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1.
J Cell Biol ; 90(2): 474-84, 1981 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6116717

ABSTRACT

The vasopressin-producing neurons of the hypothalamo-neurohypophysial system are a particularly good model with which to consider the relationship between the Golgi apparatus nd GERL and their roles in secretory granule production because these neurons increase their synthesis and secretion of vasopressin in response to hyperosmotic stress. Enzyme cytochemical techniques for acid phosphatase (AcPase) and thiamine pyrophosphatase (TPPase) activities were used to distinguish GERL from the Golgi apparatus in cell bodies of the supraoptic nucleus from normal mice, mice hyperosmotically stressed by drinking 2% salt water, and mice allowed to recover for 5-10 d from hyperosmotic stress. In nonincubated preparations of control supraoptic perikarya, immature secretory granules at the trans face of the Golgi apparatus were frequently attached to a narrow, smooth membrane cisterna identified as GERL. Secretory granules were occasionally seen attached to Golgi saccules. TPPase activity was present in one or two of the trans Golgi saccules; AcPase activity appeared in GERL and attached immature secretory granules, rarely in the trans Golgi saccules, and in secondary lysosomes. As a result of hyperosmotic stress, the Golgi apparatus hypertrophied, and secretory granules formed from all Golgi saccules and GERL. Little or no AcPase activity could be demonstrated in GERL, whereas all Golgi saccules and GERL-like cisternae were TPPase positive. During recovery, AcPase activity in GERL returned to normal; however, the elevated TPPase activity and secretory granule formation seen in GERL-like cisternae and all Golgi saccules during hyperosmotic stress persisted. These results suggest that under normal conditions GERL is the predominant site for the secretory granule formation, but during hyperosmotic stress, the Golgi saccules assume increased importance in this function. The observed cytochemical modulations in Golgi saccules and GERL suggest that GERL is structurally and functionally related to the Golgi saccules.


Subject(s)
Cytoplasmic Granules/ultrastructure , Golgi Apparatus/physiology , Hypothalamus/ultrastructure , Intracellular Membranes/physiology , Supraoptic Nucleus/ultrastructure , Water-Electrolyte Balance , Acid Phosphatase/metabolism , Animals , Female , Golgi Apparatus/ultrastructure , Intracellular Membranes/ultrastructure , Mice , Osmotic Pressure , Thiamine Pyrophosphatase/metabolism
2.
Science ; 217(4555): 164-6, 1982 Jul 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7089551

ABSTRACT

Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) opens the blood-brain barrier of mice to the enzymatic tracer horseradish peroxidase. A single injection of horseradish peroxidase in 10 to 15 percent DMSO into the tail vein along with 10 to 15 percent DMSO delivered intraperitoneally allowed horseradish peroxidase to fill the extracellular clefts throughout the brain within 2 hours. In the absence of DMSO, peroxidase failed to enter brain parenchyma except through the circumventricular organs. Opening of the blood-brain barrier by DMSO is reversible. Dimethyl sulfoxide stimulated the pinocytosis of horseradish peroxidase by the cerebral endothelium; the peroxidase was then directed to lysosomal dense bodies for degradation. Vesicular transport of horseradish peroxidase from the luminal to the abluminal wall of the endothelial cell was not observed. Dimethyl sulfoxide did not alter the morphology of endothelial cells or brain parenchyma.


Subject(s)
Blood-Brain Barrier/drug effects , Dimethyl Sulfoxide/pharmacology , Animals , Brain Chemistry , Dimethyl Sulfoxide/administration & dosage , Endothelium/drug effects , Extracellular Space/analysis , Female , Horseradish Peroxidase/analysis , Horseradish Peroxidase/metabolism , Injections, Intraperitoneal , Injections, Intravenous , Mice , Pinocytosis/drug effects
3.
J Comp Neurol ; 163(3): 329-45, 1975 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1176643

ABSTRACT

The efferent connections of the main and accessory olfactory bulbs in the female albino rabbit have been studied using the autoradiographic method for tracing axonal pathways. Following unilateral injections of 3H-proline or 3H-leucine into the main olfactory bulb, radioactively labeled material transported intraaxonally by axoplasmic flow in an anterograde direction from soma to axon terminal is present ipsilaterally in the superficial half of the plexiform layer (IA) of: the entire circumference of the olfactory peduncle, the tenia tecta, the full mediolateral extent of the olfactory tubercle, the entire length of the prepyriform cortex, a transition area between the prepyriform cortex and the horizontal limb of the nucleus of the diagonal band, the nucleus of the lateral olfactory tract, the anterior cortical and posterolateral cortical amygdaloid nuclei (periamygdaloid areas 1, rostral half of 2, 5 of Rose, '31), and the ventrolateral entorhinal cortex (entorhinal areas 1, 2, 4, 5, 7 of Rose, '31). No subcortical or contralateral projection of main bulb efferents was found. After a unilateral injection of 3H-leucine into the accessory olfactory bulb, transported material could be followed caudally along the dorsal surface of the ipsilateral lateral olfactory tract. This heavily labeled projection is distinct from the unlabeled lateral olfactory tract and has been termed the accessory olfactory tract. Beginning at the level of the caudal third of the olfactory tubercle and extending caudally to the nucleus of the lateral olfactory tract is a group of small neurons intimately associated with the accessory olfactory tract. This cell group is referred to as the bed nucleus of the accessory olfactory tract. Projection sites of the accessory bulb include the bed nucleus of the accessory olfactory tract and layer IA of the medial nucleus and the posteromedial cortical nucleus of the amygdala (periamygdaloid areas 3, 4, PAM, caudal half of 2, 6 of Rose, '31). An additional accessory bulb efferent projection was found to enter the stria terminalis at the level of the medial amygdaloid nucleus and could be traced to a posterior segment of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. The autoradiographic findings indicate that the accessory olfactory bulb connects with portions of the amygdala that do not receive afferent input from the main olfactory bulb and provide evidence for the existence of two distinct and separate olfactory systems.


Subject(s)
Olfactory Bulb/anatomy & histology , Amygdala/anatomy & histology , Animals , Brain Mapping , Cerebral Ventricles/anatomy & histology , Cerebral Ventricles/physiology , Female , Limbic System/anatomy & histology , Neural Pathways , Olfactory Pathways/anatomy & histology , Rabbits , Sexual Behavior, Animal/physiology
4.
J Comp Neurol ; 164(4): 389-409, 1975 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1206126

ABSTRACT

The efferent connections of the anterior olfactory nucleus in the female albino rabbit have been studied using the autoradiographic and horseradish peroxidase methods for tracing axonal pathways. Following a unilateral injection of 3H-leucine into the olfactory peduncle, radioactively labeled efferent projections from the anterior olfactory nucleus were traced into all layers of the ipsilateral main olfactory bulb beneath the olfactory nerve layer and through the ipsilateral anterior limb of the anterior commissure and plexiform layer of the medial side of the cerebral hemisphere to the deep half of the plexiform (IB) and pyramidal cell (II) layers of the prepyriform cortex, the tenia tecta, and the entire surface of the olfactory tubercle. Labeled projections crossing the midline within the anterior commissure were followed to the layers IB and II of the contralateral anterior prepyriform cortex and pars externa, pars lateralis, and pars dorsalis of the anterior olfactory nucleus, and through the periventricular layer of the olfactory peduncle to all layers of the main olfactory bulb beneath the olfactory nerve layer. No well-defined labeled projection was traced to the contralateral accessory olfactory bulb. Evidence for possible anterior olfactory nucleus and/or prepyriform cortical projections to the ipsilateral paleocortical half of the claustrum, horizontal limb of the nucleus of the diagonal band, the posterior lateral hypothalamus at the level of the mammillary complex, and to the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis is discussed. Intra-axonal retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase from axon terminals to parent cell bodies after unilateral injection of the protein into the main olfactory bulb or anterior olfactory nucleus revealed that anterior olfactory nucleus projections to the olfactory bulbs and the contralateral anterior olfactory nucleus arise predominately from the pars externa. The autoradiographic data indicate that the anterior olfactory nucleus projects to olfactory cortical structures which also receive afferent input from the olfactory bulb and that the termination of these projections is complementary to those from the olfactory bulb.


Subject(s)
Central Nervous System/anatomy & histology , Limbic System/anatomy & histology , Olfactory Nerve/anatomy & histology , Olfactory Pathways/anatomy & histology , Animals , Autoradiography , Brain Mapping/methods , Female , Histocytochemistry , Leucine/metabolism , Neurons, Efferent , Olfactory Bulb/anatomy & histology , Olfactory Pathways/metabolism , Peroxidases/metabolism , Rabbits , Temporal Lobe/anatomy & histology
5.
J Comp Neurol ; 242(4): 632-50, 1985 Dec 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2418083

ABSTRACT

The lectin wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was employed to study the endocytic and exocytic pathways of the secretory process in neurons and the potential for trans-synaptic transfer of molecules within the CNS. WGA-HRP binds to surface membrane oligosaccharides and enters cells by adsorptive endocytosis. The lectin conjugate was administered intranasally or into the cerebral ventricles of mice; postinjection survival times ranged from 5 minutes to 6 days. Due to binding of the lectin to ependymal cells subsequent to an intraventricular injection, only select populations of neurons (i.e., hippocampal formation; paraventricular nuclei; midbrain raphe; VI, X, XII motor nuclei; among others) were exposed extracellularly to WGA-HRP and became labeled by retrograde axoplasmic transport from axon terminals or by direct cell body/dendritic uptake. WGA-HRP delivered intranasally was endocytosed by first-order olfactory neurons and transported by anterograde axoplasmic flow to the terminal field within the glomerular layer of the main olfactory bulb; eventually perikarya of the mitral cell layer were labeled, presumably by anterograde trans-synaptic transfer of the lectin conjugate. In the variety of neurons analyzed ultrastructurally following exposure to WGA-HRP, the proposed sequence of intracellular pathways through which peroxidase reaction product was traced over time was: cell surface membrane----endocytic structures----endosomes (presecondary lysosomes)----transfer vesicles----transmost Golgi saccule----vesicles, vacuoles, and/or dense core granules. WGA-HRP also labeled vesicles and tubules that were channeled to and/or derived from spherical endosomes, dense bodies, and multivesicular bodies. The peroxidase-positive, membrane-delimited products of the trans Golgi saccule contributed to anterograde axonal transport vectors and accumulated within axon terminals. A second contribution to these vectors was provided by peroxidase-labeled tubules and dense bodies believed to represent components of the lysosomal compartment. Profiles of the axonal reticulum comparable to those that stained cytochemically for glucose-6-phosphatase activity, a marker for the endoplasmic reticulum, were not associated with the transport of WGA-HRP. Trans-synaptic transfer of WGA-HRP from primary olfactory neurons to postsynaptic cells in the olfactory bulb was reflected in peroxidase-positive endocytic vesicles, endosomes, dense bodies, and the trans Golgi saccule.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Endocytosis , Exocytosis , Neurons/physiology , Neurosecretory Systems/anatomy & histology , Synapses/physiology , Administration, Intranasal , Animals , Axonal Transport , Female , Horseradish Peroxidase , Injections, Intraventricular , Lectins , Mice , Mice, Inbred Strains , Microinjections , Microscopy, Electron , Neurons/ultrastructure , Synapses/ultrastructure , Wheat Germ Agglutinin-Horseradish Peroxidase Conjugate
6.
J Comp Neurol ; 170(3): 321-45, 1976 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-62770

