Stereological and allometric studies on neurons and axo-dendritic synapses in the superior cervical ganglia of rats, capybaras and horses


Autoria(s): LOESCH, Andrzej; MAYHEW, Terry M.; TANG, Helen; LADD, Fernando V. Lobo; LADD, Aliny A. B. Lobo; MELO, Mariana Pereira de; SILVA, Andrea Almeida P. da; COPPI, Antonio Augusto
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

19/10/2012

19/10/2012

2010

Resumo

The superior cervical ganglion (SCG) in mammals varies in structure according to developmental age, body size, gender, lateral asymmetry, the size and nuclear content of neurons and the complexity and synaptic coverage of their dendritic trees. In small and medium-sized mammals, neuron number and size increase from birth to adulthood and, in phylogenetic studies, vary with body size. However, recent studies on larger animals suggest that body weight does not, in general, accurately predict neuron number. We have applied design-based stereological tools at the light-microscopic level to assess the volumetric composition of ganglia and to estimate the numbers and sizes of neurons in SCGs from rats, capybaras and horses. Using transmission electron microscopy, we have obtained design-based estimates of the surface coverage of dendrites by postsynaptic apposition zones and model-based estimates of the numbers and sizes of synaptophysin-labelled axo-dendritic synaptic disks. Linear regression analysis of log-transformed data has been undertaken in order to establish the nature of the relationships between numbers and SCG volume (V(scg)). For SCGs (five per species), the allometric relationship for neuron number (N) is N=35,067xV (scg) (0.781) and that for synapses is N=20,095,000xV (scg) (1.328) , the former being a good predictor and the latter a poor predictor of synapse number. Our findings thus reveal the nature of SCG growth in terms of its main ingredients (neurons, neuropil, blood vessels) and show that larger mammals have SCG neurons exhibiting more complex arborizations and greater numbers of axo-dendritic synapses.

FAPESP Sao Paulo Research Foundation[2005/53835-6]

CNPQ[470913/2006-1]

CAPES

Identificador

CELL AND TISSUE RESEARCH, v.341, n.2, p.223-237, 2010

0302-766X

http://producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/25153

10.1007/s00441-010-1002-8

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00441-010-1002-8

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

SPRINGER

Relação

Cell and Tissue Research

Direitos

restrictedAccess

Copyright SPRINGER

Palavras-Chave #Superior cervical ganglion #Stereology #Neurons #Synapses #Allometry #Rat (Wistar, male) #Capybara (male) #Horse (male) #LUMBAR SYMPATHETIC-GANGLIA #CAUDAL MESENTERIC GANGLION #DORSAL-ROOT GANGLION #TOTAL NUMBER #SYNAPTOPHYSIN-IMMUNOREACTIVITY #MICROSTRUCTURAL ORGANIZATION #POSTNATAL-DEVELOPMENT #CANIS-FAMILIARIS #AGOUTI-PACA #GUINEA-PIGS #Cell Biology
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion