Abstract

The glyoxylic acid fluorescence technique was applied to the study of catecholamine fibres in the caudate-putamen (neostriatum) of control and experimental adult rats. Cryostat or vibratome sectioning procedures were used; in the last case, either incubations of brain slices in γ-methyl-noradrenaline or pre-treatment of animals with γ-hydroxybutyrate were performed, in order to increase the intensity of fluorescence. In control animals and in the contralateral side of rats lesioned in the substantia nigra, the fluorescence of the dense plexus of dopamine nerver fibres appeared under the form of densely packed varicosities. However, some regions differed from the ordinary fluorescence of the neostriatum by their stronger intensity and more visible varicosities. They were located principally in the ventro-medial regions bordering either the nucleus accumbens, the dorsal nucleus interstitialis striae terminalis and the ventricle in the anterior part, or the amygdala, the globus pallidus and the ventricle in the posterior part. Moreover, islands of stronger fluorescence also were observed in the head of the caudate-putamen along the dorsal and lateral corpus callosum, as well as scattered in the central region. These particular neostriatal structures might correspond to a separate system of ascending dopamine nerve fibres. Therefore, restricted electrolytic lesions of the substantia nigra pars compacta were undertaken in order to study the morphology of the remaining Catecholaminergic fibres in the ipsilateral neostriatum. In largely denervated areas, different types of fluorescent axons were evident. Presumed noradrenergic nerve fibres characterized by a very coarse appearance and closed varicosities were rare. They contrasted markedly with numerous delicate fibres which might belong to several dopaminergic systems. Both first types exhibited long, clearly visible intervaricose segments and ovoid triangular varicosities. The second type, which was thicker and more strongly fluorescent, probably formed the islands observed in unlesioned striata. The third type had very closed, small spherical varicosities and poorly fluorescent intervaricose segments. Dopamine nerve fibres of the same morphology were described previously in the neocortex [43,44] and the possibility of a common origin for nerve fibres of the same type is discussed. When rats were treated with the anaesthetic γ-hydroxybutyrate, all the dopamine nerve fibres appeared to develop a strong fluorescence within the neostriatum, but more fluorescent islands were always visible. Additionally, some swollen fluorescent fibres were seen; these could be abnormal dopamine fibres whose metabolism had been pathologically altered by the drug.

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