ABSTRACT

The axoplasmic retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) from axon terminals to their parent cell bodies and histochemical fluorescence microscopy have been used to study the ipsilateral centrifugal fibers to the olfactory bulbs and anterior olfactory nucleus in the rabbit. Focal injections of peroxidase were placed unilaterally into the main or accessory olfactory bulb or into the anterior olfactory nucleus. In animals with injected HRP confined within the main bulb, perikarya retrogradely labeled with the protein in the ipsilateral forebrain were observed in the anterior prepyriform cortex horizontal limb of the nucleus of the diagonal band, and far lateral preoptic and rostral lateral hypothalamic areas. Brain stem cell groups that contained HRP-positive somata include the locus coeruleus and midbrain dorsal raphe nucleus. Except for the prepyriform cortex, the basal forebrain structures with labeled perikarya correlate well with locations of cell bodies containing acetylcholinesterase and choline acetyltransferase. These somata may represent a cholinergic afferent system to the main olfactory bulb. Peroxidase-labeled cell bodies in the locus coeruleus and midbrain raphe are indicative of noradrenergic and serotonergic innervations respectively of the olfactory bulb. In rabbits in which peroxidase was injected or diffused into the accessory olfactory bulb and anterior alfactory nucleus, HRP-positive somata were identified in the prepyriform cortex bilaterally, the horizontal limb of the diagonal band nucleus, lateral hypothalamic region, nucleus of the lateral olfactory tract, corticomedial complex of the amygdala, mitral and tufted cell layers of the ipsilateral main olfactory bulb, locus coeruleus, and the midbrain raphe. Evidence for centrifugal fibers to the accessory olfactory bulb from the corticomedial complex of the amygdala, locus coeruleus, and possibly the nucleus of the lateral olfactory tract and midbrain raphe is discussed. A similar distribution of labeled perikarya in the forebrain and brain stem was seen in rats in which peroxidase injected into the main olfactory bulb had spread into the accessory bulb and anterior olfactory nucleus. Histochemical fluorescence microscopy of the main and accessory olfactory bulbs in the rabbit and rat revealed fine caliber, green fluorescent fibers and varicosities predominantly in the granule cell layer and less so among cells in the glomerular layer. In sections through the root of the main olfactory bulb, a similar fluorescence was seen in the deep half of the plexiform layer of the pars externa of the anterior alfactory nucleus. These fluorescent fibers likely represent the noradrenergic innervation of the olfactory bulbar and retrobulbar formations. A fluorescent yellow hue was observed in the glomerular layer of the main bulb and may signify a serotonergic innervation of this lamina...


Subject(s)
Diencephalon/physiology , Olfactory Bulb/physiology , Olfactory Nerve/physiology , Telencephalon/physiology , Animals , Axonal Transport , Brain Stem/physiology , Cerebral Ventricles/physiology , Female , Horseradish Peroxidase/metabolism , Male , Mesencephalon/physiology , Olfactory Pathways , Rabbits , Rats
7.
J Comp Neurol ; 166(3): 257-83, 1976 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-57126

ABSTRACT

Autonomic preganglionic, sensory, and lower motoneuron perikarya within the central nervous system, as well as cell bodies with axons projecting to the circumventricular organs, are retrogradely labeled with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) delivered to their axon terminals by cerebral and extracerebral blood. Subsequent to vascular injection of HRP into mice, blood-borne peroxidase passes across permeable vessels in muscle, ganglia, and in all circumventricular organs except for the subcommissural organ in which no leak could be discerned. Brain parenchyma adjacent to each of the permeable circumventricular organs quickly becomes inundated with the protein. By four to six hours post-injection, this extracellular HRP reaction product has disappeared, and by eight hours perikarya of specific hypothalamic nuclei contain HRP-positive granules indicative of the intra-axonal retrograde transport of the protein. Hypothalamic neurons so labeled are presumed to send axons to such circumventricular organs as the median eminence or neurohypophysis and include neurons of the magnocellular neurosecretory supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei, the accessory magnocellular nuclei, the parvicellular arcuate nucleus, and a band of periventricular cells extending rostrally into the medial preoptic area. Labeled somata are also adjacent to the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis and in the vertical limb of the nucleus of the diagonal band of Broca. No similarly labeled cell bodies were identified near the subfornical organ.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Ventricles/anatomy & histology , Nervous System/enzymology , Peroxidases/metabolism , Animals , Axonal Transport , Biological Transport , Blood-Brain Barrier , Capillary Permeability , Female , Histocytochemistry/methods , Mice , Neurons, Afferent , Peroxidases/blood
8.
J Comp Neurol ; 167(3): 315-39, 1976 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-818133

ABSTRACT

A description of the organization, areas, and cell groups within the hypothalamus of the mouse is presented in detail. Photomicrographs of cell-stained serial sections through the hypothalamus in frontal, sagittal and horizontal planes are included. The hypothalamus has been divided basically into medial and lateral parts with most well-defined cell groups or nuclei lying within the medial subdivision and surrounded by diffuse collections of cells referred to as areas. The heterogenetiy of cell types within most hypothalamic nuclei and areas has been emphasized with the consequent implications for heterogeneity of neuronal connections and of functions. Recently introduced neuroanatomical techniques permitting increased attention to the cellular level of organization have demonstrated precise connections and functional localization of cells within the hypothalamus. While cytoarchitectonic distinctions imply functional distinctions, morphological and experimental evidence suggest the existence also of systems of cells which transcend conventional cytoarchitectonic boundaries, the cells within each system being interconnected functionally or neuronally.


