well as by fewer terminals forming symmetric (Gray type II) synapses. The majority of terminals forming symmetric synapses with PV-IR post-synaptic structures were not immunolabeled; however, some of these boutons did contain PV-immunoreactivity. PV-IR boutons exclusively form symmetric synapses and heavily innervate layer II/III pyramidal cells. PV-IR axon cartridges formed numerous axo-axonic synapses with the axon initial segments of pyramidal cells 15-20 microns beneath the axon hillock and also terminated on large axonal spines of the initial segment. Furthermore, we failed to observe a mixture of PV-immunoreactive and non-immunoreactive boutons composing a single axon cartridge. Pyramidal cell somata and proximal dendrites were also heavily innervated by PV-IR boutons forming symmetric synapses, again, consistent with basket cell innervation. In addition, PV-IR axon terminals frequently formed symmetric synapses with dendritic shafts and spines of unidentified neurons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The cellular and ultrastructural distribution patterns of the AMPA glutamate receptor subunit, GluR2, were determined in the rat basolateral amygdala. GluR2 immunoreactivity was widely and uniformly distributed in the basolateral nucleus, with both pyramidal and non-pyramidal neurons labelled. In fact, double label immunohistochemical analyses demonstrated that over 90% of the GABAergic interneurons were labelled for GluR2. Electron microscopic analyses further confirmed the presence of GluR2 in the soma and dendrites of GABAergic interneurons as well as in the soma, spines and dendritic shafts of pyramidal cells. As in our parallel study in the rat hippocampus, immunogold analyses revealed that GluR2 immunoreactivity was frequently preferentially located at asymmetric synapses on both pyramidal cell spines and shafts, as well as the dendritic processes and soma of GABAergic interneurons. However, the number of immunogold particles per labelled synapse on GABAergic neurons was significantly lower than at similar labelled asymmetric synapses on spines of presumed pyramidal cells. Given that the presence of GluR2 within the AMPA receptor complex decreases calcium flux, these data indicate that GABAergic local circuit neurons might possess AMPA receptors with higher calcium permeability on average than pyramidal cells, as has been suggested for hippocampus. Such cell class-specific differences in the subunit representation and resultant channel properties of AMPA receptors have implications for response properties as well as selective vulnerability of neurons within the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala.  相似文献   

3.
The connections of local circuit neurons immunoreactive for calcium-binding protein calretinin (CR-ir) were studied in area 17 of the macaque monkey visual cortex. Most CR-ir neurons were located in layers 2 and 3A. They were polymorphic and included bitufted, multipolar, pyramid-shaped neurons with smooth dendrites and Cajal-Retzius cells. The majority of CR-ir neurons were γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-immunopositive (approximately 90%), and comprised about 14% of the total GABAergic neuron population. The axons of CR-ir cells had local arbors within layers 1–3, but the major trunks descended to deep layers 5 and 6 where they formed dense terminal fields within narrow columns (100–150 μm). This specific innervation of layers 5 and 6 appeared as a distinct feature of area 17 as it was not seen in the adjacent area 18. CR-ir boutons (n = 168) were GABA-ir (95%) and formed symmetric synapses. In layers 1–3, the majority of postsynaptic targets (n = 64) were GABAergic local circuit neurons [postsynaptic target distribution: GABA-positive dendrites (67%) and somata (14%), and GABA-negative dendrites (13%) and spines (6%)]. In deep layers, the most synapses (80%; n = 187) were formed with pyramidal cells where they provided a basket-type innervation [postsynaptic target distribution: GABA-positive dendrites (19%) and somata (1%), and GABA-negative dendrites (50%), spines (20%) and somata (10%)]. Unlike other GABAergic neurons, which innervate mainly pyramidal neurons, the CR-ir subpopulation only has pyramids as a preferred target in the deep layers (layers 5 and 6); however, in the superficial layers of the area 17, they selectively form synapses mainly with other GABAergic cells. Thus, the CR-ir neurons appear to have a dual function of disinhibiting superficial layer neurons and inhibiting pyramidal output neurons in the deep layers. J. Comp. Neurol. 379:113-132, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
The neuropeptide calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) was localized in the hippocampus and dentate gyrus of the rat by immunocytochemistry at the light and electron microscopic levels. Without colchicine treatment only faint neuropil labelling was found in the inner molecular layer of the dentate gyrus. Following colchicine treatment, a large number of neurons with numerous complex spines along the proximal dendrites were visualized in the hilus of the dentate gyrus, particularly in the ventral areas, and, in addition, staining of the inner molecular layer became stronger. Several CA3c pyramidal cells located adjacent to the hilar region in the ventral hippocampus also appeared to be faintly positive, although in most cases only their axon initial segments were labelled. Outside this region, the subicular end of the CA1 subfield contained occasional CGRP-positive non-pyramidal cells. The hilar CGRP-positive neurons were negative for parvalbumin, calretinin, cholecystokinin and somatostatin, whereas most of them were immunoreactive for GluR2/3 (the AMPA-type glutamate receptor known to be expressed largely by principal cells). Correlated electron microscopy showed that the spines along the proximal dendritic shafts indeed correspond to thorny excrescences engulfed by large complex mossy terminals forming asymmetrical synapses. Pre-embedding immunogold staining demonstrated that CGRP immunoreactivity in the inner molecular layer was confined to axon terminals that form asymmetrical synapses, and the labelling was associated with large dense-core vesicles. The present data provide direct evidence that CGRP is present in mossy cells of the dentate gyrus and to a lesser degree in CA3c pyramidal cells of the ventral hippocampus. These CGRP-containing principal cells terminate largely in the inner molecular layer of the dentate gyrus, and may release the neuropeptide in conjunction with their 'classical' neurotransmitter, glutamate.  相似文献   

