Ultrastructure of cholinergic synaptic terminals in the thalamic anteroventral, ventroposterior, and dorsal lateral geniculate nuclei of the rat

Abstract
The principal relay nuclei of the thalamus receive their cholinergic innervation from two midbrain cholinergic groups: the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus and the laterodorsal tegmental nucleus. The different thalamic nuclei exhibit populations of cholinergic axons which vary in density and morphology when examined at the light microscopic level. However, the ultrastructure of the cholinergic terminals in different thalamic nuclei has not been described. This study was undertaken to confirm that synaptic contacts are formed by cholinergic axons in several principal thalamic relay nuclei, to describe their ultrastructural morphology, and to identify the types of postsynaptic elements contacted by cholinergic synaptic terminals. The thalamic nuclei examined in this study are the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus, ventroposteromedial nucleus, ventroposterolateral nucleus, and anteroventral nucleus. Our results confirm that cholinergic axons form synaptic terminals in these thalamic nuclei. Cholinergic synaptic terminals contact structures outside the characteristic synaptic glomeruli, are never postsynaptic, and have morphologies and postsynaptic targets which differ among the thalamic nuclei. In the ventroposterior nuclei, cholinergic terminals form asymmetric synaptic contacts onto larger dendrites in the extraglomerular neuropil. In the anteroventral nucleus, cholinergic terminals form both symmetric and asymmetric synaptic contacts onto dendrites and somata. Cholinergic terminals in the anteroventral nucleus are larger than those in other nuclei. In the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus, cholinergic terminals contact both somata and dendrites in the extraglomerular neuropil, but the synaptic contacts in this nucleus are symmetric in morphology.

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