Subject(s)
Hypothalamus/anatomy & histology , Mice/anatomy & histology , Animals , Atlases as Topic , Brain Mapping , Hypothalamus, Anterior/anatomy & histology , Hypothalamus, Middle/anatomy & histology , Hypothalamus, Posterior/anatomy & histology , Mammillary Bodies/anatomy & histology , Preoptic Area/anatomy & histology , Tuber Cinereum/anatomy & histology
9.
J Comp Neurol ; 230(2): 231-48, 1984 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6210310

ABSTRACT

The morphology and cytochemistry of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in axons and terminals of a number of different types of neurons in brains from mice were investigated ultrastructurally. The neurohypophysis received particular attention because the morphology and enzyme cytochemical activities of many of the preterminal swellings of hypothalamo-neurohypophysial axons are altered by chronic salt-stress. Membrane contrast and enzyme cytochemical staining techniques were employed to characterize the axonal reticulum and to determine if organelles representing the lysosomal system in the axon and the tubular profiles participating in the anterograde axonal transport of native horseradish peroxidase (HRP) are associated with the ER. Potential enzyme cytochemical markers for the axonal ER included glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase), thiamine pyrophosphatase, nucleoside diphosphatase, and acid hydroxylase activities. The anterograde transport of HRP was analyzed in undamaged hypothalamo-neurohypophysial neurons and in facial and hypoglossal motoneurons of mice receiving the protein in the lateral cerebral ventricle. The ER pervaded the axon and appeared as parallel, 20-40-nm-wide tubules interconnected by oblique anastomoses. Membrane thickness of the axonal reticulum measured 60-100 A, which is similar to that of the perikaryal ER. Enzyme cytochemical activities associated with the ER or lysosomes were not conspicuous in axons and terminals under normal conditions but became prominent in some axons and preterminal swellings manifesting an autophagic appearance within neurohypophyses from salt-stressed mice. Only G6Pase activity was a marker for the ER in these axons and preterminals. Many ER profiles in non-incubated sections and in G6Pase cytochemical preparations of salt-stressed neurohypophyses were wrapped around or interspersed among secretory granules, multilamellar bodies, and vacuoles that may represent forms of lysosomes involved in autophagy and crinophagy. Acid hydrolase activities were localized within the vacuoles as well as within 80-130-nm-wide, blunt-ended tubules in pituitary stalk axons; similar reactive tubules were confluent with large secondary lysosomes in neurosecretory cell bodies and may be derived from these lysosomes. Morphologically identical tubules transporting HRP in the anterograde direction were observed only in the salt-stressed hypothalamo-neurohypophysial neuron. The HRP-positive tubules very likely are affiliated with the lysosomal system.


Subject(s)
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases , Brain/ultrastructure , Endoplasmic Reticulum/enzymology , Acid Phosphatase/metabolism , Animals , Axonal Transport , Axons/ultrastructure , Endoplasmic Reticulum/ultrastructure , Energy Metabolism , Female , Glucose-6-Phosphatase/metabolism , Hydrolases/metabolism , Lysosomes/enzymology , Mice , Microscopy, Electron , Nerve Endings/ultrastructure , Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases/metabolism , Thiamine Pyrophosphatase/metabolism
10.
J Comp Neurol ; 190(3): 519-32, 1980 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6156186

ABSTRACT

Neurosecretory neurons of the hyperosmotically stressed hypothalamo-neurohypophysial system have been a useful model with which to demonstrate interrelationships among perikaryal lysosomes, agranular reticulum-like cisterns, endocytotic vacuoles, and the axoplasmic transport of acid hydrolases and horseradish peroxidase. Supraoptic neurons from normal mice and mice given 2% salt water to drink for 5--8 days have been studied using enzyme cytochemical techniques for peroxidase and lysosomal acid hydrolases. Peroxidase-labeling of these neurons was accomplished by intravenous injection or cerebral ventriculocisternal perfusion of the protein as previously reported (Broadwell and Brightman, '79). Compared to normal controls, supraoptic cell bodies from hyperosmotically stimulated mice contained elevated concentrations of peroxidase-labeled dense bodies demonstrated to be secondary lysosomes and acid hydrolase-positive and peroxidase-positive cisterns either attached or unattached to secondary lysosomes. These cisterns were smooth-surfaced and 400--1,000 A wide. Their morphology was similar to that of the agranular reticulum. Some of the cisterns contained both peroxidase and acid hydrolase activities. The cisterns probably represent an elongated form of lysosome and, therefore, are not elements of the agranular reticulum per se. By virtue of their direct connections with perikaryal secondary lysosomes, these cisterns may provide the route by which acid hydrolases and exogenous macromolecules can leave perikaryal secondary lysosomes for anterograde flow down the axon. Very few smooth-surfaced cisterns were involved in the retrograde transport of peroxidase within pituitary stalk axons from normal and salt-treated mice injected intravenously with peroxidase. Peroxidase undergoing retrograde transport was predominantly in endocytotic structures such as vacuoles and cup-shaped organelles, which deliver this exogenous macromolecule directly to secondary lysosomes for degradation in the cell body. These observations extend our previously reported findings in the axon to the cell body and suggest that agranular reticulum-like cisterns in the perikaryon, like those in the axon, may be part of the lysosomal system rather than associated with the agranular reticulum. A diagram summarizing the lysosomal system of organelles and proposed transport of acid hydrolases and peroxidase in neurosecretory neurons specifically and in neurons in general is provided.


