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1. Intracellular recordings were made from the output neurons (mitral and tufted cells) of the rat olfactory bulb during electrical orthodromic stimulation of the olfactory nerve layer (ONL) and antidromic stimulation of the lateral olfactory tract and posterior piriform cortex (pPC) to test for physiological differences among the neuron types. Many of these neurons were identified by intracellular injections of biocytin, and others were identified by their pattern of antidromic activation. 2. Both marked and unmarked mitral cells showed large inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) in response to antidromic stimulation of the pPC, whereas tufted cells exhibited small IPSPs in response to pPC stimulation. Tufted cells, however, showed large IPSPs in response to ONL stimulation. In many cases, these tufted cell responses to ONL stimulation were larger than the mitral cell responses. The marked superficial tufted cells, those with basal dendrites in the superficial sublayer of the external plexiform layer (EPL), had the smallest IPSPs in response to pPC stimulation. These data support anatomic observations suggesting that the granule cell populations responsible for the IPSPs may be different for mitral and for superficial tufted cells. 3. The different types of output cells also showed differences in their responses to orthodromic stimulation. Type I mitral cells, which have basal dendrites confined to the deep sublayer of the EPL, were significantly less excitable by ONL stimulation than were the type II mitral cells, which have basal dendrites distributed within the intermediate sublayer of the EPL. Half of the type I mitral cells could not be excited at all by ONL stimulation. Superficial tufted cells showed even greater orthodromic excitability than type II mitral cells, usually responding to ONL stimulation with two or more spikes. 4. The ionic basis of the IPSPs in the superficial tufted cells appeared similar to those described for mitral cells. These IPSPs could be reversed by chloride injection and were associated with increased membrane conductance. 5. For both mitral and tufted cells, the number of ONL electrodes evoking IPSPs was greater than the number evoking spikes. These data suggest a kind of center-surround organization of inputs to these cells from the ONL, although this does not yet imply that the sensory receptive field of these output cells has a center-surround organization. 6. In conclusion, the properties of rat olfactory bulb output cells correlate with the sublayers of the EPL in which their basal dendrites lie.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The ontogeny and cellular specificity of expression of beta-galactosidase activity and olfactory marker protein (OMP) are compared in olfactory tissue of the H-OMP-lacZ-3 line of transgenic mice. In this line the expression of lacZ is driven by a 0.3 kb fragment of the rat OMP promoter. During fetal development, lacZ expression is detectable in olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) shortly after the initial appearance of endogenous OMP. The beta-galactosidase marker was observed only in mature olfactory receptor neurons where it co-localized with endogenous OMP. It was absent from immature neurons that express the growth associated phosphoprotein B50/GAP43. Lesion of the peripheral olfactory pathway by intranasal irrigation with Triton X-100 eliminated expression of both OMP and lacZ in the olfactory neuroepithelium. Subsequent regeneration of the full complement of olfactory receptor neurons was associated with co-expression of both OMP and beta-galactosidase activity. Neither OMP nor beta-galactosidase activity was induced in any other cell type of the regenerating olfactory mucosa. Thus, as little as 0.3 kb of the OMP promoter has the ability to target lacZ expression to olfactory receptor neurons in a temporally and spatially defined manner. We discuss the potential utility of this transgenic line for future studies of the olfactory system.  相似文献   

4.
The morphological characteristics and distribution of neurocalcin (NC)-immunoreactive elements were studied in the rat main olfactory bulb (OB) using a polyclonal antibody and the avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase method. NC-positive elements were abundant in the glomerular layer (GL), where numerous immunostained external tufted cells and periglomerular cells were detected. Other less abundant NC-immunolabeled populations included middle and internal tufted cells, Van Gehuchten cells, horizontal cells, vertical cells of Cajal, deep short-axon cells and granule cells. This study demonstrates the presence of NC immunoreactivity in subsets of different neuronal types in the rat main OB. This calcium-binding protein has been found in interneurons, and no evidence of immunoreactivity to NC is detected in projecting neurons. Despite the large population of labeled external tufted cells, most of them belong according to morphological criteria to the local circuit group and some others to those with interbulbar and/or intrabulbar connections. The identification of neuronal subpopulations expressing NC provides a further characterization and shows the existence of biochemical differences within morphologically identical neurons. Thus, this marker may be a useful tool in unravelling the circuitries of the rodent OB in both normal and experimental conditions. The exact physiological function of NC in the olfactory system remains unknown. On the basis of similarities to recoverin, it could be involved in mechanisms responsible for sensory adaptation. Additionally, its calcium-binding abilities may contribute to improve the temporal precision of stimuli transmission, or be concerned with general calcium-related events occurring in specific interneuronal groups.  相似文献   

