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Midline thalamic inputs to the amygdala: Ultrastructure and synaptic targets
Authors:Alon Amir  Jean-Francois Paré  Yoland Smith  Denis Paré
Affiliation:1. Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience, Rutgers University-Newark, Newark, New Jersey;2. Department of Neurology, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia
Abstract:One of the main subcortical inputs to the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala (BL) originates from a group of dorsal thalamic nuclei located at or near the midline, mainly from the central medial (CMT), and paraventricular (PVT) nuclei. Although similarities among the responsiveness of BL, CMT, and PVT neurons to emotionally arousing stimuli suggest that these thalamic inputs exert a significant influence over BL activity, little is known about the synaptic relationships that mediate these effects. Thus, the present study used Phaseolus vulgaris-leucoagglutinin (PHAL) anterograde tracing and electron microscopy to shed light on the ultrastructural properties and synaptic targets of CMT and PVT axon terminals in the rat BL. Virtually all PHAL-positive CMT and PVT axon terminals formed asymmetric synapses. Although CMT and PVT axon terminals generally contacted dendritic spines, a substantial number ended on dendritic shafts. To determine whether these dendritic shafts belonged to principal or local-circuit cells, calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CAMKIIα) immunoreactivity was used as a selective marker of principal BL neurons. In most cases, dendritic shafts postsynaptic to PHAL-labeled CMT and PVT terminals were immunopositive for CaMKIIα. Overall, these results suggest that CMT and PVT inputs mostly target principal BL neurons such that when CMT or PVT neurons fire, little feed-forward inhibition counters their excitatory influence over principal cells. These results are consistent with the possibility that CMT and PVT inputs constitute major determinants of BL activity.
Keywords:amygdala  CAMKIIα  electron microscopy  RRID AB_2313606  RRID AB_2313686  RRID AB_2336656  RRID AB_2637031  RRID AB_447192  RRID RGD_734476  thalamus  tract-tracing
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