Corticotropin-releasing factor is preferentially colocalized with excitatory rather than inhibitory amino acids in axon terminals in the peri-locus coeruleus region - PubMed (original) (raw)

Corticotropin-releasing factor is preferentially colocalized with excitatory rather than inhibitory amino acids in axon terminals in the peri-locus coeruleus region

R J Valentino et al. Neuroscience. 2001.

Abstract

Corticotropin-releasing factor(CRF)-immunoreactive terminals form synaptic specializations with locus coeruleus (LC) dendrites in rat brain. Within these terminals, CRF-immunoreactive dense core vesicles are colocalized with non-labeled dense core vesicles and clear vesicles, implicating other neuromodulators in the actions of CRF on LC neurons. Excitatory (glutamate) and inhibitory (GABA) amino acid afferents to the LC, have been identified which regulate noradrenergic responses to sensory stimuli. This study was designed to determine whether these amino acid neurotransmitters are colocalized with CRF in terminals within the LC/peri-LC region in the rat. Sections through the LC region that were dually labeled using immunohistochemical techniques to visualize either CRF and glutamate or CRF and GABA were examined using electron microscopy. Numerous terminals that contained immunolabeling for both CRF and glutamate (e.g. 30% of 106 CRF-immunoreactive terminals and 13% of 232 glutamate-immunolabeled terminals) were observed in the peri-LC. Additionally, single labeled CRF and glutamate terminals were often apposed to one another or found to converge on common dendritic targets. In contrast, relatively few terminals exhibited immunolabeling for both GABA and CRF (5% of 317 CRF-immunoreactive terminals). However, evidence for a postsynaptic effect of CRF on GABA-containing profiles included synapses between CRF axon terminals and GABA-labeled dendrites (10% of 317 CRF-labeled terminals), as well as appositions between CRF- and GABA-labeled terminals. These results indicate that CRF is preferentially colocalized with glutamate in the rostrolateral LC region and may impact on glutamate neurotransmission in the LC via presynaptic or postsynaptic actions. They argue against colocalization of CRF with GABA, although CRF may modulate GABA release via postsynaptic effects in the peri-LC region.

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