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Transplantation of embryonic neurons to the adult mammalian central nervous system (CNS) offers the possibility of re-establishing neural functions lost after traumatic injuries or neurodegenerative disease. In the adult CNS, however, transplanted neurons and their growing neurites can become confined to the graft region, and there may also be a relative paucity of afferents innervating grafted neurons. Because glia may influence the development and regeneration of CNS neurons, the present study has characterized the distribution of astrocytes and developmentally regulated glycoconjugates (chondroitin-6-sulfate proteoglycan and tenascin) within regions of the embryonic mouse CNS used as donor tissues, and in and around these grafts to the adult striatum and substantia nigra. Both chondroitin-6-sulfate proteoglycan and tenascin are present in the embryonic ventral mesencephalon (in association with radial glia and their endfeet, and glial boundaries that cordon off the ventral mesencephalon dopamine neuron migratory zone) and lateral ganglionic eminence before transplantation, and they are conserved within grafts of these tissues to the adult mouse. Neostriatal grafts exhibit a heterogeneous pattern of astrocyte and extracellular matrix molecule distribution, unlike ventral mesencephalon grafts, which are rather homogeneous. There is evidence to suggest that, in addition to variation in astroglial/extracellular matrix immunostaining within different compartments in striatal grafts to either adult striatum or substantia nigra, there are also boundaries between these compartments that are rich in glial fibrillary acidic protein/extracellular matrix components. Substantia nigra grafts, with cells immunoreactive for tyrosine hydroxylase, are also rich in immature astroglia (RC-2-immunopositive), and as the astroglia mature (to glial fibrillary acidic protein-positive) over time the expression of chondroitin-6-sulfate proteoglycan and tenascin is also reduced. These same extracellular matrix constituents, however, are only slightly up-regulated in an area of the adult host which surrounds the grafted tissue. Glial scar components exhibit no obvious differences between grafts from different sources to homotopic (e.g., striatum to striatum) or heterotopic (e.g., substantia nigra to striatum) sites, and likewise grafts of non-synaptically associated structures (e.g., cerebellum to striatum), needle lesions or vehicle injections all yield astroglial/extracellular matrix scars in the host that are indistinguishable. Studies utilizing the ROSA-26 transgenic (beta-galactosidase-positive) mouse as a host for non-5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-beta-d-galactopyranoside-labeled grafts indicate that the early astroglial/extracellular matrix response to the graft is derived from the surrounding host structures. Furthermore, biochemical analysis of one of the "boundary molecules", tenascin, from the developing ventral mesencephalon versus adult striatal lesions, suggests that different forms of the molecule predominate in the embryonic versus lesioned adult brain. Such differences in the nature and distribution of astroglia and developmentally regulated extracellular matrix molecules between donor and host regions may affect the growth and differentiation of transplanted neurons. The present study suggests that transplanted neurons and their processes may flourish within graft versus host regions, in part due to a confining glial scar, but also because the extracellular milieu within the graft site remains more representative of the developmental environment from which the donor neurons were obtained [Gates M. A., et al. (1994) Soc. Neurosci. Abstr. 20, 471].  相似文献   

