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. 1979;20(5):539-51.

Electron microscope histochemistry of acetylcholinesterase distribution in the optic tectum of teleosts

  • PMID: 94927

Electron microscope histochemistry of acetylcholinesterase distribution in the optic tectum of teleosts

L Villani et al. J Hirnforsch. 1979.

Abstract

An ultrastructural analysis was made on acetylcholinesterase (AChE) localization in the optic tectum of two teleosts, the goldfish and the catfish. Electron microscope histochemistry reveals several details on synthesis, distribution and possible sites of utilization of the enzyme in the different tectal layers. The results show that AChE is synthesized by all the neuronal types present in the optic tectum. The final localization of the enzyme is the result of its synthesis in cell bodies, its storage and transport along dendrites and its release in extracellular spaces. The differences in AChE localization between the two teleosts examined mainly derive from differential enzyme release in the corresponding layers of the optic tectum. Cholinergic synapses cannot be precisely identified by means of AChE histochemistry, but the layers in which maximum release of enzyme in the extracellular spaces occurs most likely correspond to areas where cholinergic mechanisms are operating. In this connection some interesting differences of AChE localization in the superficial tectal layers (stratum marginale, stratum opticum and stratum fibrosum et griseum superficiale) are discussed. Electron microscopic histochemistry of AChE confirms its usefulness in better understanding some links between the anatomical and functional organization of complex neural structures.

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