Abstract

The distribution of FMRFamide (FMRFa)-like peptides in caiman (Caiman crocodilus) and turtle (Trachemys scripta elegans) brains was studied by immunohistochemistry. In both species, distinct groups of FMRFa-like immunoreactive (ir) perikarya were present in the medial septal nucleus, accumbens nucleus, nucleus of the diagonal band of Broca, suprachiasmatic area, lateral hypothalamic area, and periventricular hypothalamic nucleus. A few FMRFa-ir neurons in the hypothalamic area were located in the neuroepithelial cell lining of the third ventricle. FMRFa-ir fibers were scattered in all major areas of the brain, from the olfactory bulbs to the rhombencephalon. They formed dense aggregates in the medial septal area, basal telencephalon, median eminence, and infundibulum, and adjacent to the fourth ventricle. The most obvious difference between the FMRFa-ir systems in caimans and turtles concerned the number of nuclei that contained neurons with this immunoreactivity. Eight such clusters were present in the caiman brain, whereas thirteen clusters were found in the turtle brain. The turtle also displayed scattered FMRFa-ir somata in the anterior olfactory nucleus, striatum, lateral septal nucleus, medial and lateral cortex, medial forebrain bundle, lateral preoptic area, and lateral geniculate nucleus. In the caiman brain, a few FMRFa-ir neurons were noted in the ventrolateral area of the pallial commissure and an even smaller number of ir neurons was found dispersed in the optic tracts. Neither formed nuclear aggregates. The results are compared with those described for other vertebrates.

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