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Synaptic connectivity of urinary bladder afferents in the rat superficial dorsal horn and spinal parasympathetic nucleus
Authors:Sook Kyung Park  Angom Pushparani Devi  Jin Young Bae  Yi Sul Cho  Hyoung-Gon Ko  Duk Yoon Kim  Yong Chul Bae
Affiliation:1. Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, School of Dentistry, Kyungpook National University, Daegu, South Korea;2. Department of Urology, School of Medicine, Catholic University of Daegu, Daegu, South Korea
Abstract:That visceral sensory afferents are functionally distinct from their somatic analogues has been known for a long time but the detailed knowledge of their synaptic connections and neurotransmitters at the first relay nucleus in the spinal cord has been limited. To provide information on these topics, we investigated the synapses and neurotransmitters of identified afferents from the urinary bladder to the superficial laminae of the rat spinal dorsal horn (DH) and the spinal parasympathetic nucleus (SPN) by tracing with horseradish peroxidase, quantitative electron microscopical analysis, and immunogold staining for GABA and glycine. In the DH, most bladder afferent boutons formed synapses with 1–2 postsynaptic dendrites, whereas in the SPN, close to a half of them formed synapses with 3–8 postsynaptic dendrites. The number of postsynaptic dendrites and dendritic spines per bladder afferent bouton, both measures of synaptic divergence and of potential for synaptic plasticity at a single bouton level, were significantly higher in the SPN than in the DH. Bladder afferent boutons frequently received inhibitory axoaxonic synapses from presynaptic endings in the DH but rarely in the SPN. The presynaptic endings were GABA- and/or glycine-immunopositive. The bouton volume, mitochondrial volume, and active zone area, all determinants of synaptic strength, of the bladder afferent boutons were positively correlated with the number of postsynaptic dendrites. These findings suggest that visceral sensory information conveyed via the urinary bladder afferents is processed differently in the DH than in the SPN, and differently from the way somatosensory information is processed in the spinal cord.
Keywords:axoaxonic synapse  RRID: AB_10013220  RRID: AB_1769134  RRID: AB_2314443  RRID: AB_2314586  RRID: AB_2340411  spinal cord  synaptic connectivity  ultrastructure  urinary bladder  visceral afferent
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