Comparative investigation of neuronal nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity in rat and human claustrum

Publication date: Available online 15 July 2017 Source:Journal of Chemical Neuroanatomy Author(s): Boycho Landzhov, Dimka Hinova-Palova, Lawrence Edelstein, Elena Dzhambazova, Ilina Brainova, Georgi P. Georgiev, Vesela Ivanova, Adrian Paloff, Wladimir Ovtscharoff We compared the distribution, density and morphological characteristics of nitric oxide synthase-immunoreactive (NOS-ir) neurons in the rat and human claustrum. These neurons were categorized by diameter into three main types: large, medium and small. In the human claustrum, large neurons ranged from 26 to 40μm in diameter, medium neurons from 20 to 25μm and small neurons from 13 to 19μm. In the rat claustrum, large neurons ranged from 19 to 23μm in diameter, medium neurons from 15 to 18μm and small neurons from 10 to 14μm. The cell bodies of large and medium neurons varied broadly in shape – multipolar, elliptical, bipolar and irregular, consistent with a projection neuron phenotype. The small neurons were most seen as being oval or elliptical in shape, resembling an interneuron phenotype. Based on a quantitative comparison of their dendritic characteristics, the NOS-ir neurons of humans and rats displayed a statistically significant difference.
Source: Journal of Chemical Neuroanatomy - Category: Neuroscience Source Type: research