6.
The accessory olfactory bulb (AOB) is the first relay station in the vomeronasal system and may play a critical role in processing pheromone signals. The AOB shows similar but less distinct lamination compared with the main olfactory bulb (MOB). In this study, synaptic organization of the AOB was analyzed in slice preparations from adult rats by using both field potential and patch-clamp recordings. Stimulation of the vomeronasal nerve (VN) evoked field potentials that showed characteristic patterns in different layers of the AOB. Current source density (CSD) analysis of the field potentials revealed spatiotemporally separated loci of inward current (sinks) that represented sequential activation of different neuronal components: VN activity (period I), synaptic excitation of mitral cell apical dendrites (period II), and activation of granule cells by mitral cell basal dendrites (period III). Stimulation of the lateral olfactory tract also evoked field potentials in the AOB, which indicated antidromic activation of the mitral cells (period I and II) followed by activation of granule cells (period III). Whole cell patch recordings from mitral and granule cells of the AOB supported that mitral cells are excited by VN terminals and subsequently activate granule cells through dendrodendritic synapses. Both CSD analysis and patch recordings provided evidence that glutamate is the neurotransmitter at the vomeronasal receptor neuron; mitral cell synapses and both NMDA and non-NMDA receptors are involved. We also demonstrated electrophysiologically that reciprocal interaction between mitral and granule cells in the AOB is through the dendrodendritic reciprocal synapses. The neurotransmitter at the mitral-to-granule synapses is glutamate and at the granule-to-mitral synapse is gamma-aminobutyric acid. The synaptic interactions among receptor cell terminals, mitral cells, and granule cells in the AOB are therefore similar to those in the MOB, suggesting that processing of chemosensory information in the AOB shares similarities with that in the MOB.  相似文献   

7.
In previous work, we showed a robust gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABAergic) synaptic input onto embryonic luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) neurons maintained in olfactory explants. In this study, we identify GABAergic neurons in olfactory pit (OP) of embryonic mice in vivo and study, using patch-pipet whole-cell current and voltage clamp techniques, synaptic interactions of these neurons in explant cultures. In vivo, glutamate decarboxylase (GAD, the enzyme which synthesizes GABA) mRNA was first detected in nasal regions on Embryonic Day (E) 11.5. From E12.5 to E13.5, robust GAD expression was localized to cells primarily in the ventral aspect of the OP. GAD mRNA was not detected over dorsally located cells in olfactory sensory or respiratory epithelium. In addition, GAD mRNA was not observed in cells along olfactory axons. GAD mRNA was dramatically reduced in the OP/vomeronasal organ by E16.5. Using antibodies against both GABA and GAD, immunopositive axonal-like tracts were detected in the nasal septum on E12.5. GABAergic staining decreased by E13.5. To examine synaptic interactions of these GABAergic cells, embryonic olfactory explants were generated and maintained in serum-free media. As explants spread, neuron-like cells migrated into the periphery, sometimes forming ganglion-like clusters. Cells were recorded, marked intracellularly with Lucifer Yellow and post-fixation, immunocytochemically examined. Forty-six cells, typically multipolar, were GABAergic, had resting potentials around -50 mV, and exhibited spontaneous action potentials which were generated by spontaneous depolarizing GABAergic (GABAA) synaptic activity. OP neurons depolarized in response to GABA by increasing Cl- conductance. The biophysical properties of OP-derived GABAergic neurons were distinct from those reported for olfactory receptor neurons but similar to embryonic LHRH neurons. However, unlike LHRH neurons, GABAergic neurons did not migrate large distances in olfactory explants or appear to leave the olfactory pit in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
We investigated in adult rats whether a relatively short exposure to a novel odour can lead to changes in reactivity of olfactory bulb principal neurons. Naive rats were exposed to isoamyl acetate for 20 min per day either for 6 consecutive days or for a single 20-min exposure. Control group was non-exposed. Under anaesthesia, responsiveness of each recorded single mitral/tufted cell was tested towards isoamyl acetate and four other odours. Results show that the proportion of responding cells in the exposed groups decreased drastically when compared to controls. In the two experimental groups recorded 24 h following the last exposure, mitral/tufted cells show a significant decrease in the number of excitatory responses. In parallel, the number of non-responsive cells increased by at least a fourfold factor. This decrease in reactivity was not selective towards the odour used during the exposure but concerned any of the five test-odours presented during recordings. Finally, this lower responsiveness was long lasting as it was still observed 10 days after the end of the last exposure. This preliminary study points out the importance of even limited sensory experience in neural representation of odours.  相似文献   

