Abstract

AbstractThe septal area of the rat is known to receive a rich innervation by axons of catecholamine (CA) neurons. In the present study this innervatic was studied using biochemical assay of CA content and fluorescence histochemical analysis of the distribution of CA‐producing axons to determine the nuclei origin of the septal CA innervation and the effects of lesions on these parameters. The autoradiographic tracing technique and the horseradish peroxidase (HRP)‐retrograde transport technique also were used for this purpose.The norepinephrine (NE) content of the normal septal area is 1,162 ± 127 ng/g and the dopamine (DA) content is 522 ± 106 ng/g. Hemisection of the brainstem caudal to the locus coeruleus results in a 47% decrease in septal NE content and a unilateral locus coeruleus lesion produces a 48% decrease in septal NE content. These observations suggest that the NE innervation of the septal area arises approximately equally from the locus coeruleus and nuclei in the caudal brain stem. This is confirmed, at least in part, by the anterograde and retrograde transport studies. The DA innervation of the septal area is shown by all of the techniques employed to arise almost exclusively from cells of the ventral tegmental area.NE axons arising from the locus coeruleus distribute in the septal area to the hippocampal rudiment, the nucleus of the diagonal band, the interstitial nucleus of the stria terminalis, the medial septal nucleus, the lateral septal nucleus and the nucleus septofimbrialis. In each area the innervation is sparse to moderate in density and has the plexiform organization typical of locus coeruleus innervation. The brainstem NE innervation is very dense in the interstitial nucleus of the stria terminalis, moderately dense in the lateral septal nucleus and sparse in the nucleus of the diagonal band.The DA axons innervating the septum terminate in two distinct patterns. The first is identical to that seen in the neostriatum. Preterminal axons are very fine and non‐varicose. As they reach a terminal area they branch markedly and give rise to extremely numerous, closely‐packed, fine varicosities. This type of DA innervation is found in the medial part of the lateral septal nucleus in a dense band and about some scattered lateral septal nucleus neurons, in the nucleus accumbens and in the interstitial nucleus of the stria terminalis. The second pattern is for non‐varicose preterminal axons to branch and terminate in pericellular baskets about lateral septal nucleus neurons or simply terminate in the lateral septal nucleus neuropil. In each case the terminal branches give off distinct varicosities which are larger than those formed in the first pattern of DA innervation.Thus, the septal area has a complex organization of CA innervation with NE axons arising from caudal brainstem nuclei and the locus coeruleus and DA axons arising from the ventral tegmental area.

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