We present a method for establishing in a single experiment four characteristics of individual neurons: the efferent and afferent connectivity, the morphology, and the content of a particular neuroactive substance. The connectivity of the neurons is determined by retrograde fluorescent tracing with Fast Blue and anterograde tracing with the lectin Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHA-L). After fixation, the brain is cut into 300-μm thick slices. Neurons containing retrogradely transported Fast Blue are intracellularly injected with the fluorescent dye Lucifer Yellow to fill their dendritic trees. The slices are then resectioned at 20-40 μm. One section through the soma of a Lucifer Yellow-filled neuron is selected for the detection of a neuroactive substance contained by this cell [immunofluorescence, secondary antiserum conjugated to tetramethylrhodamine (TRITC)]. Using appropriate filtering, it can be determined in the fluorescence microscope whether a Lucifer Yellow-containing cell body has also been labeled with TRITC, i.e., whether it is immunoreactive for this neuroactive substance. The adjacent sections are subjected to dual peroxidase immunocytochemistry with different chromogens to visualize the PHA-L-labeled afferent fibers (nickel-enhanced diaminobenzidine, blue-black reaction product) and to stabilize the Lucifer Yellow (diaminobenzidine, brown reaction product) in the dendrites of the intracellular injected cells. The other sections are used for electron microscopic visualization of the transported PHA-L. The relationships between the PHA-L-labeled afferent fibers (blue color) and the dendrites of the intracellularly Lucifer Yellow- injected, retrogradely Fast Blue-labeled cells (brown color) are studied by light microscopy. The electron microscope supplies ultrastructural data on the PHA-L-labeled axon terminals.
CITATION STYLE
Wouterlood, F. G., Goede, P. H., Arts, M. P. M., & Groenewegen, H. J. (1992). Simultaneous characterization of efferent and afferent connectivity, neuroactive substances, and morphology of neurons. Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, 40(4), 457–465. https://doi.org/10.1177/40.4.1552182
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