Tyrosine hydroxylase and serotonin containing cells in embryonic rat rhombencephalon: A whole‐mount immunocytochemical study

Abstract
Rhombencephala from rat embryos were processed as whole‐mounts for immunocytochemical detection of monoaminergic cell populations, using antibodies to tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and serotonin (5‐HT). Specific advantages of the whole‐mount technique over the classical serial‐section method were that even isolated immunoreactive (IR) cells could be detected easily, and three‐dimensional relationships could be ascertained without the need for serial reconstruction. Embryos between embryonic days (E) 12 and 16 (the day following nocturnal mating being considered as E1) were used in this study. Both TH and 5‐HT immunoreactivities were already detectable at E12, even in the smallest embryos (crown‐rump length: 6mm), but there was a striking difference in the number and regional distribution of these two types of IR cells. TH was expressed in several cell groups located in the rostral rhombencephalon (the presumed anlage of the A4‐7 complex) as well as in the caudal rhombencephalon (the presumed anlagen of groups A1‐2 and C1‐3), whereas 5‐HT was expressed in very few cells located near the rostral border of the rhombencephalon (presumed anlage of the B4‐9 complex). Although the three‐dimensional distribution of the TH‐IR cell groups underwent some modifications during the period studied, its general pattern remained relatively stable after E12. This contrasted with the sequential appearance of the 5‐HT‐IR cell groups and their spatial transformations during this period. Using the rhombencephalic isthmus as a landmark, we found that conspicuous 5‐HT‐IR fibre bundles penetrated into the mesencephalon from E13 onwards, but that the 5‐HT IR cell bodies were exclusively located caudal to the borderline between the mesencephalon and the rhombencephalon (the rhombencephalic isthmus). We therefore suggest the term “rostral rhombencephalic raphe nuclei” for the rostral 5‐HT cell groups instead of “mesencephalic raphe nuclei,” which is a misnomer. Close spatial association between TH and 5‐HT‐IR elements was observed mainly in the caudal rhombencephalon, where 5‐HT‐IR fibres coursed through an area containing numerous TH‐IR cell bodies (the presumed anlagen of groups A1‐2 and C1‐3).