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Title: The distribution of glutamic acid decarboxylase immunoreactivity in the diencephalon of the opossum and rabbit. Author: Penny GR, Conley M, Schmechel DE, Diamond IT. Journal: J Comp Neurol; 1984 Sep 01; 228(1):38-56. PubMed ID: 6090511. Abstract: We have examined the distribution of neurons and terminals immunoreactive for glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) in the thalamus and adjacent structures of the opossum (Didelphis virginiana) and the rabbit and have compared this distribution with the distributions we described previously for the cat and bushbaby (Galago senegalensis). The significance of these experiments depends, first, on the fact that GAD is the synthetic enzyme for GABA, and therefore that GAD immunoreactivity is a marker for GABAergic inhibitory neurons, and second, on previous findings that suggest that GABAergic neurons in the dorsal thalamus are local circuit neurons. In both cat and Galago, GAD-immunoreactive neurons are distributed essentially throughout the entire thalamus. In the opossum, GAD neurons are chiefly confined to the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus and the lateral extremity of the lateral posterior nucleus. The distribution of GAD neurons in the rabbit is intermediate between that found in the opossum on the one hand and cat and Galago on the other. Like opossum, about 25% of the neurons in the lateral geniculate nucleus of rabbit are GAD immunoreactive. Unlike opossum, however, as many as 18% of the cells in the ventral posterior nucleus of the rabbit are GAD immunoreactive, and scattered cells are also labeled in other thalamic areas, such as the medial geniculate and the lateral group. Aside from the findings in the dorsal thalamus, the chief observation is that GAD-immunoreactive neurons and/or terminals densely fill all principal targets of the optic tract, including the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus; the superficial gray layer of the superior colliculus; the anterior, posterior, and olivary pretectal nuclei; the nucleus of the optic tract; and the medial and lateral terminal nuclei of the accessory optic tract. These results support the idea first put forward by Cajal that local circuit neurons increase in number during the course of the evolution of complex mammalian brains. If we can assume that the conservative opossum retains characteristics reflecting an early stage of mammalian evolution, the results suggest that thalamic local circuit neurons arose first in the visual system and only later in evolution spread throughout the thalamus.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]