Abstract

Immunohistochemistry of three specific synthesizing catecholamine enzymes was used in the rat spinal cord to determine precisely the distribution of catecholaminergic perikarya and the nature of the neurotransmitter they contain. Single and double labeling experiments were performed on cryostat sections from perfused rats. The peroxidase anti-peroxidase (PAP) and the indirect fluorescence techniques were used for labeling spinal catecholaminergic somata and separated into two completely different populations. The first is located in the upper cervical cord and includes three apparently distinct groups: a lateral cluster, of probably a noradrenergic nature, and two central subgroups where noradrenergic and dopaminergic neurons are intermingled. It is likely that these cervical cells represent caudal extensions of the medullary catecholaminergic cell groups. In the remaining cord, only tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactive cell bodies have been found. Accordingly, this second population is probably dopaminergic. It is present almost exclusively in the first sacral segments, where it is located in the commissural (mostly lateral) grey matter and in the marginal dorsal horn.

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