Subject(s)
Horseradish Peroxidase/metabolism , Hydrolases/metabolism , Hypothalamus/metabolism , Lysosomes/metabolism , Neurons/metabolism , Peroxidases/metabolism , Supraoptic Nucleus/metabolism , Animals , Axonal Transport , Biological Transport, Active , Cytoplasmic Granules/ultrastructure , Female , Mice , Supraoptic Nucleus/ultrastructure
11.
J Comp Neurol ; 251(2): 260-80, 1986 Sep 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3782501

ABSTRACT

Pathways traversed by peripherally administered protein tracers for entry to the mammalian brain were investigated by light and electron microscopy. Native horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) conjugated to peroxidase were administered intranasally, intravenously, or intraventricularly to mice; native HRP was delivered intranasally or intravenously to rats and squirrel monkeys. Unlike WGA-HRP, native HRP administered intranasally passed freely through intercellular junctions of the olfactory epithelia to reach the olfactory bulbs of the CNS extracellularly within 45-90 minutes in all species. The olfactory epithelium labeled with intravenously delivered HRP, which readily escaped vasculature supplying this epithelium. Blood-borne peroxidase also exited fenestrated vessels of the dura mater and circumventricular organs. This HRP in the mouse, but not in the other species, passed from the dura mater through patent intercellular junctions within the arachnoid mater; in time, peroxidase reaction product in the mouse brain was associated with the pial surface, the Virchow-Robin spaces of vessels penetrating the pial surface, perivascular clefts, and with phagocytic pericytes located on the abluminal surface of superficial and deep cerebral microvasculature. Blood-borne HRP was endocytosed avidly at the luminal face of the cerebral endothelium in all species. WGA-HRP and native HRP delivered intraventricularly to the mouse were not endocytosed appreciably at the abluminal surface of the endothelium; hence, the endocytosis of protein and internalization of cell surface membrane within the cerebral endothelium are vectorial. The low to non-existent endocytic activity and internalization of membrane from the abluminal endothelial surface suggests that vesicular transport through the cerebral endothelium from blood to brain and from brain to blood does not occur. The extracellular pathways through which probe molecules enter the mammalian brain offer potential routes of passage for blood-borne and air-borne toxic, carcinogenic, infectious, and neurotoxic agents and addictive drugs, and for the delivery of chemotherapeutic agents to combat CNS infections and deficiency states. Methodological considerations are discussed for the interpretation of data derived from application of peroxidase to study the blood-brain barrier.


Subject(s)
Brain Mapping/methods , Drug Administration Routes , Horseradish Peroxidase/pharmacology , Peroxidases/pharmacology , Wheat Germ Agglutinins/pharmacology , Administration, Intranasal , Animals , Blood-Brain Barrier/drug effects , Endothelium/metabolism , Endothelium/ultrastructure , Female , Horseradish Peroxidase/administration & dosage , Injections, Intravenous , Male , Mice , Microscopy, Electron , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Saimiri , Wheat Germ Agglutinins/administration & dosage
12.
J Comp Neurol ; 260(1): 47-62, 1987 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3597834

ABSTRACT

Blood vessels of the fetal, neonatal, and adult subprimate and primate CNS, including circumventricular organs (e.g., median eminence, pituitary gland, etc.), and of solid CNS and nonneural (anterior pituitary gland) allografts placed within brains of adult mammalian hosts were visualized with peroxidase cytochemistry applied in three ways: to tissues from animals injected systemically with native horseradish peroxidase (HRP) or peroxidase conjugated to the lectin wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) prior to perfusion fixation; to tissues from animals infused with native HRP into the aorta subsequent to perfusion fixation; and to tissues from animals fixed by immersion and incubated for endogenous peroxidase activity in red cells retained within blood vessels. In neonatal and adult animals receiving native HRP intravascularly, non-fenestrated vessels contributing to a blood-brain barrier were outlined with HRP reaction product when tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) as opposed to diaminobenzidine (DAB) was used as the chromogen; fenestrated vessels of circumventricular organs were not discernible due to the density of extravascular reaction product. Fenestrated and non-fenestrated cerebral and extracerebral blood vessels exposed to bloodborne WGA-HRP were visible when incubated in TMB and DAB solutions. Native HRP infused into the aorta of fixed animals likewise labeled non- fenestrated vessels throughout the brain upon exposure to TMB or DAB but obscured fenestrated vessels of the circumventricular organs. Endogenous peroxidase activity of red cells, seen equally well with TMB and DAB, outlined blood vessels throughout the cerebral gray and white matter and all circumventricular organs in fetal, neonatal, and adult animals. Application of the three peroxidase cytochemical approaches to study the development or absence of a blood-brain barrier in intracerebral allografts demonstrated that the vascularization of day 16-19 fetal/1 day neonatal CNS allografts is not well defined prior to 7 days following intracerebral placement of the grafts. CNS allografts secured from donor sites expected to possess a blood-brain barrier exhibited blood vessels that were not leaky to HRP injected intravenously in the host. Fenestrated blood vessels associated with anterior pituitary allografts were evident prior to 3 days posttransplantation within the host brain and permitted blood-borne HRP in the host to enter the graft and surrounding host brain parenchyma.


Subject(s)
Blood-Brain Barrier , Brain/blood supply , Cebidae/anatomy & histology , Mice, Inbred AKR/anatomy & histology , Pituitary Gland/blood supply , Saimiri/anatomy & histology , Animals , Erythrocytes/enzymology , Hypothalamus/transplantation , Mice , Neurosecretory Systems/blood supply , Peroxidases/metabolism , Pituitary Gland, Anterior/transplantation
13.
J Comp Neurol ; 228(2): 155-67, 1984 Sep 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6207213

