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Title: D-amino-acid oxidase is confined to the lower brain stem and cerebellum in rat brain: regional differentiation of astrocytes. Author: Horiike K, Tojo H, Arai R, Nozaki M, Maeda T. Journal: Brain Res; 1994 Aug 01; 652(2):297-303. PubMed ID: 7953743. Abstract: Based on enzymatic activity, the localization and the identification of D-amino-acid oxidase-containing cells in rat whole brain was systematically studied in serial fixed sections. The oxidase activity was absent or scarce in the forebrain, was confined to the brain stem (midbrain, pons and medulla oblongata) and cerebellum, and its localization was extended to the spinal cord. In the brain stem the oxidase was mainly localized in the tegmentum, particularly in the reticular formation. The intense oxidase reactions were present in the red nucleus, oculomotor nucleus, trochlear nucleus, ventral nucleus of the lateral lemniscus, dorsal and ventral cochlear nuclei, vestibular nuclei, nuclei of posterior funiculus, nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, lateral reticular nucleus, inferior olivary nucleus, and hypoglossal nucleus. In the cerebellum the activity in the cortex was much more intense than that in the medulla. In all the fields described above, the oxidase-containing cells were exclusively astrocytes including Bergmann glial cells, and neither neuronal components, endothelial cells, oligodendrocytes nor ependymal cells showed oxidase activity. These results indicated that the astrocytes regionally differentiated into two distinct types, one of which expressed oxidase in the midbrain, rhombencephalon and spinal cord, and the other which did not in the forebrain. The localization of the oxidase was inversely correlated with the distribution of free D-serine in mammalian brains (Nagata, Y., Horiike, K. and Maeda, T., Brain Res., 634 (1994) 291-295). Based on the characteristic localization of the oxidase-containing astrocytes, we discussed the physiological role of the oxidase.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]