Publication | Open Access
Barrel Pattern Formation Requires Serotonin Uptake by Thalamocortical Afferents, and Not Vesicular Monoamine Release
210
Citations
67
References
2001
Year
Synaptic TransmissionNeurotransmitterNeurotransmissionOptogeneticsSynaptic SignalingNeurochemistryBarrel Pattern FormationHealth SciencesNeuropharmacologyVmat2 Ko MiceNervous SystemDopaminePharmacologyVesicular Monoamine ReleaseThalamocortical AfferentsDevelopmental BiologyBarrel CortexNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyPhysiologyNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryCentral Nervous SystemMolecular NeurobiologyMedicine
Thalamocortical neurons innervating the barrel cortex in neonatal rodents transiently store serotonin (5-HT) in synaptic vesicles by expressing the plasma membrane serotonin transporter (5-HTT) and the vesicular monoamine transporter (VMAT2). 5-HTT knock-out (ko) mice reveal a nearly complete absence of 5-HT in the cerebral cortex by immunohistochemistry, and of barrels, both at P7 and adulthood. Quantitative electron microscopy reveals that 5-HTT ko affects neither the density of synapses nor the length of synaptic contacts in layer IV. VMAT2 ko mice, completely lacking activity-dependent vesicular release of monoamines including 5-HT, also show a complete lack of 5-HT in the cortex but display largely normal barrel fields, despite sometimes markedly reduced postnatal growth. Transient 5-HTT expression is thus required for barrel pattern formation, whereas activity-dependent vesicular 5-HT release is not.
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