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  • Title: An ultrastructural study of 5-hydroxytryptamine-, thyrotropin-releasing hormone- and substance P-immunoreactive axonal boutons in the motor nucleus of spinal cord segments L7-S1 in the adult cat.
    Author: Ulfhake B, Arvidsson U, Cullheim S, Hökfelt T, Brodin E, Verhofstad A, Visser T.
    Journal: Neuroscience; 1987 Dec; 23(3):917-29. PubMed ID: 2449639.
    Abstract:
    The distribution and fine structure of 5-hydroxytryptamine-, thyrotropin-releasing hormone- and substance P-immunoreactive synaptic boutons and varicosities were studied in the motor nucleus of the spinal cord segments L7-S1 in the cat, using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase immunohistochemical technique and analysis of ultrathin serial sections. The 5-hydroxytryptamine-, thyrotropin-releasing hormone- and substance P-immunoreactive boutons had a similar ultrastructural appearance as judged from serial section analysis. The boutons could be classified into two types on the basis of their vesicular content, with one type containing a large number of small agranular vesicles together with only a few, if any large granular vesicles, while the other type contained a large number of large granular vesicles in addition to small agranular vesicles. The vesicles were spherical or spherical-to-pleomorphic. Postsynaptic dense bodies (Taxi bodies) were occasionally observed in relation to all three types of immunoreactive boutons, which almost invariably formed synaptic junctions with dendrites. Judged by the calibre of the postsynaptic dendrites, the boutons were preferentially distributed to the proximal dendritic domains of motoneurons. In one case, a substance P-immunoreactive bouton formed an axosomatic synaptic contact. In addition to synaptic boutons, 5-hydroxytryptamine-, thyrotropin-releasing hormone- and substance P-immunoreactive axonal varicosities containing a large number of large granular and small agranular vesicles but lacking any form of conventional synaptic contact were observed. Such varicosities were either directly apposing surrounding neuronal elements or separated from the neurons by thin glial processes. The origin of the immunoreactive boutons was not traced, but it was thought likely that the main source of the boutons was neurons with their cell bodies located in the medullary raphe nuclei.
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