Literature DB >> 2115053

Distribution of two morphologically distinct subsets of serotoninergic axons in the cerebral cortex of the marmoset.

J P Hornung1, J M Fritschy, I Törk.   

Abstract

The serotoninergic innervation of the marmoset (New World monkey, Callithrix jacchus) cerebral cortex has been analyzed by using immunocytochemistry. The use of a sensitive monoclonal antibody against serotonin allowed the visualization of the fine morphology of individual axons. Two types of terminal axons were demonstrated: one has sparse, small, ovoid varicosities (dia. less than 1 micron), and the other has large, spheroidal varicosities (up to 5 microns in dia.), which are more densely clustered. The first type of axon is distributed through all cortical layers, with a characteristic laminar distribution that varies from area to area. The second type of axons was distributed sparsely in all regions but was markedly denser in the frontal and anterior parietal lobes, and in the hippocampal formation. Axons with large varicosities typically surrounded certain cell bodies and proximal dendrites, forming pericellular arrays, or baskets. These morphological specializations were most frequent in the frontal and anterior parietal cortex, where they were found around stellate and horizontal cells in layer I and around stellate and bipolar cells in layer II and III. Similar baskets were also found in the hippocampal formation, mainly along the border between the hilus and the granule cell layer of the dentate gyrus, across the CA4 field, and at each side of the pyramidal cell layer of the CA3 regions. The distribution and cellular morphology of the cell surrounded by the 5-HT basket fibres were suggestive of a subpopulation of interneurons, possibly GABAergic and/or peptidergic. In agreement with previous reports on the innervation of the cerebral cortex of other mammalian species, the marmoset cerebral cortex is innervated by two separate subsystems of serotoninergic axons. One of these may have a strong and specific influence on the cortical inhibitory circuitry, via relay through cortical interneurons.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2115053     DOI: 10.1002/cne.902970202

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Neurol        ISSN: 0021-9967            Impact factor:   3.215


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