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Detailed information regarding the contribution of individual gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-containing inhibitory neurons to the overall synaptic activity of single postsynaptic cells is essential to our understanding of fundamental elements of synaptic integration and operation of neuronal circuits. For example, GABA-containing cells in the thalamic reticular nucleus (nRt) provide major inhibitory innervation of thalamic relay nuclei that is critical to thalamocortical rhythm generation. To investigate the contribution of individual nRt neurons to the strength of this internuclear inhibition, we obtained whole-cell recordings of unitary inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) evoked in ventrobasal thalamocortical (VB) neurons by stimulation of single nRt cells in rat thalamic slices, in conjunction with intracellular biocytin labeling. Two types of monosynaptic IPSCs could be distinguished. "Weak" inhibitory connections were characterized by a significant number of postsynaptic failures in response to presynaptic nRt action potentials and relatively small IPSCs. In contrast, "strong" inhibition was characterized by the absence of postsynaptic failures and significantly larger unitary IPSCs. By using miniature IPSC amplitudes to infer quantal size, we estimated that unitary IPSCs associated with weak inhibition resulted from activation of 1-3 release sites, whereas stronger inhibition would require simultaneous activation of 5-70 release sites. The inhibitory strengths were positively correlated with the density of axonal swellings of the presynaptic nRt neurons, an indicator that characterizes different nRt axonal arborization patterns. These results demonstrate that there is a heterogeneity of inhibitory interactions between nRt and VB neurons, and that variations in gross morphological features of axonal arbors in the central nervous system can be associated with significant differences in postsynaptic response characteristics.  相似文献   

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Homozygous Purkinje Cell Degeneration (PCD) mice exhibit a selective loss of olfactory bulb mitral cells (MCs) after 4 months of age. This selective degeneration leaves a subpopulation of denervated granule cells which establish new reciprocal dendro-dendritic synapses with unaffected tufted cells (TCs) (14). This suggests a capacity for plasticity in TCs and raises the question of whether a comparable degree of reorganization occurs in their axonal terminals in piriform cortex (PC) following the loss of MCs. Homozygous (experimental) and heterozygous (control) PCD mice were routinely perfused and processed for electron microscopy. A quantitative electron microscopic analysis was performed on radially oriented micrograph montages spanning from the pia into layer II of PC. After MC loss in the experimental animals there was a decrease in density of larger myelinated axons in the lateral olfactory tract (LOT). Myelinated axons in the LOT had a mean cross-sectional diameter of 1.26 +/- 0.04, and 0.81 +/- 0.025 microm in the control and experimental mice, respectively. In superficial layer I of PC, control mice had presynaptic axonal terminals from mitral and tufted cells with characteristic electron lucent (light) profiles establishing asymmetric synapses with pyramidal cell dendrites. In contrast, the experimental mice showed a decrease in electron lucent terminals and a robust increase in electron dense (dark) presynaptic associational terminals. Although the overall synaptic density did not differ between the control and experimental mice (16.40 +/- 0.94 and 18.10 +/- 0.96 synapses/100 microm2, respectively), an overall decrease in the thickness of Layer 1 suggests that the total number of synapses decreases following MC loss. In addition to the apparent increase of associational terminals, the diameter of terminal enlargements increased as well as the number of multiple synaptic contact per terminals in the experimental animal, suggesting further compensatory mechanisms for the loss of MC presynaptic terminals.  相似文献   

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The distribution of GABAergic elements and their synaptic contacts in the nucleus submedius, a specific nociceptive relay in the medial thalamus of the cat, was studied using light and electron-microscopic postembedding immunohistochemical methods. About one-fourth of the neurons in nucleus submedius were GABA immunoreactive. These neurons were generally smaller than the unlabeled neurons and are probably local circuit neurons. Electron microscopy showed GABA immunoreactivity in two types of vesicle-containing profiles, F-terminals and presynaptic dendrites. F-terminals formed simple synapses with the dendrites of presumed thalamocortical relay cells. Presynaptic dendrites were involved in more complex synaptic arrangements that included ascending trigeminothalamic and spinothalamic tract terminals and thalamocortical relay cell dendrites. Analysis of single sections showed that about 40% of the trigeminothalamic and spinothalamic tract terminals, identified by anterograde transport of horseradish peroxidase, were presynaptic to GABAergic presynaptic dendrites. These results show that GABAergic neurons are frequent in nucleus submedius and that the GABAergic elements make synaptic connections similar to those described for other sensory relay nuclei, including the somatosensory ventroposterior nucleus. This suggests that GABAergic mechanisms play an important role in the processing of nociceptive and thermoreceptive information.  相似文献   

