Abstract

The distribution of monoamine-oxidase and acetylcholinesterase activities in the hypothalamus of the White-crowned Sparrow has been studied in relation to the hypothalamohypophysial neurosecretory system. The enzyme activities, as revealed by the methods employed, are unaffected during photoperiodically induced testicular growth. Monoamine oxidase has a distribution distinctly different from that of the aldehyde-fuchsin positive neurosecretory material in that there is high activity in the peripheral palisade layers of both the anterior and posterior divisions of the median eminence. Intimate contact is made between these areas with the primary vessels of the hypophysial portal system. A second concentration of activity lies in a layer between the ependymal cells and the neurosecretory material of the fiber tract. In general, monoamine oxidase appears to be associated with glial elements and non-neurosecretory axons. The pars nervosa has little or no monoamine-oxidase activity. The distribution of acetylcholinesterase activity in the anterior division of the median eminence is very similar to that of the aldehyde-fuchsin positive neurosecretory neurons; however, acetylcholinesterase also occurs in the posterior division without associated neurosecretory fibers. These distribution of enzyme activities are considered in relation to possible adrenergic and cholinergic mechanisms in the median eminence.

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