Abstract

Using combined nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-diaphorase (NADPHd) histochemistry and salmon gonadotropin-releasing hormone (sGnRH) immunocytochemistry, it is reported for the first time that possible potential contacts occur between the nitric oxide (NO)- and the GnRH-containing neurons in the brain of a freshwater teleost, Rhodeus amarus. GnRH-immunoreactive (ir) neurons were observed in the olfactory nerve (OLN), olfactory bulb (OB), medial olfactory tract (MOT), ventral telencephalon (VT), nucleus preopticus periventricularis (NPP), nucleus lateralis tuberis (NLT), and midbrain tegmentum (MT). Although NADPHd neurons were widely distributed in the brain, only those having an association with GnRH-ir neurons are described. Based on the nature of the association between the GnRH and the NADPHd neurons, the former were classified into three types. The Type I GnRH neurons were characterized by the presence of NADPHd-positive granules in the perikarya and processes and occurred in the OLN, OB, MOT, and VT. The Type II GnRH neurons, having soma–soma or soma–process contacts with the NADPHd neurons, were restricted to the MT; the long processes of NADPHd cells crossed over either the perikarya or the thick processes of GnRH cells. However, the Type III GnRH neurons, found in the NPP and NLT, did not show direct contact, but a few NADPHd fibers were present in the vicinity. The terminal–soma contacts in the olfactory system and the VT and the soma–soma contacts in the MT represent the sites of possible potential contacts indicating a direct NO involvement in GnRH function, although NO action by diffusion remains possible. NO may influence the NPP and NLT GnRH cells by diffusion only, since a direct contact was not observed.

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