Dendritic Morphology of Visual Callosal Neurons in the Golden Hamster
Autor: | Yun-Cheng Diao, Kwok-Fai So |
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Rok vydání: | 1991 |
Předmět: |
Male
Hamster Dendrite Biology Corpus Callosum Behavioral Neuroscience chemistry.chemical_compound Species Specificity Developmental Neuroscience Cricetinae Apical dendrite medicine Animals Visual Pathways Dominance Cerebral Visual Cortex Neurons Depth Perception Lucifer yellow Mesocricetus food and beverages Dendrites Anatomy Axons medicine.anatomical_structure Visual cortex Microscopy Fluorescence chemistry Axoplasmic transport Soma Visual Fields Golden hamster |
Zdroj: | Brain, Behavior and Evolution. 37:1-9 |
ISSN: | 1421-9743 0006-8977 |
DOI: | 10.1159/000114342 |
Popis: | The visual callosal neurons and the connections between the two cerebral hemispheres in hamsters have been shown to be important for visual functions, but little is known about the detailed morphology of these neurons. In this study, we have used techniques based on retrograde transport of a fluorescent tracer, Granular Blue, and intracellular injection of Lucifer Yellow in fixed brain slices to identify the laminar distribution and dendritic morphology of the visual callosal neurons in the 17/18a border region of the adult golden hamster. The cells giving rise to the callosal projections were morphologically heterogeneous, although they were all spiny neurons. Most were pyramidal cells, but some were stellate cells. They were located in layers II–VI, with cells concentrating in three bands: (1) in the middle three fifths of layer II/III; (2) in layer IV, and (3) in the middle three fifths of layer V. In layer II/III and layer V, the great majority of the cells were pyramidal or star pyramidal neurons. In layer IV, about half were stellate neurons and the rest pyramidal or star pyramidal neurons. In layer VI, they consisted mostly of modified pyramidal cells. The soma areas of the pyramidal and star pyramidal neurons in all the layers ranged from 52 to 335 µm2 with a mean of 148 µm2 (n = 92; SD = 64.4). In general, these cells gave rise to 3–5 basal dendrites. Most callosally projecting pyramidal neurons in layer V had an apical dendrite that bifurcated and terminated in layer V or IV, but about one third of these cells had their apical dendrites terminating in layer II/III or layer I. We conclude that the interhemispheric pathway in hamsters consists of a group of morphologically heterogeneous neurons whose direct actions are most likely excitatory, according to known physiological correlates of neuronal morphology. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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