Organization and morphological characteristics of cholonergic neurons: an immunocytochemical study with a monoclonal antibody to choline acetyltransferase

CR Houser, GD Crawford, RP Barber, PM Salvaterra… - Brain research, 1983 - Elsevier
CR Houser, GD Crawford, RP Barber, PM Salvaterra, JE Vaughn
Brain research, 1983Elsevier
Choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), the acetylcholine (ACh) synthesizing enzyme, has been
localized immunocytochemically with a monoclonal antibody inlight and electron
microscopic preparations of rat central nervous system (CNS). The antibody was an IgG 1
subclass immunoglobulin that removed ChAT activity from solution. The specificity of the
antibody and immunocytochemical methods has been confirmed by the demonstration of
ChAT-positive neurons in a number of well-characterized cholinergic systems. For …
Abstract
Choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), the acetylcholine (ACh) synthesizing enzyme, has been localized immunocytochemically with a monoclonal antibody inlight and electron microscopic preparations of rat central nervous system (CNS). The antibody was an IgG1 subclass immunoglobulin that removed ChAT activity from solution. The specificity of the antibody and immunocytochemical methods has been confirmed by the demonstration of ChAT-positive neurons in a number of well-characterized cholinergic systems. For examples, ChAT-positive reaction product was present in the cell bodies of spinal and cranial nerve motoneurons, as well as in their axons and terminations as motor end-plates in skeletal muscle. In addition, the somata of preganglionic sympathetic and parasympathetic neurons were ChAT-positive. The specificity of staining was further supported by a lack of reaction in several groups of neurons thought to use neuroactive substances other than acetylcholine. No specific staining was observed in control specimens.
The findings indicated that ChAT had an extensive intraneuronal distribution in many cholinergic neurons, being present in cell bodies, dendrites, axons and axon terminals. ChAT-positive somata were found in the medial septum and diagonal band, the medial habenula, and the basal nucleus of, the forebrain, 3 regions that are sources of cholinergic afferents to the hippocampus, interpeduncular nucleus and cerebral cortex, respectively. In addition, positively stained cell bodies were present within the cerebral cortex. ChAT-positive punctate structures were observed in the ventral horn of the spinal cord, where electron microscopic studies demonstrated that some of these structures were synaptic terminals. Other regions containing numerous ChAT-positive puncta included the hippocampus, the interpeduncular nucleus and the cerebral cortex. The light microscopic appeaance of these putative cholinergic terminals varied among different brain regions. Large punctate structures related to well-defined postsynaptic elements were characteristic of some regions, such as the ventral horn of the spinal cord, while smaller punctate structures and varicose fibers with a diffuse pattern of organization distinguished otther regions, such as the cerebral cortex.
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