Immunocytochemical analysis of serotonergic axons in laminae I and II of the lumbar spinal cord of the cat

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Abstract

Serotonergic axons in the superficial dorsal horn were examined at the light and electron microscopic levels using an antibody specific for serotonin (5-HT). Immunoreactive 5-HT axons were most numerous in lamina I and fewest in lamina IIb. The 5-HT axons tended to orient rostrocaudally as they traveled long distances in the gray matter. Based on the size of the 5-HT varicosities along a strand of axon, at least three different types of 5-HT axons were observed at the light microscopic level. Ultrastructurally, 5-HT-immunoreactive axonal endings contained either a mixture of flattened and small oval agranular vesicles or a relatively homogeneous population of oval vesicles. 5-HT endings synapsed primarily on small caliber dendritic shafts. They also were found synapsing on large caliber dendritic shafts, dendritic spines, and neuronal cell bodies. Based on the laminar location of 5-HT axosomatic synapses and the presence of 5-HT synapses on different morphological types of dendrites, we propose that 5-HT modulates the response properties of at least three different types of neurons in the superficial dorsal horn.

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Ruda, M. A., Coffield, J., & Steinbusch, H. W. M. (1982). Immunocytochemical analysis of serotonergic axons in laminae I and II of the lumbar spinal cord of the cat. Journal of Neuroscience, 2(11), 1660–1671. https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.02-11-01660.1982

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