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  • Title: Immunohistochemical differentiation of electrophysiologically defined neuronal populations in the region of the rat hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus.
    Author: Hoffman NW, Tasker JG, Dudek FE.
    Journal: J Comp Neurol; 1991 May 15; 307(3):405-16. PubMed ID: 1856330.
    Abstract:
    Intracellular recording and labeling were combined with neurophysin immunohistochemistry to study neurons in the paraventricular nucleus region of the rat hypothalamus. Neuronal membrane properties were examined in hypothalamic slices, and cells were labeled by injecting biocytin or Lucifer yellow. Slices were then embedded, sectioned, and immunohistochemically processed for neurophysin. Immunoreactivity patterns, and in some cases counterstaining, enabled determinations of the cytoarchitectonic positions of recorded cells to be made. Recorded cells were divided into three types according to their electrophysiological characteristics. The first type lacked low-threshold Ca2+ spikes and displayed linear current-voltage relations, a short time constant, and evidence for an A current. These were relatively large cells that were typically immunoreactive for neurophysin and were situated near other neurophysin-positive neurons. The second type had relatively small low-threshold potentials that did not generate bursts of Na+ spikes. These cells had heterogeneous current-voltage relations and intermediate time constants. They did not label for neurophysin, and most were located in the parvicellular subregion of the paraventricular nucleus. The third type had large low-threshold Ca2- spikes that generated bursts of Na+ spikes, and these cells had nonlinear current-voltage relations and long time constants. These neurons were dorsal or dorsolateral to the paraventricular nucleus and were not immunoreactive for neurophysin. These results indicate that paraventricular magnocellular neurons lack low-threshold potentials, whereas paraventricular parvicellular neurons display low-threshold potentials that generate one or two action potentials. Neurons that fire spike bursts from low-threshold potentials are adjacent to the paraventricular nucleus, confirming earlier reports.
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