Author:
CARDEN Wm. BRECKINRIDGE,BICKFORD MARTHA E.
Abstract
We previously reported that two types of visual thalamic
interneurons (class III and class V) could be distinguished
by the presence or absence of the enzyme brain nitric oxide
synthase (bNOS; Bickford et al., 1999). In the present study,
we found that further immunocytochemical characterization can
be used to isolate class V and class III neurons: class V neurons
express GABA and bNOS but not the calcium binding protein
calbindin, whereas class III neurons express GABA and calbindin,
but not bNOS. By pairing staining for bNOS or calbindin with
staining for GABA, we were able to distinguish class III and
class V neurons, thereby allowing us to characterize the synaptic
inputs to these two interneuron populations within the cat pulvinar
nucleus. We found class III and class V interneurons participate
in distinctly different circuitries. Class III cells receive
the majority of their input from large terminals with round
vesicles (RL profiles, that presumably originate from cortical
layer V) while class V cells receive all of their input from
small terminals with round vesicles (RS profiles, that presumably
originate from cortical layer VI). These two types of interneurons
also target different regions of the dendritic arbors of
thalamocortical cells; class III cells contact large caliber
(presumably proximal) thalamocortical dendrites within glomeruli,
while class V cells contact the small caliber (presumably distal)
thalamocortical cell dendrites within the extraglomerular neuropil.
Thus, a dual inhibitory system exists within the visual thalamus
that integrates different types of corticothalamic input and
targets distinct regions of thalamocortical cell dendritic arbors.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
18 articles.
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