ABSTRACT

The axonal endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and synaptic-like (micro)vesicles within axon terminals of the neurohypophysis and their contribution to the secretory process in hypothalamo-neurohypophysial neurons have been investigated cytochemically in normal mice and in mice given 2% salt water to drink for stimulation of hormone synthesis in and release from these neurons. Cytochemical techniques included the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) immunocytochemical method for localization of neurophysin, wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) as a tracer for the anterograde axonal transport of membrane from within the perikaryon, and blood-borne native horseradish peroxidase (HRP) as a tracer for internalized axon terminal membrane. The primary antiserum employed was directed against neurophysins I and II, the carrier proteins for the peptide hormones oxytocin and vasopressin, respectively. PAP reaction product was observed over neurosecretory granules but never over the endoplasmic reticulum, microvesicles or other organelles in axons and terminals of the neurohypophysis. WGA-HRP was delivered extracellularly to cell bodies of paraventricular neurons by cerebral ventriculocisternal perfusion. Internalized perikaryal surface membrane tagged with WGA-HRP was recycled through the innermost Golgi saccule (GERL) from which neurosecretory granules were formed. The anterograde axonal transport of membrane-bound WGA-HRP was manifested within the neurosecretory granules; WGA-HRP did not label the axonal reticulum or terminal microvesicles in the neurohypophysis. Blood-borne native HRP endocytosed into neurohypophysial terminals was associated with a plethora of microvesicles measuring 40-70 nm in diameter and vacuoles similar in size to the 100-300-nm-wide neurosecretory granules. The microvesicles contributed to the formation of numerous vacuoles. The internalization of axon terminal membrane as microvesicles incorporating HRP was quantitatively greater than vacuoles in both salt-stressed and control mice. The results suggest that in the hypothalamo-neurohypophysial system of the mouse the axonal ER and terminal microvesicles are not involved in the transport, storage, and exocytosis of neurosecretory material and perhaps other molecules processed through the innermost Golgi saccule. Nevertheless, a prominent population of the microvesicles within axon terminals of the neurohypophysis does participate in the secretory process. These vesicles are involved directly in the internalization of the terminal surface membrane subsequent to release of secretory granule content.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System/metabolism , Neurophysins/metabolism , Neurosecretion , Animals , Axonal Transport , Cell Membrane/ultrastructure , Cytoplasmic Granules/ultrastructure , Endocytosis , Exocytosis , Female , Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System/ultrastructure , Mice , Microscopy, Electron
14.
Methods Enzymol ; 103: 187-218, 1983.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6199645

ABSTRACT

The versatility of horseradish peroxidase is its usefulness both as an antigenic marker and as a probe molecule. We have demonstrated in the neuroendocrine cell that an HRP-bound antibody offers a high order of resolution for determining in which cellular compartment an antigen is located and where it is not. When native peroxidase is applied as an intracellular probe, it labels organelles associated with endocytosis in retrograde axonal transport and with the lysosomal system in both retrograde and orthograde axonal transport. The investigation that remains is the application of lectin-bound HRP to determine the pathways of membrane flow at the time when the neuroendocrine cell is stimulated to synthesize, transport, and secrete its peptide. For example, we are interested to know (1) whether internalized axon terminal membrane tagged with wheat germ agglutinin-HRP is channeled to all Golgi saccules engaged in the production of secretory granules in salt stimulated supraoptic neurons; and (2) if internalized cell membrane of the supraoptic cell body is tagged with wheat germ agglutinin-HRP and channeled to GERL, will this membrane be transferred from GERL to secretory granules, lysosomes in the cell body and axon, the axonal endoplasmic reticulum, and to autophagic/crinophagic vacuoles in axon terminals of salt-stressed supraoptic neurons? These additional studies should provide a more comprehensive, morphological picture of membrane flow in a neuroendocrine cell that is responding to the metabolic demands placed upon it.


Subject(s)
Horseradish Peroxidase , Neurosecretion , Neurosecretory Systems/metabolism , Peroxidases , Animals , Axonal Transport , Endocytosis , Histocytochemistry , Horseradish Peroxidase/metabolism , Immunoenzyme Techniques , Microscopy, Electron/methods , Neurons/physiology , Neurophysins/analysis , Neurosecretory Systems/ultrastructure
15.
J Histochem Cytochem ; 35(4): 489-98, 1987 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2434560

ABSTRACT

Labeling of the Golgi complex with the lectin conjugate wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP), which binds to cell surface membrane and enters cells by adsorptive endocytosis, was analyzed in secretory cells of the anterior, intermediate, and posterior lobes of mouse pituitary gland in vivo. WGA-HRP was administered intravenously or by ventriculo-cisternal perfusion to control and salt-stressed mice; post-injection survival times were 30 min-24 hr. Peroxidase reaction product was identified within the extracellular clefts of anterior and posterior pituitary lobes through 24 hr but was absent in intermediate lobe. Endocytic vesicles, spherical endosomes, tubules, dense and multivesicular bodies, the trans-most saccule of the Golgi complex, and dense-core secretory granules attached or unattached to the trans Golgi saccule were peroxidase-positive in the different types of anterior pituitary cells and in perikarya of supraoptico-neurohypophyseal neurons; endoplasmic reticulum and the cis and intermediate Golgi saccules in the same cell types were consistently devoid of peroxidase reaction product. Dense-core secretory granules derived from cis and intermediate Golgi saccules in salt-stressed supraoptic perikarya likewise failed to exhibit peroxidase reaction product. The results suggest that in secretory cells of anterior and posterior pituitary lobes, WGA-HRP, initially internalized with cell surface membrane, is eventually conveyed to the trans-most Golgi saccule, in which the lectin conjugate and associated membrane are packaged in dense-core secretory granules for export and potential exocytosis of the tracer. Endoplasmic reticulum and the cis and intermediate Golgi saccules appear not to be involved in the endocytic/exocytic pathways of pituitary cells exposed to WGA-HRP.


