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Title: Postnatal development of parvalbumin-, calbindin- and adult GABA-immunoreactivity in two visual nuclei of zebra finches. Author: Braun K, Scheich H, Zuschratter W, Heizmann CW, Matute C, Streit P. Journal: Brain Res; 1988 Dec 20; 475(2):205-17. PubMed ID: 3214731. Abstract: The characterization of neuron populations by their immunoreactivity against parvalbumin- and calbindin (28-kDa)-antisera has been used to study the postnatal development of the visual diencephalic nucleus rotundus and the mesencephalic nucleus isthmi complex in zebra finches. In nucleus rotundus, parvalbumin-immunoreactivity was restricted to the neuropil during the first 10 days and appears additionally in somata around day 12 where it remains until adulthood. Calbindin-immunoreactivity of the very scarce neuropil and the few somata, which can be observed during the first two weeks, disappears until adulthood. Thus, the adult nucleus rotundus shows an almost complementary distribution of calbindin- and parvalbumin-immunoreactive structures: the numerous, heavily parvalbumin-positive somata, which are surrounded by dense immunoreactive neuropil are in sharp contrast to the complete absence of calbindin-immunoreactive somata. Only a thin rim surrounding this nucleus contains punctate calbindin-positive neuropil. In the nucleus isthmi complex, parvalbumin and calbindin staining patterns show markedly different developmental profiles. While the density of parvalbumin-immunoreactive neuropil in the parvocellular part of the nucleus isthmi continuously increases and the somata remain unstained, the initially heavily calbindin-positive somata gradually lose their immunoreactivity during the first two weeks. In the adult nucleus isthmi complex, parvalbumin- and calbindin show nearly identical staining patterns. A comparison between the two calcium-binding proteins and GABA-immunoreactivity in adult brains revealed different relationships in the two nuclei: while in nucleus rotundus GABA-staining pattern neither resembles that of parvalbumin nor of calbindin, in the nucleus isthmi complex all three staining patterns coincide.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]