5.
We investigated the ultrastructural basis of the synaptic convergence of afferent fibres from the mediodorsal thalamic nucleus (MD) and the ventral tegmental area (VTA) on the prefrontal cortical neurons of the rat by examining the synaptic relationships between thalamocortical or tegmentocortical terminals labelled with anterograde markers [lesion-induced degeneration or transport of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA—HRP)] and randomly selected unlabelled apical dendrites of layer V pyramidal cells in the prelimbic cortex. WGA—HRP-labelled terminals from the VTA ranged in diameter from 0.7 to 2.8 μm and established synaptic contacts with large dendritic profiles, i.e. proximal segments of apical dendritic shafts and spines from layer V pyramidal cells. Symmetrical synapses, i.e. inhibitory synapses, were more often seen than asymmetrical ones. Degenerating terminals from the MD formed asymmetrical synapses on dendritic spines or occasionally on small dendritic shafts of apical dendrites from layer V pyramidal cells, which received tegmentocortical synapses, mostly within layer III. Thalamocortical synapses were more distally distributed over common apical dendrites than tegmentocortical synapses, although some of them overlapped. The numerical density of direct synaptic inputs from the MD and VTA was low. These results suggest that fibres from the VTA exert their inhibitory effects directly on pyramidal cells in layer V via synaptic junctions with apical dendrites of these pyramidal cells, and that the tegmentocortical fibres are in an ideal anatomical position to modulate the reverberatory circuits between the MD and the prelimbic cortex.  相似文献   

6.
Light and electron microscopic quantitative analysis was carried out on a type of neuron intracellularly filled with horseradish peroxidase. Two cells were studied in area 17, one of which was injected intra-axonally, and its soma was not recovered. One cell was studied in area 18. The two somata were on the border of layers IVa/b; they were radially elongated and received synapses from numerous large boutons with round synaptic vesicles. The dendrites were smooth and remained largely in layer IV. The cells can be recognised on the basis of their axonal arbor, which was restricted to layer IV (90-95% of boutons) with minor projections to layers III, V, and VI. Many of the large, bulbous boutons contacted neuronal somata, short collaterals often forming "claw"-like configurations around cells. The name "clutch cell" is suggested to delineate this type of neuron from other aspiny multipolar cells. Computer-assisted reconstruction of the axon showed that in layer IV the axons occupied a rectangular area about 300 X 500 microns, elongated anteroposteriorly in area 17 and mediolaterally in area 18. The distributions of synaptic boutons and postsynaptic cells were patchy within this area. A total of 321 boutons were serially sectioned in area 17. The boutons formed type II synaptic contacts. The postsynaptic targets were somata (20-30%), dendritic shafts (35-50%), spines (30%), and rarely axon initial segments. Most of the postsynaptic somata tested were not immunoreactive for GABA and their fine structural features suggest that they are spiny stellate, star pyramidal, and pyramidal neurons. The characteristics of most of the postsynaptic dendrites and spines also suggest that they belong to these spiny neurons. A few of the postsynaptic dendrites and somata exhibited characteristics of cells with smooth dendrites and these somata were immunoreactive for GABA. It is suggested that clutch cells are inhibitory interneurons exerting their effect mainly on layer IV spiny neurons in an area localised perhaps to a single ocular dominance column. The specific laminar location of the axons of clutch cell also suggests that they may be associated with the afferent terminals of lateral geniculate nucleus cells, and could thus be responsible for generating some of the selective properties of neurons of the first stage of cortical processing.  相似文献   

