ONTOGENY OF CHOLECYSTOKININ BINDING-SITES IN THE HINDBRAIN OF THE LABORATORY RAT

Citation
M. Kuehlkovarik et Cd. Jacobson, ONTOGENY OF CHOLECYSTOKININ BINDING-SITES IN THE HINDBRAIN OF THE LABORATORY RAT, Brain, behavior and evolution, 47(5), 1996, pp. 246-256
Citations number
58
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences,Neurosciences
ISSN journal
00068977
Volume
47
Issue
5
Year of publication
1996
Pages
246 - 256
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-8977(1996)47:5<246:OOCBIT>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
Studies in our laboratory have revealed a robust, transient expression of cholecystokinin binding sites in the facial motor nucleus during d evelopment in the Brazilian opossum, Monodelphis domestica. To investi gate the ubiquity of this phenomenon, we have performed receptor autor adiography on the hindbrains of embryonic and neonatal rat pups. Chole cystokinin binding sites are present at very low levels in the embryon ic day-16 rat hindbrain, but binding sites are abundant prior to birth . The greatest increase in labelled nuclei occurs prior to 5 days of p ostnatal age. Binding levels are heavy in the nucleus of the solitary tract, medial vestibular nucleus, posterior dorsal tegmental nucleus, area postrema, and caudal spinal trigeminal nucleus by 30 days postnat al. Both A-type and B-type receptors are present in the neonatal brain stem, although most labelled areas appear to be B-type. A-type binding sites are present in the ventral cochlear nucleus, the nucleus of the solitary tract, the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus, the area postr ema, the spinal nucleus of the trigeminal, and the cuneate and gracile nuclei by 5 days postnatal. As reported for the Brazilian opossum, ch olecystokinin binding sites are expressed in the facial motor nucleus of neonatal rats and are transient. In this study of the brainstem in laboratory rats, a transient expression is also observed in the rubros pinal tract, parvocellular reticular nucleus, raphe obscurus, cuneate and gracile nuclei, and the ventral median fissure of the spinal cord. As vasopressin binding sites and estrogen receptors have also been sh own to be expressed transiently in the laboratory rat facial motor nuc leus, the physiological and developmental significance of transient bi nding site expression remains to be elucidated.