Organization and ultrastructural identification of the catecholamine nerve terminals in the neural lobe and pars intermedia of the rat pituitary |
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Authors: | H G Baumgarten A Björklund A F Holstein A Nobin |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Neuroanatomy and Institute of Anatomy, University of Hamburg, Germany;(2) Department of Histology, University of Lund, Sweden |
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Abstract: | Summary The central catecholamine innervation of the pituitary neural lobe and pars intermedia of the rat have been identified ultrastructurally and their organization has been investigated in a combined fluorescence histochemical and electron microscopical study. The dopamine analogues, 5-hydroxydopamine and 6-hydroxydopamine, were used to label the catecholamine terminals, and to enable the direct correlation between the fluorescence microscopical and the electron microscopical pictures.The fibre type that was identified as catecholamine-containing was ultrastructurally chiefly characterized by dense-cored vesicles, 500–1200 Å in diameter, intermingled with varying numbers of small empty vesicles. 5-hydroxydopamine was selectively accumulated in these fibres and caused an increased electron density of the granular vesicles as well as of some small normally agranular vesicles, and systemically administered 6-hydroxydopamine caused a selective degeneration of these fibres, most prominently within the neural lobe. The dopaminergic terminals of the neural lobe showed frequent close contacts (80–120 Å), without real membrane thickenings, to neurosecretory axons and to pituicyte processes. It is suggested that these close contacts might signify a direct dopaminergic influence on the neurosecretory axons and/or on the pituicyte processes. The identified central catecholamine fibres were also found to make common synapse-like contacts on the pars intermedia cells, whereas the innervation by neurosecretory fibres was very rare. This suggests that the direct central nervous control of the rat pars intermedia is exerted by the catecholamine neurons. A very special feature of the catecholamine fibres in the pituitary is the occurrence of peculiar, large dopamine-filled droplet-like swellings. Electron microscopically, such large axonal swellings (more than 2 in diameter) were found to contain, in addition to the characteristic vesicles and organelles, strongly osmiophilic lamellated membrane complexes resembling myelin bodies and multivesicular bodies encircling disintegrated vesicles, suggesting that these droplet fibres represent dilated stumps of spontaneously degenerating dopaminergic axons. It is suggested that the dopaminergic neural lobe fibres are undergoing continuous reorganization through degeneration—regeneration cycles, a phenomenon previously suggested for the neurosecretory axons of the neural lobe.Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.Supported by Svenska Livförsäkringsbolags Nämnd för Medicinsk Forskning, by The Medical Faculty, University of Lund and by the Ford Foundation. |
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Keywords: | Catecholamine nerve terminals Fluorescence and electron microscopical identification Neurointermediate lobe Spontaneous and 6-OH-DA induced degeneration Rat pituitary |
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