7.
We performed whole-cell recordings of layer III non-pyramidal neurons in the piriform cortex of Sprague–Dawley rats. For comparison purposes, recordings were made from deep pyramidal cells, which are also present in layer III. These two cell types could be distinguished both anatomically and physiologically. Anatomically, the layer III non-pyramidal neuron displayed smooth beady dendrites, while deep pyramidal cells showed thicker dendrites with spines. The dendrites of the layer III non-pyramidal neuron also tended to be restricted to layer III while deep pyramidal cells had long apical dendrites that spanned layers I and II. Although the resting membrane potentials of both cell types were very similar, significant differences were noted in other physiological measures. Layer III non-pyramidal neurons typically displayed higher input resistances, faster time constants, smaller spike amplitudes, shorter spike widths, and higher spike thresholds. In addition, layer III non-pyramidal neurons were able to spike at much higher rates when stimulated with the same level of threshold normalized current injection. The most dramatic differences in physiology were seen in the pattern of spiking in response to increasing levels of positive constant current pulses. Layer III non-pyramidal neurons showed qualitatively different responses at low and high levels of stimulation. At low levels, spikes occurred with long latency and the firing frequency increased throughout the duration of the current pulse. At high levels, non-pyramidal neurons started spiking with short latency, followed by a decrease in firing frequency, which in turn was followed by an increase in firing frequency. Deep pyramidal neurons differed dramatically from this pattern, displaying a qualitatively similar response at all levels of current injection. This response was characterized by short latency spikes and spike adaptation for the duration of the current pulse.  相似文献   

8.
Previous immunocytochemical investigations performed in our laboratory on the human hippocampus surgically resected for the treatment of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) have demonstrated an increased expression of the AMPA-receptor subunit GluR1 on neurons in the hilus and area CA3. Light microscopically, many of these neurons exhibited peculiar filamentous extensions and grape-like excrescences that protruded from their somata and proximal dendrites, suggesting that these neurons may be mossy cells and CA3 pyramidal neurons, respectively. The present electron microscopic study was carried out to further characterize these cells. The filamentous extensions were identified as dendrites from which spines often protruded, and the grape-like excrescences represented clusters of closely associated dendrites and spines. A variety of synapses were formed by the GluR1-positive profiles. These arrangements ranged from simple contacts between a single unlabelled axon terminal and a single labelled postsynaptic element, to complex contacts involving multiple unlabelled axon terminals and labelled postsynaptic elements. Many of the axon terminals involved in these arrangements were mossy fibre boutons. Thus, a large proportion of the GluR1-positive neurons were identified as hilar mossy cells and CA3 pyramidal neurons, cells hitherto thought to be absent or greatly reduced in the MTLE hippocampus. Taken together, these data suggest the presence of a highly efficient excitatory circuit involving AMPA receptors, mossy cells and CA3 pyramidal neurons in the sclerotic hippocampus. Such a circuit could be critically involved in the genesis and maintenance of temporal lobe epilepsy.  相似文献   

