Patchy distribution of substance P receptor immunoreactivity in the developing rat striatum

Tokuno H, Takada M, Kaneko T, Shigemoto R, Mizuno N. 1996. Patchy distribution of substance P receptor immunoreactivity in the developing rat striatum. Developmental Brain Research. 95(1), 107–117.

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Journal Article | Published | English

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Author
Tokuno, Hironobu; Takada, Masahiko; Kaneko, Takeshi; Shigemoto, RyuichiISTA ; Mizuno, Noboru
Abstract
Developmental changes of the distribution pattern of substance P receptor (SPR) were investigated immunohistochemically in the rat striatum. The SPR immunoreactivity in the striatum first emerged at postnatal day 1 and transiently showed a patchy pattern of distribution until it displayed the adult pattern of homogeneous distribution by the end of the third postnatal week. The SPR-immunoreactive patches were most marked in the medial and dorsolateral parts of the striatum, as well as in the subcallosal streak. They matched tyrosine hydroxylase-enriched areas and, conversely, avoided calbindin-enriched zones. No neurons within the SPR-immunoreactive patches contained either choline acetyltransferase or somatostatin, which is known to be contained in intrinsic neurons in the striatum. The vast majority of SPR-immunoreactive patch neurons also contained DARPP-32, a phosphoprotein that is expressed in striatal projection neurons with D1 dopamine receptor. The results indicate that SPR-immunoreactive patches which appear transiently in the developing striatum are in register with the striatal patch compartment, and that SPR immunoreactivity within these patches may be expressed on projection neurons rather than intrinsic neurons. Such SPR immunoreactivity in projection neurons in striatal patches may fade out in adulthood.
Publishing Year
Date Published
1996-08-20
Journal Title
Developmental Brain Research
Acknowledgement
We thank Mr. Akira Uesugi and Ms. Miao-Li Zhang for their photographic help. We are also grateful for the support of Dr. Kajitaro Morita in the Morita Clinic of Internal Medicine and Pediatrics at Kadoma, Osaka, Japan, and for the support of Drs. Satoru Fukuchi, Ritsu Hayashi, Sozaburo Hayashi, Mizuho Katsurada, Yutaka Kitani, Keiko Kumagai, Toshihiko Kuroda., Hiroshi Matsubara, Hiroshi Matsushita, Chisato Minakuchi, Gonpei Niwa, Hajime Oda, Masahiko Ohbayashi, Sei-ichi Ohbayashi, Hiroyasu Ohtsuka, Shigeo Tamaki, Eizo Watanabe, Kazuo Yoshino, and Toshiaki Yoshino. This work was supported in part by Grants-in-Aid for Special Research on Priority Areas 05267104, Scientific Research (B) 5454658, and Scientific Research (C) 05680658 and 06680735 from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan.
Volume
95
Issue
1
Page
107 - 117
ISSN
IST-REx-ID

Cite this

Tokuno H, Takada M, Kaneko T, Shigemoto R, Mizuno N. Patchy distribution of substance P receptor immunoreactivity in the developing rat striatum. Developmental Brain Research. 1996;95(1):107-117. doi:10.1016/0165-3806(96)00080-6
Tokuno, H., Takada, M., Kaneko, T., Shigemoto, R., & Mizuno, N. (1996). Patchy distribution of substance P receptor immunoreactivity in the developing rat striatum. Developmental Brain Research. Elsevier. https://doi.org/10.1016/0165-3806(96)00080-6
Tokuno, Hironobu, Masahiko Takada, Takeshi Kaneko, Ryuichi Shigemoto, and Noboru Mizuno. “Patchy Distribution of Substance P Receptor Immunoreactivity in the Developing Rat Striatum.” Developmental Brain Research. Elsevier, 1996. https://doi.org/10.1016/0165-3806(96)00080-6.
H. Tokuno, M. Takada, T. Kaneko, R. Shigemoto, and N. Mizuno, “Patchy distribution of substance P receptor immunoreactivity in the developing rat striatum,” Developmental Brain Research, vol. 95, no. 1. Elsevier, pp. 107–117, 1996.
Tokuno H, Takada M, Kaneko T, Shigemoto R, Mizuno N. 1996. Patchy distribution of substance P receptor immunoreactivity in the developing rat striatum. Developmental Brain Research. 95(1), 107–117.
Tokuno, Hironobu, et al. “Patchy Distribution of Substance P Receptor Immunoreactivity in the Developing Rat Striatum.” Developmental Brain Research, vol. 95, no. 1, Elsevier, 1996, pp. 107–17, doi:10.1016/0165-3806(96)00080-6.

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