13.
The presence and distribution of intracellular Ca2+ release pathways in olfactory bulb neurons were studied in dissociated cell cultures. Histochemical techniques and imaging of Ca2+ fluxes were used to identify two major intracellular Ca2+ release mechanisms: inositol 1, 4,5-triphosphate receptor (IP3R)-mediated release, and ryanodine receptor-mediated release. Cultured neurons were identified by immunocytochemistry for the neuron-specificmarker beta-tubulin III. Morphometric analyses and immunocytochemistry for glutamic acid-decarboxylase revealed a heterogeneous population of cultured neurons with phenotypes corresponding to both projection (mitral/tufted) and intrinsic (periglomerular/granule) neurons of the in vivo olfactory bulb. Immunocytochemistry for the IP3R, and labeling with fluorescent-tagged ryanodine, revealed that, irrespective of cell type, almost all cultured neurons express IP3R and ryanodine binding sites in both somata and dendrites. Functional imaging revealed that intracellular Ca2+ fluxes can be generated in the absence of external Ca2+, using agonists specific to each of the intracellular release pathways. Local pressure application of glutamate or quisqualate evoked Ca2+ fluxes in both somata and dendrites in nominally Ca2+ free extracellular solutions, suggesting the presence of IP3-dependent Ca2+ release. These fluxes were blocked by preincubation with thapsigargin and persisted in the presence of the glutamate receptor antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione. Local application of caffeine, a ryanodine receptor agonist, also evoked intracellular Ca2+ fluxes in the absence of extracellular Ca2+. These Ca2+ fluxes were suppressed by preincubation with ryanodine. In all neurons, both IP3- and ryanodine-dependent release pathways coexisted, suggesting that they interact to modulate intracellular Ca2+ concentrations.  相似文献   

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In a previous study we demonstrated that grafted dopamine (DA) neurons are able to induce an early and widespread normalization of DA-neuropeptide Y (NPY) interactions in the host striatum previously deprived of its DA input. Since similar recoveries were found to occur in striatal areas densely or poorly reinnervated by the graft, the question was raised as to what mechanisms (synaptic or volumic release) were involved in these functional effects. Ultrastructural analysis of graft-to-host relationships was performed using single--and double--immunolabelling techniques to detect neurons containing tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and NPY, with a view to analysing the early establishment of synaptic connectivity in various areas of the host striatum. Within 1 month of the grafting, TH-immunoreactive (TH-IR) neurons showed most of the normal intrinsic morphological features characteristic of adult rat neurons and were found to have established direct relationships with various striatal neuronal populations. TH-NPY relationships were observed only in the area most densely reinnervated by the graft, and their relative frequency was found to be roughly the same as that determined in the intact striatum. Three months after the grafting, this percentage decreased, probably owing to the further elongation in TH-IR axons resulting in a wider distribution of the TH-NPY associations over the host striatum. In the zones distal from the graft, the reinnervation was far from complete and the few TH-IR fibres projected only to some unlabelled elements, mainly of the spiny type, which have been shown to interact normally with both DA afferents and NPY cells and therefore may relay the DA action over the whole striatum on the NPY population. It can be concluded from these data that the rapid and extensive functional normalization of the TH-NPY interactions previously found to occur in the entire striatum may depend on the restoration of direct and indirect synaptic relationships. A diffuse action of DA through non-synaptic mechanisms may also account for the fact that the amine has access to broader striatal populations than to those presumably reached by DA fibres arising from the graft.  相似文献   