9.
Previous studies described the postnatal development of CA3 pyramidal neurons and their afferents in the rat. However, the postnatal development of the primate hippocampus was not previously studied. Thus, pyramidal neurons of the CA3 area of the monkey hippocampus were analyzed postnatally in the present study. At birth, a few thorny excrescences, the complex spines postsynaptic to mossy fibers, were found on the proximal segments of both apical and basal dendrites, whereas distal dendrites displayed pedunculate spines. Thorny excrescences increased in number until the third month. A continuous increase in the number of spines per unit length along the distal dendrites was observed during the first 12 months. The ultrastructural features of somata and dendrites of pyramidal cells in newborn monkeys were similar to those of adults. The analysis of the afferents to the CA3 pyramidal neurons was limited to the development of mossy fibers, the axons of granule cells, and myelinated axons in the alveus, stratum oriens, and stratum lacunosum-moleculare. At birth, most mossy fiber terminals were densely packed with synaptic vesicles and formed mainly axospinous synapses with CA3 pyramidal cells. By 1 month of age, the number of mitochondria and embedded spines increased to mature amounts. In the first postnatal month, degenerating axons and axon terminals were frequently observed in the mossy fiber bundles in stratum lucidum. The proportion of myelinated axons increased simultaneously in all three examined layers. At birth most axons were unmyelinated, whereas at 7 months of age the proportion of myelinated axons was similar to that found in adults. The present study indicates that most pyramidal neurons of the CA3 region in monkeys are in an advanced stage of development at the time of birth. Thus, mossy fibers from granule cells in the dentate gyrus have established mature-looking synapses, and the thorny excrescences of pyramidal cells that are postsynaptic to mossy fibers are also adult-like. Nevertheless, several of the adult features, such as the spine density of distal dendrites of pyramidal neurons and the myelination of afferent axons, develop during an extended period of time in the first year. The significance of this early anatomical maturation in a brain region involved in memory function is consistent with recent behavioral data that show a rapid postnatal maturation of limbic-dependent recognition memory in rhesus monkeys. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
The pyramidal neuron in cerebral cortex following prenatal X-irradiation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Pregnant rats were subjected to whole body X-irradiation amounting to 125 R, on gestational day 15. Cortical pyramidal neurons were examined in irradiated and control offspring at 4 weeks and 4 to 6 months postnatally. All gestationally irradiated rats developed ectopic cortex located below the corpus callosum adjacent to the caudate nucleus in the forebrain. With the rapid Golgi stain, counts were made of dendritic spines on the apical dendrites of layer 5 pyramidal cells in the normally-located cortex and compared with similar neurons in the ectopias. Dendritic spines were present on all pyramidal cells but spines were more sparse on ectopic pyramidal cells. Electron microscopic examination of ectopic and layered cortex in irradiated rats showed axodendritic synapses on the spines and shafts of the dendrites and axosomatic synapses, all of which were indistinguishable morphologically from synapses in control cortex. As a result of the observations made with the light and electron microscopes, it is concluded that the ectopic cortex may contain functional cells in spite of the abnormal location of the tissue.  相似文献   

11.
The synaptic termination in the cat motor cortex of afferents from the ventrolateral nucleus of the thalamus (VL) has been studied with experimental light and electron microscopic methods. The distribution of normal synapses on motor cortex pyramidal, stellate, and Betz cells was also examined. Synapses in the motor cortex can be classified into two general types. The first and most prominent type contains flat vesicles, lacks a compact postsynaptic density, and corresponds to Colonnier's ('68) symmetrical synapse. Stellate neurons receive synapses of both types on their cell bodies and proximal dendritic shafts, while pyramidal cells have only symmetrical synapses at these sites. The dendritic spines of both stellate and pyramidal cells are contacted by predominantly asymmetrical synapses. Betz cells, like smaller pyramidal neurons, receive only symmetrical synapses on their cell bodies. The proximal portions of the Betz cells apical dendrites, however, receive both asymmetrical and symmetrical synapses. Following VL lesions, degenerating synapses were mainly found in three cortical layers: the upper third of layer I (18%), layer III (66%), and layer VI (13%). Degenerating synapses were not seen in the lower two-thirds of layer I or in layer II, and were only rarely seen in layer V (3%). Ninety-one percent of the VL synapses were found on spines and 8% on stellate-type dendritic shafts. Stellate cell bodies rarely received VL synapses (1%) and none occurred on pyramidal or Betz cell bodies and their proximal dendrites. A VL synapse within layer III was found on two dendritic spines of a Betz cell apical dendrite. Thus, part of the VL input to layer III synapses on the processes of both motor cortex output neurons (Betz cells in layer V) and cortical interneurons (stellate cells in layer III).  相似文献   

