Abstract

Distribution of nitric oxide synthase (NOS), somatostatin (SSN), and parvalbumin (PV) was studied in the rat hippocampus by immunohistochemical methods. The aim was to explore the interrelationship between SSN-immunoreactive (SSN-IR) neurons in the dentate hilus, which have been shown to be vulnerable to a number of pathophysiological insults, and the presence or absence of NOS and/or PV in the same subset of dentate hilar neurons. Small NOS-IR neurons were scattered in the pyramidal, oriens, and radiatum layers of the CA1-CA3 areas and in the subiculum, where larger NOS-IR neurons were occasionally noted. In the area dentata, NOS-IR neurons, which were composed of small and large polymorphic cells, appeared as a single file at the hilar border with the granule cell layer and clustered in the hilus in fairly high density. Double-labeling techniques showed that most NOS-IR neurons in the hilus were SSN-IR, whereas coexistence of NOS and PV immunoreactivity or SSN and PV immunoreactivity was low in dentate hilar neurons. In other areas of the hippocampus, colocalization of NOS and SSN in the same neurons was much less frequent. Thus, SSN-IR neurons in the dentate hilus constitute a population of neurons that contain the enzyme NOS as well. The presence of NOS coupled to the lack or low level of PV in this group of neurons may provide a neurochemical basis for their high susceptibility to certain pathophysiological insults.

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