Abstract

The molecular layer of the dentate gyrus appears as the main entrance gate for information into the hippocampus, i.e., where the perforant path axons from the entorhinal cortex synapse onto the spines and dendrites of granule cells. A few dispersed neuronal somata appear intermingled in between and probably control the flow of information in this area. In rabbits, the number of neurons in the molecular layer increases in the first week of postnatal life and then stabilizes to appear permanent and heterogeneous over the individuals’ life span, including old animals. By means of Golgi impregnations, NADPH histochemistry, immunocytochemical stainings and intracellular labelings (lucifer yellow and biocytin injections), eight neuronal morphological types have been detected in the molecular layer of developing adult and old rabbits. Six of them appear as interneurons displaying smooth dendrites and GABA immunoreactivity: those here called as globoid, vertical, small horizontal, large horizontal, inverted pyramidal and polymorphic. Additionally there are two GABA negative types: the sarmentous and ectopic granular neurons. The distribution of the somata and dendritic trees of these neurons shows preferences for a definite sublayer of the molecular layer: small horizontal, sarmentous and inverted pyramidal neurons are preferably found in the outer third of the molecular layer; vertical, globoid and polymorph neurons locate the intermediate third, while large horizontal and ectopic granular neurons occupy the inner third or the juxtagranular molecular layer. Our results reveal substantial differences in the morphology and electrophysiological behaviour between each neuronal archetype in the dentate molecular layer, allowing us to propose a new classification for this neural population.

Highlights

  • The main entrance gate of sensory information to the hippocampus is the molecular layer of the dentate gyrus

  • The number of neuronal somata in the molecular layer of rabbits varied among individuals; 1444764667 neurons on average per hemisphere

  • No significant difference was observed in the other age groups (Fig. 1G), indicating that the rabbit molecular layer contains a steady/ permanent neuronal population

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The main entrance gate of sensory information to the hippocampus is the molecular layer of the dentate gyrus. The classical study [3] maintains the same classification and nomenclature in terms of the hippocampal molecular layer neuronal population, but this study was conducted on mice. No mention of these neurons was made in the bibliography until the study of the rabbit hippocampus histogenesis [4,5,6,7]. Descriptions of displaced basket cells [8,9], or ectopic granular cells with vertical morphology [10], and neurogliaform cells [11] in the molecular layer of rats were provided

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call