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PURPOSE: We report the MR findings in nine patients with clinical and laboratory evidence of Kallmann syndrome (KS), a genetic disorder of olfactory and gonadal development. In patients with KS, cells that normally express luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone fail to migrate from the medial olfactory placode along the terminalis nerves into the forebrain. In addition, failed neuronal migration from the lateral olfactory placode along the olfactory fila to the forebrain results in aplasia or hypoplasia of the olfactory bulbs and tracts. Patients with KS, therefore, suffer both reproductive and olfactory dysfunction. METHODS: Nine patients with KS underwent direct coronal MR of their olfactory regions in order to assess the olfactory sulci, bulbs, and tracts. A 10th patient had MR findings of KS, although the diagnosis is not yet confirmed by laboratory tests. RESULTS: Abnormalities of the olfactory system were identified in all patients. In particular, the anterior portions of the olfactory sulci were uniformly hypoplastic. The olfactory bulbs and tracts appeared hypoplastic or aplastic in all patients in whom the bulb/tract region was satisfactorily imaged. In two (possibly three) patients, prominent soft tissue in the region of the bulbs suggests radiographic evidence of neurons that have been arrested before migration. CONCLUSIONS: Previous investigators of patients with KS used axial MR images to demonstrate hypoplasia of the olfactory sulci but offered no assessment of the olfactory bulbs. In the present study we used coronal images to show hypoplasia of both olfactory sulci and bulbs. In addition, we found what we believe to be the radiologic correlate of arrested neuronal migration in KS.  相似文献   

17.
Transplant-to-host neuron migration and neurite projection were demonstrated using the mouse allelic Thy-1 system, namely, BALB/c (Thy-1.2) embryonic olfactory bulb (OB) as the graft and 5- to 6-week-old AKR (Thy-1.1) OB as the host. From OB transplants inserted into the host OB, small neurons were often extensively moved mainly in the internal granular layer and showed almost the same morphology as the normal granule neurons. Some large neurons also migrated. Furthermore, inside OB the transplants sent axons mainly into the internal granular layer and dendrites into the external plexiform layer. Outside OB the axons arrived at the anterior olfactory nucleus, primary olfactory cortex, olfactory tubercle, and cortical nucleus of the amygdaloid complex. These fibers appeared to terminate in normal target areas. These findings show that the olfactory system at 5-6 weeks of age still has the capacity to integrate newly migrated neurons and to receive newly growing fibers from the transplant.  相似文献   

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Sheep learn to recognize the odours of their lambs within two hours of giving birth, and this learning involves synaptic changes within the olfactory bulb. Specifically, mitral cells become increasingly responsive to the learned odour, which stimulates release of both glutamate and GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) neurotransmitters from the reciprocal synapses between the excitatory mitral cells and inhibitory granule cells. Nitric oxide (NO) has been implicated in synaptic plasticity in other regions of the brain as a result of its modulation of cyclic GMP levels. Here we investigate the possible role of NO in olfactory learning. We find that the neuronal enzyme nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) is expressed in both mitral and granule cells, whereas the guanylyl cyclase subunits that are required for NO stimulation of cGMP formation are expressed only in mitral cells. Immediately after birth, glutamate levels rise, inducing formation of NO and cGMP, which potentiate glutamate release at the mitral-to-granule cell synapses. Inhibition of nNOS or guanylyl cyclase activity prevents both the potentiation of glutamate release and formation of the olfactory memory. The effects of nNOS inhibition can be reversed by infusion of NO into the olfactory bulb. Once memory has formed, however, inhibition of nNOS or guanylyl cyclase activity cannot impair either its recall or the neurochemical release evoked by the learned lamb odour. Nitric oxide therefore seems to act as a retrograde and/or intracellular messenger, being released from both mitral and granule cells to potentiate glutamate release from mitral cells by modulating cGMP concentrations. We propose that the resulting changes in the functional circuitry of the olfactory bulb underlie the formation of olfactory memories.  相似文献   

20.
Striatal neurons from E15 rat embryos were dissociated, plated at low cell density on polyornithine or on astrocyte monolayers derived from the striatum (homotopic) or mesencephalon (heterotopic), and cultured in a chemically defined medium. Dendrites developing in homotopic co-cultures could reach a state of maturation allowing the establishment of synapses with axons from mesencephalic explants. This culture system thus partially reproduces the in vivo conditions in which striatal neurons developing in an homotopic glial environment can serve as synaptic targets for afferent mesencephalic axons.  相似文献   

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