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Transplantation of the rat pineal organ to the brain: pinealocyte differentiation and innervation
Authors:Tetsuo Nonaka  Masasuke Araki  Hiroshi Kimura  Ikuko Nagatsu  Fumiaki Satoh  Toshio Masuzawa
Institution:(1) Department of Surgical Neurology, Jichi Medical School, Tochigi, Japan;(2) Department of Anatomy, Jichi Medical School, Tochigi, Japan;(3) Department of Anatomy, Shiga University of Medical Sciences, Ohtsu, Japan;(4) Department of Anatomy, Fujita-Gakuen Health University, School of Medicine, Aichi, Japan;(5) Present address: Molecular Neurobiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Sciences, Ohtsu, Japan;(6) Department of Anatomy, Jichi Medical School, Minamikawachi, 329-04 Tochigi, Japan
Abstract:Summary The pineal organ of neonatal rats was transplanted to the frontal part of the cerebral cortex or the cerebral interhemispheric fissure of an isogenic adult rat to determine whether pineal differentiation and pinealopetal innervation are affected by aberrant neuronal influences. Transplants were fixed for immunohistochemistry at 1, 2 and 6 months after transplantation. When treated with an anti-serotonin antibody, cells in transplants from both locations showed intense immunoreactivity and a morphology comparable to intact pinealocytes, indicating that the transplanted pinealocytes had differentiated normally. Tyrosine hydroxylase immunohistochemistry revealed that new catecholamine fibers of central nervous origin extended only into the periphery and not into the core of transplants grafted within the cortex. However, numerous catecholamine fibers were found in transplants placed in the interhemispheric fissure. These fibers were often accompanied by blood vessels, suggesting that they derived from sympathetic ganglia. Serotonin fibers, which are densely distributed in the cerebral cortex, were seldom found to enter transplants from both locations. These observations indicate that pineal cells express their characteristic properties even when transferred to a foreign milieu and that they do not receive novel innervation from the central nerves that normally do not innervate the intact pineal body; the transplant thereby retains the property of selective pinealopetal innervation.
Keywords:Pineal organ  Transplantation  Serotonin  Tyrosine hydroxylase  Rat (Wistar)
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