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      Ultrastructural distribution of glutamate immunoreactivity within neurosecretory endings and pituicytes of the rat neurohypophysis.

      Brain Research
      Animals, Axons, immunology, ultrastructure, Cell Nucleus, metabolism, Cytoplasm, Dehydration, physiopathology, Glutamates, Glutamic Acid, Immunohistochemistry, Male, Mitochondria, Nerve Endings, Neurosecretory Systems, Pituitary Gland, Posterior, innervation, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Subcellular Fractions, physiology, Tissue Fixation

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          Abstract

          An ultrastructural analysis of post-embedding glutamate immunocytochemistry within the neural lobe of the pituitary was used to explore the possible role of glutamate within the magnocellular neuroendocrine cells. Relative densities of a colloidal gold marker associated with various cellular and subcellular compartments of the neural lobe were quantified by computer analysis of electron micrographs. Robust glutamate immunoreactivity was observed in both pituicytes (cytoplasm, mitochondria and nucleus) and neurosecretory endings. Within the neurosecretory endings, glutamate staining was specifically localized to the microvesicles with no overlap into the neurosecretory granule population. Stimulation of the vasopressin/oxytocin neurosecretory system by water deprivation increased glutamate content in pituicytes and mitochondria within neurosecretory endings but had little influence on microvesicle glutamate content. The results are consistent with the existence of multiple functional pools of immunoreactive glutamate in both pituicytes and neurosecretory endings. Microvesicles within the neurosecretory endings exhibit many properties of secretory vesicles, appear to be functionally independent of the neurosecretory granules, and have sufficient glutamate immunoreactivity to suggest that this amino acid may be compartmentalized for release in the neural lobe.

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