Subject(s)
Endocytosis , Golgi Apparatus/metabolism , Organoids/metabolism , Pituitary Gland/metabolism , Plant Lectins , Soybean Proteins , Animals , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Female , Horseradish Peroxidase , Lectins , Mice , Microscopy , Microscopy, Electron , Sodium Chloride , Stress, Physiological/metabolism , Wheat Germ Agglutinin-Horseradish Peroxidase Conjugate , Wheat Germ Agglutinins
16.
J Histochem Cytochem ; 31(9): 1077-88, 1983 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6309951

ABSTRACT

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and its contribution to the endomembrane system (i.e., membranes of cell organelles) in the neuron have been investigated in brains of mice by applying electron microscopic enzyme cytochemistry for demonstration of glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) activity. The phosphohydrolytic activity of G6Pase is a well-known cytochemical marker for the ER in numerous cell types. Of the different substrates employed, glucose-6-phosphate and mannose-6-phosphate were the only two with which G6Pase reaction product was seen in the neuronal ER and organelles related morphologically to the ER. G6Pase activity in cell bodies and dendrites was localized consistently within the lumen of the nuclear envelope, rough and smooth ER, lamellar bodies, hypolemmal and subsurface cisternae, and frequently in the cis saccules of the Golgi apparatus. The G6Pase reactive ER appeared as a network of saccules and tubules pervading the cell body and its dendrites. Possible membrane continuities were identified between the ER and the other reactive structures, including the cis half of the Golgi apparatus. Neither G6Pase activity nor reactive ER was associated with the trans Golgi saccules or GERL. G6Pase activity thus serves as a reliable marker for the perikaryal and dendritic ER and related structures. These observations support the theory that the ER is an integral component of the neuronal endomembrane system associated with the transfer of membrane or membrane molecules among intracellular compartments, the packaging and transport of exportable protein, and energy metabolism. G6Pase activity in the ER of axons and terminals is considered in detail in part two of this study.


Subject(s)
Dendrites/analysis , Endoplasmic Reticulum/analysis , Inclusion Bodies/analysis , Neurons/analysis , Animals , Brain Chemistry , Dendrites/ultrastructure , Endoplasmic Reticulum/ultrastructure , Female , Glucose-6-Phosphatase/metabolism , Golgi Apparatus/analysis , Golgi Apparatus/ultrastructure , Intracellular Membranes/analysis , Intracellular Membranes/ultrastructure , Mice , Neurons/ultrastructure
17.
J Histochem Cytochem ; 32(12): 1285-94, 1984 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6094657

ABSTRACT

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and glycogen in secretory cells of anterior pituitary glands from control and fasted mice were investigated ultrastructurally using cytochemical staining techniques. Potential enzyme cytochemical markers for the ER included glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) and nucleoside diphosphatase (NDPase) activities. Presumptive glycogen particles were identified in tissue postfixed in 1% osmium tetroxide-1.5% potassium ferrocyanide or in ultrathin sections poststained with periodic acid-thiocarbohydrazide-silver proteinate. The ER appeared to be related structurally and cytochemically to the nuclear envelope and cis Golgi saccules. Similar relationships between the ER and the trans Golgi saccules or GERL were not observed. In anterior pituitary glands from control mice, G6Pase activity was prominent within the lumen of the ER, nuclear envelope, and cis Golgi saccules of all cells; reaction product was absent in the trans Golgi saccules and in GERL. G6Pase activity was sparse to non-existent in anterior pituitary cells from fasted mice. The cytochemical reaction utilizing the Gomori lead capture method indicated that G6Pase in anterior pituitary cells may function as a phosphohydrolase for converting glucose-6-phosphate to glucose. Cytochemical localization of NDPase activity was not evident in the ER; reaction product was localized consistently in one or two trans Golgi saccules and occasionally in GERL and nascent secretory granules. Presumptive glycogen particles in each of the different secretory cell types from control mice appeared as 20-30 nm wide, electron-dense particles scattered as single entities throughout the cytoplasm. Anterior pituitary glands from fasted mice exhibited conspicuous and numerous clumps of glycogen particles in addition to scattered particles in all cell types except corticotrophs, which appeared to be devoid of glycogen. Glycogen particles were absent in anterior pituitary cells incubated in a medium containing diastase. Our results suggest that in anterior pituitary cells of the mouse: 1) the phosphohydrolytic activity of G6Pase is a reliable cytochemical marker for the ER; 2) the ER is associated morphologically and cytochemically with the cis face but not with the trans face of the Golgi apparatus or with GERL; 3) some glucose-6-phosphate, a possible substrate for G6Pase in vivo, may be derived indirectly from glycogen stores; and 4) modulations in G6Pase activity and glycogen storage during fasting may reflect an alteration in energy metabolism.


Subject(s)
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases , Endoplasmic Reticulum/ultrastructure , Glycogen/analysis , Pituitary Gland, Anterior/ultrastructure , Animals , Endoplasmic Reticulum/enzymology , Fasting , Female , Glucose-6-Phosphatase/analysis , Golgi Apparatus/ultrastructure , Histocytochemistry , Mice , Microscopy, Electron , Nuclear Envelope/ultrastructure , Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases/analysis , Pituitary Gland, Anterior/enzymology
18.
J Histochem Cytochem ; 31(6): 818-22, 1983 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6302165

ABSTRACT

Glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) activity, with glucose-6-phosphate and mannose-6-phosphate as substrates, was examined by cytochemistry in capillary and arteriole endothelial cells of the mouse brain. G6Pase activity was observed ultrastructurally in the lumen of the nuclear envelope and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of these cells. The reactive ER and nuclear membrane appeared to be in continuity. Nucleoside diphosphatase activity, also a marker for the ER in some cell types, was not seen within the ER of the cerebral microvasculature. The ER of arterioles and capillaries did not bind lead nonspecifically when incubated in a substrate-free medium. Speculation is raised concerning the involvement of G6Pase in glucose metabolism of cerebral endothelial cells and in making blood-borne glucose available to brain parenchyma.


