Different subpopulations of GABA neurons containing the neuropeptides somatostatin and neuropeptide Y, and the calcium binding protein parvalbumin were studied by immunocytochemistry using light and electron microscopy in the dorsomedial cortex of the lizard Psammodromus algirus to investigate the connectivity of different subsets of GABA neurons in the lizard dorsomedial cortical circuitry and to compare cortical regions of reptiles and mammals. GABA neurons were classified into different subsets by using the peroxidase anti-peroxidase immunohistochemical method on adjacent Araldite-embedded semithin sections. GABA neurons in the dorsomedial cortex fall into three major subsets: 1) neurons with somatostatin (and neuropeptide Y), which accounted for about 44% of the GABA population; 2) neurons with parvalbumin, which accounted for about 13% of the GABA neurons; and 3) neurons without parvalbumin or neuropeptides, which represented 40% of all GABA cells. This division of GABA neurons in non-overlapping subpopulations of neuropeptide- and parvalbumin-containing cells is similar to that found in the mammalian hippocampal formation. On the basis of the nerve terminal fields, somatostatin- and parvalbumin-immunoreactive neuronal populations appear to be functionally different, acting on different portions of the projection neurons. Parvalbumin-immunoreactive neurons inhibit the pyramidal neurons at the cell body level, whereas somatostatin-immunoreactive neurons inhibit them on distal dendrites. The results of the present study add more similarities between the lizard dorsomedial cortex and parts of the mammalian hippocampus.
The aim of the present study was to analyze the distribution and characteristics of NPY immunoreactive structures in the cerebral cortex of lizards and to investigate the degree of co-existence of this neuropeptide with somatostatin and GABA. The immunoperoxidase method was applied to vibratome sections as well as to semithin sections. NPY neurons are multipolar or fusiform and were unevenly distributed throughout the brain cortex. Within the medial, dorsomedial and dorsal cortices, most NPY perikarya were located in the plexiform layers, especially in the deep one. This suggests that these cells could be regarded as interneurons. In the lateral cortex, NPY neurons were found throughout all layers. The dorsomedial cortex displayed the highest NPY cell density. Here, neuronal perikarya projected many immunoreactive processes toward two distinct zones: the deep plexiform layer of the medial cortex and the superpositio medialis. The NPY neurons of the dorsomedial cortex differed from the other NPY cortical immunoreactive cells in that the latter displayed very few immunoreactive processes. A high degree of co-existence among NPY, somatostatin, and GABA (approx. 80%) was found. This co-existence rate is very similar to that reported in mammals and suggests that co-localization is a phylogenetically ancient phenomenon.
The telencephalic medial wall of the lizard Psammodromus algirus was studied using Golgi and conventional light microscopic techniques. The area is formed by two different cytological fields-medial cortex and dorsomedial cortex. These two cortices possess three layers dorsoventrally: a superficial plexiform layer, a cellular layer, and a deep plexiform layer. The alveus, a deep fiber system, runs adjacent to the ependyma. Four classes of neurons are found in the cellular layer of the medial cortex on the basis of soma shape, dendritic pattern, and position in the layer: horizontal, double pyramidal, and candelabra cells. Solitary cells are present in the superficial and deep plexiform layers of the medial cortex. Those of the superficial plexiform layer are stellate cells. Horizontal and vertical cells are found in the deep plexiform layer. Double pyramidal cells are the most frequently impregnated in the cellular layer of the dorsomedial cortex. In addition, candelabra cells are present at the lateral end of the layer. Two cell types are found in the deep plexiform layer of the dorsomedial cortex: solitary pyramidal cells and, among the fibers of the alveus, horizontal cells. Ependymal tanycytes line the ventricular surface, and protoplasmic astrocytes are found in the plexiform layers of both medial and dorsomedial cortices.
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