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Ultrastructural examination of the corticocollicular pathway in the guinea pig: a study using electron microscopy, neural tracers, and GABA immunocytochemistry

Projections from auditory cortex (AC) can alter the responses of cells in the inferior colliculus (IC) to sounds. Most IC cells show excitation and inhibition after stimulation of the AC. AC axons release glutamate and excite their targets, so inhibition is presumed to result from cortical activatio...

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Autores principales: Nakamoto, Kyle T., Mellott, Jeffrey G., Killius, Jeanette, Storey-Workley, Megan E., Sowick, Colleen S., Schofield, Brett R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3660666/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23734104
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnana.2013.00013
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author Nakamoto, Kyle T.
Mellott, Jeffrey G.
Killius, Jeanette
Storey-Workley, Megan E.
Sowick, Colleen S.
Schofield, Brett R.
author_facet Nakamoto, Kyle T.
Mellott, Jeffrey G.
Killius, Jeanette
Storey-Workley, Megan E.
Sowick, Colleen S.
Schofield, Brett R.
author_sort Nakamoto, Kyle T.
collection PubMed
description Projections from auditory cortex (AC) can alter the responses of cells in the inferior colliculus (IC) to sounds. Most IC cells show excitation and inhibition after stimulation of the AC. AC axons release glutamate and excite their targets, so inhibition is presumed to result from cortical activation of GABAergic IC cells that inhibit other IC cells via local projections. However, it is not known whether cortical axons contact GABAergic IC cells directly. We labeled corticocollicular axons by injecting fluorescent dextrans into the AC in guinea pigs. We visualized the tracer with diaminobenzidine and processed the tissue for electron microscopy. We identified presumptive GABAergic profiles with post-embedding anti-GABA immunogold histochemistry on ultrathin sections. We identified dextran-labeled cortical boutons in the IC and identified their postsynaptic targets according to morphology (e.g., spine, dendrite) and GABA-reactivity. Cortical synapses were observed in all IC subdivisions, but were comparatively rare in the central nucleus. Cortical boutons contain round vesicles and few mitochondria. They form asymmetric synapses with spines (most frequently), dendritic shafts and, least often, with cell bodies. Excitatory boutons in the IC can be classified as large, medium or small; most cortical boutons belong to the small excitatory class, while a minority (~14%) belong to the medium excitatory class. Approximately 4% of the cortical targets were GABA-positive; these included dendritic shafts, spines, and cell bodies. We conclude that the majority of cortical boutons contact non-GABAergic (i.e., excitatory) IC cells and a small proportion (4%) contact GABAergic cells. Given that most IC cells show inhibition (as well as excitation) after cortical stimulation, it is likely that the majority of cortically-driven inhibition in the IC results from cortical activation of a relatively small number of IC GABAergic cells that have extensive local axons.
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spelling pubmed-36606662013-06-03 Ultrastructural examination of the corticocollicular pathway in the guinea pig: a study using electron microscopy, neural tracers, and GABA immunocytochemistry Nakamoto, Kyle T. Mellott, Jeffrey G. Killius, Jeanette Storey-Workley, Megan E. Sowick, Colleen S. Schofield, Brett R. Front Neuroanat Neuroscience Projections from auditory cortex (AC) can alter the responses of cells in the inferior colliculus (IC) to sounds. Most IC cells show excitation and inhibition after stimulation of the AC. AC axons release glutamate and excite their targets, so inhibition is presumed to result from cortical activation of GABAergic IC cells that inhibit other IC cells via local projections. However, it is not known whether cortical axons contact GABAergic IC cells directly. We labeled corticocollicular axons by injecting fluorescent dextrans into the AC in guinea pigs. We visualized the tracer with diaminobenzidine and processed the tissue for electron microscopy. We identified presumptive GABAergic profiles with post-embedding anti-GABA immunogold histochemistry on ultrathin sections. We identified dextran-labeled cortical boutons in the IC and identified their postsynaptic targets according to morphology (e.g., spine, dendrite) and GABA-reactivity. Cortical synapses were observed in all IC subdivisions, but were comparatively rare in the central nucleus. Cortical boutons contain round vesicles and few mitochondria. They form asymmetric synapses with spines (most frequently), dendritic shafts and, least often, with cell bodies. Excitatory boutons in the IC can be classified as large, medium or small; most cortical boutons belong to the small excitatory class, while a minority (~14%) belong to the medium excitatory class. Approximately 4% of the cortical targets were GABA-positive; these included dendritic shafts, spines, and cell bodies. We conclude that the majority of cortical boutons contact non-GABAergic (i.e., excitatory) IC cells and a small proportion (4%) contact GABAergic cells. Given that most IC cells show inhibition (as well as excitation) after cortical stimulation, it is likely that the majority of cortically-driven inhibition in the IC results from cortical activation of a relatively small number of IC GABAergic cells that have extensive local axons. Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-05-22 /pmc/articles/PMC3660666/ /pubmed/23734104 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnana.2013.00013 Text en Copyright © 2013 Nakamoto, Mellott, Killius, Storey-Workley, Sowick and Schofield. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in other forums, provided the original authors and source are credited and subject to any copyright notices concerning any third-party graphics etc.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Nakamoto, Kyle T.
Mellott, Jeffrey G.
Killius, Jeanette
Storey-Workley, Megan E.
Sowick, Colleen S.
Schofield, Brett R.
Ultrastructural examination of the corticocollicular pathway in the guinea pig: a study using electron microscopy, neural tracers, and GABA immunocytochemistry
title Ultrastructural examination of the corticocollicular pathway in the guinea pig: a study using electron microscopy, neural tracers, and GABA immunocytochemistry
title_full Ultrastructural examination of the corticocollicular pathway in the guinea pig: a study using electron microscopy, neural tracers, and GABA immunocytochemistry
title_fullStr Ultrastructural examination of the corticocollicular pathway in the guinea pig: a study using electron microscopy, neural tracers, and GABA immunocytochemistry
title_full_unstemmed Ultrastructural examination of the corticocollicular pathway in the guinea pig: a study using electron microscopy, neural tracers, and GABA immunocytochemistry
title_short Ultrastructural examination of the corticocollicular pathway in the guinea pig: a study using electron microscopy, neural tracers, and GABA immunocytochemistry
title_sort ultrastructural examination of the corticocollicular pathway in the guinea pig: a study using electron microscopy, neural tracers, and gaba immunocytochemistry
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3660666/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23734104
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnana.2013.00013
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