The somatodendritic structure of projection neurons was morphometrically examined in the nucleus accumbens of human brain. In contrast to reticular neurons, spiny neurons of the nucleus accumbens and dorsal striatum have different somatodendritic structure. In both parts of the striatum, reticular neurons were NADPH-diaphorase-positive.
Cerebral synapses in offspring of male rats treated with morphine for a month before mating were studied using synaptophysin (p38) as a synaptic marker. The content of p38 in the nucleus accumbens, hippocampus, and layers III and V of the somatosensory cortex was below the control, while no significant changes were found in the motor cortex, caudate nucleus, and ventrolateral thalamic nuclei.
Morphometric studies of human forebrain formations composed of densely branched cells - the entorhinal cortex, the basolateral amygdala, the nucleus accumbens, the striatum, and the dorsal thalamus - were performed using nine parameters, with statistical analysis of the resulting data; measurements addressed the major projection-type densely branched and sparsely branched reticular neurons (scattered reticular and marginal reticular cells of the dorsal thalamus) stained by the Golgi method and with NADPH-diaphorase. Scattered reticular cells in the various formations showed no differences in any of the nine measures, while there were significant differences (in 5-7 measures, apart from one comparison, where there were differences in two measures) in their major projection-type densely branched cells. Scattered reticular and main projection-type densely branched neurons in each formation differed in terms of 7-9 measures. In endbrain formations, scattered reticular neurons contained NADPH-diaphorase; in the dorsal thalamus, only intermediate marginal reticular neurons were NADPH-diaphorase-positive. Thus, these human formations contained a common system of ancient integrative NADPH-diaphorase-containing reticular cells. Our results, along with published data, show these to be projection-type cells with projections to layers V and VI of the neocortex, which suggests that they have modulatory influences on its descending systems.
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