Subject(s)
Brain/blood supply , Endoplasmic Reticulum/enzymology , Glucose-6-Phosphatase/analysis , Animals , Blood-Brain Barrier , Brain/cytology , Capillaries/enzymology , Capillaries/ultrastructure , Endothelium/cytology , Endothelium/enzymology , Female , Glucose-6-Phosphatase/metabolism , Mice , Nuclear Envelope/enzymology
19.
Prog Brain Res ; 82: 95-101, 1990.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1705357

ABSTRACT

Available evidence suggests that blood vessels indigenous to solid CNS and peripheral tissues grafted to the brain are sustained and maintain the morphological and permeability characteristics they manifest in normal life. Furthermore, these vessels of graft origin anastomose (albeit not rapidly) with vessels of the surrounding host tissue predominantly at the host-graft interface and less so, or not at all, within the graft itself. For these reasons, blood-brain and brain-blood barriers, evident in the late fetal and neonatal CNS, can be expected to exist within CNS grafts placed intracerebrally or extracerebrally, providing the graft remains viable. Peripheral neural and non-neural tissues not possessing cellular barriers to circulating macromolecules do not acquire such barriers subsequent to their transplantation within the CNS. The absence of a blood-brain barrier in the adrenal gland grafted intracerebrally may be relevant for the treatment of Parkinson's disease with blood-borne therapeutics. Compared to solid tissue grafts, cell suspension grafts have the potential of becoming vascularized rapidly. That cell suspensions of neurons and of glia are supplied with BBB vessels of host origin and that the permeability characteristics of host BBB vessels are altered by a tumor cell suspension reaffirm the belief that the type of transplanted cell/tissue indeed determines the permeability characteristics of the blood vessels supplying it. The suspected immunologic privilege of the CNS is not absolute. Eventual host rejection of allografts placed within the third ventricle may be a dual consequence of the absence of a BBB at the level of the host median eminence and involvement of the minor histocompatibility complex.


Subject(s)
Blood-Brain Barrier , Brain Tissue Transplantation , Cerebrovascular Circulation , Fetal Tissue Transplantation , Neovascularization, Pathologic , Parietal Lobe/transplantation , Preoptic Area , Animals , Cattle , Cells, Cultured/transplantation , Cerebral Ventricles , Corpus Striatum , Follow-Up Studies , Glioma/pathology , Graft Rejection , Hypogonadism/surgery , Mice , Mice, Inbred AKR , Mice, Mutant Strains , Mice, Nude , Parietal Lobe/cytology , Pituitary Gland, Anterior/cytology , Preoptic Area/cytology , Rats , Rats, Inbred Lew , Rats, Inbred Strains , Transplantation, Heterologous , Transplantation, Heterotopic , Tumor Cells, Cultured/transplantation
20.
Microsc Res Tech ; 27(6): 471-94, 1994 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8012052

ABSTRACT

Development of a blood-brain barrier (BBB) within mammalian CNS grafts, placed either intracerebrally or peripherally, has been controversial. Published data from this laboratory have emphasized the presence or the absence of a BBB within solid mammalian tissue or cell suspension grafts is determined intrinsically by the graft and not by the surrounding host parenchyma (e.g., brain, kidney, testis, etc.). Nevertheless, correctly interpreting whether or not a BBB exists within brain grafts is manifested by methodologies employed to answer the question and by ensuing neuropathological and immunological consequences of intracerebral grafting. The present study addresses these issues and suggests misinterpretation for the absence of a BBB in brain grafts can be attributed to: (1) rupture of interendothelial tight junctional complexes in vessels of CNS grafts fixed by perfusion of the host; (2) damage to host vessels and BBB during the intracerebral grafting procedure; (3) graft placement in proximity to inherently permeable vessels (e.g., CNS sites lying outside the BBB) supplying the subarachnoid space/pial surface and circumventricular organs such as the median eminence, area postrema, and choroid plexus; and (4) graft rejection associated with antigen presenting cells and the host immune response. The latter is prevalent in xenogeneic grafts and exists in allogeneic grafts with donor-host mismatch in the major and/or minor histocompatibility complex. CNS grafts between non-immunosuppressed outbred donor and host rats of the same strain (e.g., Sprague Dawley or Wistar rats) can be rejected by the host; these grafts exhibit populations of immunohistochemically identifiable major histocompatibility complex class I+ and class EE+ cells (microglia, macrophages, etc.) and CD4+ T-helper and CD8+ T-cytotoxic lymphocytes. PC12 cell suspension grafts placed within the CNS of non-immunosuppressed Sprague Dawley rats are rejected similarly. Donor cells from solid CNS grafts placed intracerebrally and stained immunohistochemically for donor major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I expression are identified within the host spleen and lymph nodes; these donor MHC expressing cells may initiate the host immune response subsequent to the cells entering the general circulation through host cerebral vessels damaged during graft placement. Rapid healing of damaged cerebral vessels is stimulated with exogenously applied basic fibroblast growth factor, which may prove helpful in reducing the potential entry of donor cells to the host circulation. These results have implication clinically for the intracerebral grafting of human fetal CNS cell suspensions.


Subject(s)
Blood-Brain Barrier , Brain Tissue Transplantation/pathology , Brain/ultrastructure , Fetal Tissue Transplantation/pathology , Animals , Brain/blood supply , Brain/immunology , Brain Tissue Transplantation/immunology , Brain Tissue Transplantation/methods , Cerebral Ventricles/immunology , Cerebral Ventricles/ultrastructure , Corpus Striatum/immunology , Corpus Striatum/ultrastructure , Fetal Tissue Transplantation/immunology , Fetal Tissue Transplantation/methods , Graft Rejection/immunology , Mice , Mice, Inbred AKR , Rats , Rats, Inbred BN , Rats, Inbred Lew , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Rats, Wistar , T-Lymphocyte Subsets/immunology , Transplantation, Homologous
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