Abstract

Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS)-containing neurons and axon terminals were examined in the rat somatosensory and temporal neocortex, in the CA3/a–c areas of Ammon's horn and in the hippocampal dentate gyrus. In these areas, only nonpyramidal neurons were labeled with the antibody against nNOS. Previous observations suggested that all nNOS-positive nonpyramidal cells are GABAergic local circuit neurons, which form exclusively symmetric synapses. In agreement with this, nNOS-positive axon terminals in the hippocampal formation formed symmetric synapses exclusively with dendritic shafts. In the neocortex, in contrast, in addition to the nNOS-positive axon terminals that formed synapses with unlabeled spiny and aspiny dendrites and with nNOS-positive aspiny dendrites, a small proportion of the nNOS-positive axon terminals formed symmetric synapses with dendritic spines. These results suggest that nNOS-positive local circuit neurons form a distinct group of axo-dendritic cells displaying slightly different domain specificity in the archi- and neocortex. However, nNOS-positive cells show no target selectivity, because they innervate principal cells and local circuit neurons. Afferents to the NOS-positive cells display neither domain nor target selectivity, because small unlabeled terminals formed synapses with both the soma or dendrites of nNOS-positive neurons and an adjacent unlabeled dendrite or spine in both the hippocampal formation and in neocortex.

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