12.
The morphology of certain Golgi-stained cells was examined in the striate and peristriate cortex of the cat and in the striate cortex of the rhesus monkey. Neurons in layer III were selected on the basis of their characteristic vertical axon bundles, which are 20–150 μ in diameter and traverse layers II–V Selected neurons were examined under the electron microscope to characterize their synapses and to establish their postsynaptic targets. It was found that double bouquet cells form symmetrical or type II synapses. In the cat the postsynaptic membrane specialization was more extensive than in the monkey. After removing the Golgi precipitate from boutons of two cells in the cat, small pleomorphic and flattened vesicles were found in the boutons Earlier suggestions that double bouquet cells make synapses preferentially with spines of apical dendrites could not be confirmed. Out of 66 boutons in area 17 of the cat, 86.4% formed synapses with dendritic shafts, many of them belonging to nonpyramidal cells, 9% with perikarya of nonpyramidal cells, and only 4.6% with spines. Out of 19 synapses examined in area 18, 74% were contacting dendritic shafts and the rest contacted spines. In the monkey 60% of a total of 35 double bouquet cell synapses made synapses with dendritic shafts. A different type of double bouquet cell with densely spiny dendrites is also described in layer IV of the monkey striate cortex. This neuron formed asymmetrical synapses It is suggested that layer III double bouquet cells with vertical axon bundles are probably inhibitory and act on other nonpyramidal cells and certain parts of pyramidal cells.  相似文献   

13.
Golgi-impregnated chandelier cells in rat visual cortex have been examined by both light and electron microscopy. All of the chandelier cells impregnated have their cell bodies within layer II/III and although they occur throughout area 17, there are increased numbers at the area 17/18a border and to a lesser extent at the area 17/18 border. Most of the chandelier cells are bitufted neurons, with groups of dendrites extending from the upper and lower poles of an elongate cell body, but some cells have a more multipolar configuration. The perikaryal cytoplasm is rich in rough endoplasmic reticulum and both the cell body and the sparsely spinous dendrites receive axon terminals forming symmetric and asymmetric synapses. The axons of these neurons arise from either the lower pole of the cell body or the base of one of the dendrites in the lower tuft, and the axons form laterally spread plexuses which terminate in vertical strings of boutons. The boutons in each string synapse with axon initial segments of layer II/III pyramidal cells, the uppermost bouton in each string being 7 to 14 μm distant from the pyramidal cell body. Some layer II/III pyramidal cells seem to receive boutons from more than one chandelier cell, others from a single chandelier cell, and still others appear to receive no chandelier cell terminals. The axon terminals of the chandelier cells are irregular in shape, contain pleomorphic synaptic vesicles, and form symmetric synapses. Evidence is presented to show that axon terminals exhibiting the same morphological features and site of synaptic termination as those of the chandelier cells contain glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD), the enzyme which synthesizes GABA. Hence the chandelier cells are probably GABAergic, inhibitory neurons. Other GAD-positive axon terminals synapse with the cell bodies, axon hillocks, and proximal portions of the axon initial segments of the layer II/III pyramidal cells, and these terminals are probably derived from the smooth and sparsely spinous stellate cells.  相似文献   

14.
Although calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMK) has been shown to play a critical role in long-term potentiation (LTP) and emotional learning mediated by the basolateral amygdala, little is known about its cellular localization in this region. We have utilized immunohistochemical methods to study the neuronal localization of CaMK, and its relationship to gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-ergic structures, in the rat basolateral amygdala (ABL). Light microscopic observations revealed dense CaMK staining in the ABL. Although the cell bodies and proximal dendrites of virtually every pyramidal cell appeared to be CaMK(+), the cell bodies of small nonpyramidal neurons were always unstained. Dual localization of CaMK and GABA immunoreactivity with confocal immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that CaMK and GABA were found in different neuronal populations in the ABL. CaMK was contained only in pyramidal neurons; GABA was contained only in nonpyramidal cells. At the ultrastructural level, it was found that CaMK was localized to pyramidal cell bodies, thick proximal dendrites, thin distal dendrites, most dendritic spines, axon initial segments, and axon terminals forming asymmetrical synapses. These findings suggest that all portions of labeled pyramidal cells, with the exception of some dendritic spines, can exhibit CaMK immunoreactivity. By using a dual immunoperoxidase/immunogold-silver procedure at the ultrastructural level, GABA(+) axon terminals were seen to innervate all CaMK(+) postsynaptic domains, including cell bodies (22%), thick (>1 microm) dendrites (34%), thin (<1 microm) dendrites (22%), dendritic spines (17%), and axon initial segments (5%). These findings indicate that CaMK is a useful marker for pyramidal neurons in ultrastructural studies of ABL synaptology and that the activity of pyramidal neurons in the ABL is tightly controlled by a high density of GABAergic terminals that target all postsynaptic domains of pyramidal neurons.  相似文献   

