Developmental changes in the dendritic architecture of salt-sensitive neurons in the nucleus of the solitary tract

Recent studies have provided evidence that brainstem gustatory neurons undergo substantial dendritic growth during a period of postnatal development that coincides with the maturation of their response to salts, suggesting a relationship (perhaps causal) between the physiology and morphology of deve...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain research. Developmental brain research 1997-09, Vol.102 (2), p.231-246
Hauptverfasser: Renehan, William E, Massey, Jeffery, Jin, Zhigao, Zhang, Xueguo, Liu, Yu-Zhi, Schweitzer, Laura
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 231
container_title Brain research. Developmental brain research
container_volume 102
creator Renehan, William E
Massey, Jeffery
Jin, Zhigao
Zhang, Xueguo
Liu, Yu-Zhi
Schweitzer, Laura
description Recent studies have provided evidence that brainstem gustatory neurons undergo substantial dendritic growth during a period of postnatal development that coincides with the maturation of their response to salts, suggesting a relationship (perhaps causal) between the physiology and morphology of developing salt-sensitive neurons. In an initial effort to explore this issue, we used extracellular and intracellular recording and intracellular labeling techniques to examine the structure and function of individual gustatory neurons in the rostral nucleus of the solitary tract (rNST) of young (postnatal day [P] 22–28) and adult rats. We found that P22–28 cells that responded to all three of the salts in our taste array had a greater dendritic length, a greater cell volume, and more dendritic branches than the cells that responded to one salt. As a group, taste-sensitive neurons in P22–28 animals had a higher maximum dendritic branch order and a trend toward more dendritic branch points than gustatory neurons in adult animals. The dendritic arbors of P22–28 taste neurons that responded to all three salts were larger (greater surface area and volume), more extensive in the rostrocaudal axis and exhibited a higher maximum branch order, more branch points and higher swelling density than adult cells that responded to all three salts. These results demonstrate that the morphology of salt-sensitive gustatory neurons in developing animals is closely related to the number of salts that evoke a response. The data also support the postulate that gustatory neurons in the rat brainstem undergo substantial dendritic remodeling between the fourth week of life and adulthood. Dendritic remodeling may play an important role in the maturation of the rNST response to NaCl.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0165-3806(97)00104-1
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subjects Animals
Brain Stem - cytology
Brain Stem - drug effects
Brain Stem - growth & development
Brainstem
Cell Size - drug effects
Dendrites - physiology
Development
Gustatory
Male
Morphometry
Neurons, Afferent - physiology
Nucleus of the solitary tract
Nucleus tractus solitarius
Rats
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Sensory
Sodium Chloride - pharmacology
Solitary Nucleus - cytology
Solitary Nucleus - drug effects
Solitary Nucleus - growth & development
Taste
title Developmental changes in the dendritic architecture of salt-sensitive neurons in the nucleus of the solitary tract
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