Abstract
Immunohistochemical study was performed on cerebellar Purkinje cells of two dogs with hypoglycemia using an antibody against the inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor that is identical to the cerebellar Purkinje cell glycoprotein P(400) (P(400)/InsP(3)R). In the cerebellar neocortex of an acute case of hypoglycemia, the P(400)/InsP(3)R staining of hypoglycemic Purkinje cells was heterogeneous: some peripheral dendrites, including spiny branchlets, were negative and others were stained with various intensities, although Purkinje cells were morphologically intact by hematoxylin and eosin (HE) stain. In a chronic case of hypoglycemia, almost all the dendrites of Purkinje cells of both the neo- and archicortex of the cerebellum were not stained with the P(400)/InsP(3)R antibody. This is in contrast to the normal dog where Purkinje cell bodies, axons, and dendrites, including spiny branchlets, are intensely stained by the P(400)/InsP(3)R antibody. These results suggest that P(400)/InsP(3)R immunolabeling of Purkinje cells decreased, despite their morphology being preserved by HE stain, and that the function of P(400)/InsP(3)R, especially in spiny branchlets that receive inputs originating from axon terminals of parallel fibers, may be impaired in hypoglycemia.
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