15.
Rapid Golgi preparations from area 17 of young adult rats have been studied to determine the morphology and distribution of non-pyramidal neurons. Such cells were observed in all of the cellular laminae of the cortex, but were particularly prevalent in layers IV and V. Non-pyramidal neurons were categorized according to two features: (1) dendritic projection pattern, and (2) abundance of dendritic spines. Dendritic patterns were classified as multipolar, bitufted, and bipolar, and spine patterns as spinous, sparsely spinous, and spine-free. Spinous dendrites were associated only with multipolar neurons, while sparsely spinous and spine-free dendrites were each associated with cells of all three non-pyramidal dendritic patterns. The most frequently observed non-pyramidal cell types were multipolar cells of the spine-free and sparsely spinous varieties. All of the general cell types encountered have been described in the literature on non-pyramidal neurons, indicating the lack of any unique forms in rat area 17. An analysis of the dendritic projections of individual non-pyramidal neurons through particular cortical laminae made possible an evaluation of common sources of dendrites present in the neuropil of each layer. Non-pyramidal cell axons were impregnated only in small numbers. Spinous multipolar axons invariably exhibited a descending main branch, while the axons of bipolar neurons were distributed in a narrow vertical field. Axonal patterns of remaining cell types, including Golgi type II arborizations, did not appear to correlate consistently with dendritic morphology. Axons of the basket cell type and "horsetail" axons associated with double bouquet cells of Cajal's original type were not impregnated.  相似文献   

16.
Previous studies of CRH-induced status epilepticus in infant rats demonstrated neuronal loss in several limbic structures, including the CA3 region of the hippocampus. The goal of the present study was to identify the neurons affected by CRH-induced seizures and determine whether they formed synapses with afferent axon terminals. Clusters of neurons in the CA3 region of the hippocampus were osmiophilic when viewed in thick sections. Semi-thin 2-μ sections of the pyramidal cell layer contained dark, shrunken neurons with apical and basal dendrites among normal appearing pyramidal cells. Electron microscopy revealed degenerating pyramidal cells with intact cell membranes and electron dense nuclei and cytoplasm. The shrunken dendrites of these cells had spines and were postsynaptic to large immature-appearing mossy fibers. Thus, CA3 pyramidal neurons that are linked via mossy fibers to the tri-synaptic excitatory hippocampal circuit die subsequent to CRH-induced status epilepticus. The shrunken appearance and selective loss of these neurons are incompatible with necrosis as the mechanism of degeneration.  相似文献   

17.
Pyramidal neurons are covered with dendritic spines, the main postsynaptic targets of excitatory (asymmetrical) synapses. However, the proximal portion of both the apical and basal dendrites is devoid of spines, suggesting a lack of excitatory inputs to this region. In the present study we used electron microscopy to analyse the proximal region of the basal dendrites of supra- and infragranular pyramidal cells to determine if this is the case. The proximal region of 80 basal dendrites sampled from the rat hindlimb representation in the primary somatosensory cortex was studied by electron microscopy. A total of 317 synapses were found within this region of the dendrites, all of which were of the symmetrical type. These results suggest that glutamate receptors, although present in the cytoplasm, are not involved in synaptic junctions in the proximal portion of the dendrites. These data further support the idea that inhibitory terminals exclusively innervate the proximal region of basal dendrites.  相似文献   

18.
The synaptic input of six spiny stellate neurons in sublamina 4A of cat area 17 was assessed by electron microscopy. The neurons were physiologically characterized and filled with horseradish peroxidase in vivo. After processing the neurons were reconstructed at the light microscopic level using computer-assisted methods and analyzed quantitatively. The extensive branching of the dendritic tree about 50 μm from the soma meant that the distal branches constituted five times the length of proximal dendrite. Proximal and distal portions of a single dendrite from each neuron were examined in series of ultrathin sections (1,456 sections) in the electron microscope. The majority (79%) of the 263 synapses examined were asymmetric; the remainder (21%) were symmetric. Symmetric synapses formed 35% of synapses sampled on proximal dendrites and were usually located on the shaft. They formed only 4% of synapses sampled on distal dendrites. Spines accounted for less than half of the total asymmetric synapses (45%); the remainder were on shafts. Symmetric synapses formed with four of 92 spines. Nine spines formed no synapses. Spiny stellate neurons in cat visual cortex appear to differ considerably from pyramidal neurons in having a significant asymmetric (excitatory) synaptic input to the dendritic shaft.  相似文献   

