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. 1989 Sep;23(3):249-56.
doi: 10.1016/0361-9230(89)90154-8.

Serotonin-containing axon terminals in the hypoglossal nucleus of the rat. An immuno-electronmicroscopic study

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Serotonin-containing axon terminals in the hypoglossal nucleus of the rat. An immuno-electronmicroscopic study

L D Aldes et al. Brain Res Bull. 1989 Sep.

Abstract

The morphology and distribution of serotonin-containing axon terminals in the rat hypoglossal nucleus (XII) was investigated immunocytochemically at the electron microscopic level. Serotonin-positive profiles were found throughout all regions of XII and included unmyelinated axons, varicosities and axon terminals. Most labeled profiles (68.1%) were nonsynaptic unmyelinated axons and varicosities, while synaptic profiles, ending on dendrites and somata, were seen less frequently (28.7%). The majority of labeled axon terminals (76.9%) ended on small-to-medium-sized dendrites. Most axodendritic terminals contained small, round agranular vesicles (20-55 microns), several large (60-100 microns) dense core vesicles, and were associated with a pronounced asymmetric postsynaptic specialization. By contrast, labeled axosomatic terminals were seen less often than those ending on dendrites (23.0%). Axosomatic terminals typically contained small, round, agranular and large dense core vesicles and were associated with a symmetric or no postsynaptic specialization. These results provide the structural substrates for elucidating the functional role of serotonin in tongue control.

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