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. 1984 Dec 3;323(1):55-63.
doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(84)90264-6.

Origins of histamine-containing fibers in the cerebral cortex of rats studied by immunohistochemistry with histidine decarboxylase as a marker and transection

Origins of histamine-containing fibers in the cerebral cortex of rats studied by immunohistochemistry with histidine decarboxylase as a marker and transection

N Takeda et al. Brain Res. .

Abstract

The origins of histamine-containing fibers in the cerebral cortex were examined by means of the retrograde tracer technique of horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-immunohistochemistry with histidine decarboxylase (HDC) as a marker for the histamine neuron system. Total transection of the brain rostral to the posterior hypothalamus resulted in disappearance of HDC-like immunoreactive (HDCI) fibers in the cerebral cortex, but total transection caudal to the posterior hypothalamus did not decrease the number of HDCI fibers in the cortex, suggesting that HDCI fibers in the cerebral cortex originate in the posterior hypothalamus. The projection of HDCI neurons from the posterior hypothalamus to the cerebral cortex seemed to be bilateral because hemi-transection of the brain rostral to the posterior hypothalamus resulted in a bilateral decrease of HDCI fibers in the cerebral cortex with ipsilateral predominance. After injection of HRP into the cerebral cortex, numerous cells containing both HRP granules and HDCI structures were found bilaterally in the tuberal, caudal and postmamillary magnocellular nuclei, with ipsilateral predominance. These findings indicate that HDCI cells in the above nuclei give rise to axons extending bilaterally to the cerebral cortex.

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