19.
Dendritic spines are small protrusions along the dendrites of many types of neurons in the central nervous system and represent the major target of excitatory synapses. For this reason, numerous anatomical, physiological and computational studies have focused on these structures. In the cerebral cortex the most abundant and characteristic neuronal type are pyramidal cells (about 85 % of all neurons) and their dendritic spines are the main postsynaptic target of excitatory glutamatergic synapses. Thus, our understanding of the synaptic organization of the cerebral cortex largely depends on the knowledge regarding synaptic inputs to dendritic spines of pyramidal cells. Much of the structural data on dendritic spines produced by modern neuroscience involves the quantitative analysis of image stacks from light and electron microscopy, using standard statistical and mathematical tools and software developed to this end. Here, we present a new method with musical feedback for exploring dendritic spine morphology and distribution patterns in pyramidal neurons. We demonstrate that audio analysis of spiny dendrites with apparently similar morphology may “sound” quite different, revealing anatomical substrates that are not apparent from simple visual inspection. These morphological/music translations may serve as a guide for further mathematical analysis of the design of the pyramidal neurons and of spiny dendrites in general.  相似文献   

20.
In cerebral cortex of rat and monkey, the neuropeptide somatostatin (SOM) marks a population of nonpyramidal cells (McDonald et al. [1982] J. Neurocytol. 11:809-824; Hendry et al. [1984] J. Neurosci. 4:2497:2517; Laemle and Feldman [1985] J. Comp. Neurol. 233:452-462; Meineke and Peters [1986] J. Neurocytol. 15:121-136; DeLima and Morrison [1989] J. Comp. Neurol. 283:212-227) that represent a distinct type of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) -ergic neuron (Gonchar and Burkhalter [1997] Cereb. Cortex 7:347-358; Kawaguchi and Kubota [1997] Cereb. Cortex 7:476-486) whose synaptic connections are incompletely understood. The organization of inhibitory inputs to the axon initial segment are of particular interest because of their role in the suppression of action potentials (Miles et al. [1996] Neuron 16:815:823). Synapses on axon initial segments are morphologically heterogeneous (Peters and Harriman [1990] J. Neurocytol. 19:154-174), and some terminals lack parvalbumin (PV) and contain calbindin (Del Rio and DeFelipe [1997] J. Comp. Neurol. 342:389-408), that is also expressed by many SOM-immunoreactive neurons (Kubota et al. [1994] Brain Res. 649:159-173; Gonchar and Burkhalter [1997] Cereb. Cortex 7:347-358). We studied the innervation of pyramidal neurons by SOM neurons in rat and monkey visual cortex and examined putative contacts by confocal microscopy and determined synaptic connections in the electron microscope. Through the confocal microscope, SOM-positive boutons were observed to form close appositions with somata, dendrites, and spines of intracortically projecting pyramidal neurons of rat area 17 and pyramidal cells in monkey striate cortex. In addition, in rat and monkey, SOM boutons were found to be associated with axon initial segments of pyramidal neurons. SOM axon terminals that were apposed to axon initial segments of pyramidal neurons lacked PV, which was shown previously to label axo-axonic terminals provided by chandelier cells (DeFelipe et al. [1989] Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86:2093-2097; Gonchar and Burkhalter [1999a] J. Comp. Neurol. 406:346:360). Electron microscopic examination directly demonstrated that SOM axon terminals form symmetric synapses with the initial segments of pyramidal cells in supragranular layers of rat and monkey primary visual cortex. These SOM synapses differed ultrastructurally from the more numerous unlabeled symmetric synapses found on initial segments. Postembedding immunostaining revealed that all SOM axon terminals contained GABA. Unlike PV-expressing chandelier cell axons that innervate exclusively initial segments of pyramidal cell axons, SOM-immunoreactive neurons innervate somata, dendrites, spines, and initial segments, that are just one of their targets. Thus, SOM neurons may influence synaptic excitation of pyramidal neurons at the level of synaptic inputs to dendrites as well as at the initiation site of action potential output.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号