Glutamate receptor subunits at mossy fiber-unipolar brush cell synapses: Light and electron microscopic immunocytochemical study in cerebellar cortex of rat and cat

1995 ◽  
Vol 357 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dick Jaarsma ◽  
Robert J. Wenthold ◽  
Enrico Mugnaini
1990 ◽  
Vol 38 (12) ◽  
pp. 1767-1777 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Hámori ◽  
J Takács ◽  
P Petrusz

Selective labeling of mossy fiber terminals and parallel fibers was obtained in rat cerebellar cortex by a glutamate antibody produced and characterized by Hepler et al. The high-resolution electron microscopic immunogold demonstration of this amino acid offered the possibility of determining the size and shape of synaptic vesicles in glutamate-positive mossy endings. Mossy terminals that stained with the glutamate antibody formed two distinct populations, one with spherical synaptic vesicles with an average diameter of 34.0 nm (more than 90% of all mossy fiber endings) and one with pleomorphic and smaller synaptic vesicles which had an average diameter of 28.5 nm. We present experimental evidence that the mossy terminals with large round vesicles are of extracerebellar origin, whereas those with small pleomorphic synaptic vesicles are endings of nucleocortical fibers. The presence of two distinct classes of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-containing axon terminals within cerebellar glomeruli has also been demonstrated; those originating from the cerebellar nuclei contain large (36.2 nm) synaptic vesicles, whereas the majority of GABA-stained axon terminals that are of local (cortical) origin contain small (29.1 nm) synaptic vesicles. It therefore appears that, at least in the case of glutamate and GABA, morphological characterization of the axon terminals based on the size and shape of synaptic vesicles is not a reliable indicator of their functional nature (i.e., whether they are excitatory or inhibitory); convincing evidence for the identity of the transmitter can be obtained only by electron microscopic immunostaining procedures. Our results also suggest the existence of both inhibitory and excitatory feedback from cerebellar nuclei to cerebellar cortex.


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