Abstract: | Histochemical study of neuronally isolated area AI of the auditory cortex in cats by the reaction for acetylcholinesterase 3 days and 1, 2, and 3 weeks after undercutting showed that the cholinergic neuropil of this area is formed mainly by incoming fibers and to a lesser degree by processes from a few intrinsic cholinergic neurons. The intrinsic cholinergic neurons include, first, cholinergic long-axon association neurons responding to cortical isolation by retrograde changes and by hyperreaction to acetylcholinesterase (Cajal-Retzius cells of layer I and neurons of layer VI, whose axons run into the subcortical layer of association fibers), and, second, cholinergic short-axon association neurons of layers II–VI, preserving their normal cell structure and moderate acetylcholinesterase activity after isolation. Axon collaterals of similar cells terminate on neighboring neurons. Short-axon neurons are more numerous in the lower layers of the cortex, and exceed in number the long-axon association neurons. Choliniceptive neurons (pyramidal and stellate), on whose bodies and proximal dendrites are located terminals formed by axons of cholinergic association neurons, are found in the isolated cortex. Choliniceptive neurons are found more often in the lower layers of the cortex.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. I. I. Mechnikov State University, Odessa. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 16, No. 1, pp. 81–87, January–February, 1984. |