Premium
Immunocytochemical study of somatostatin, neurotensin, GABA, and glycine in rat spinal dorsal horn
Author(s) -
Proudlock F.,
Spike R. C.,
Todd A. J.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
journal of comparative neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.855
H-Index - 209
eISSN - 1096-9861
pISSN - 0021-9967
DOI - 10.1002/cne.903270210
Subject(s) - neurotensin , somatostatin , biology , glycine , neuroscience , dorsum , spinal cord , french horn , glycine receptor , neuropeptide , anatomy , endocrinology , medicine , receptor , biochemistry , amino acid , psychology , pedagogy
In order to determine whether somatostatin coexists with GABA or glycine in neurones in rat spinal dorsal horn, a combined pre‐ and post‐embedding immunocytochemical study was carried out. One hundred six somatostatin‐immunoreactive neurones located in lamina II and the dorsal half of lamina III were tested with antiserum or monoclonal antibody to GABA and none of these cells showed GABA‐like immunoreactivity. However, 8 out of 13 somatostatin immunoreactive neurones located deeper in the dorsal horn (ventral lamina III and lamina IV) showed glycine‐like immunoreactivity, and 6 of these were also GABA‐immunoreactive. We have previously shown that neurotensin‐immunoreactive neurones in laminae II and III are also not immunoreactive when tested with GABA antiserum (Todd et al.: Neuroscience 47 : 685–691, 1992), and a double‐labelling fluorescence method was therefore used to compare the distribution of somatostatin and neurotensin within the superficial dorsal horn. The two types of peptide‐immunoreactivity were never found in the same profile. These results suggest that somatostatin and neurotensin are present in different populations of non‐GABAergic neurones in rat superficial dorsal horn, but that some somatostatin containing neurones in the deeper part of the dorsal horn contain glycine, with or without GABA. © 1993 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.