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      Aspects of the neuroendocrine cerebellum: expression of secretogranin II, chromogranin A and chromogranin B in mouse cerebellar unipolar brush cells.

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      Neuroscience
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          Morphologically distinct neuron classes can be subdivided in sublineages by differential chemical phenotypes that correlate with functional diversity. Here we show by immunocytochemistry that chromogranin A (CgA) chromogranin B (CgB) and secretogranin II (SgII), the principal granins situated in neuronal secretory granules and large dense-core vesicles, are widely but differentially expressed in cells of the mouse cerebellum and terminals of cerebellar afferents. While CgA and CgB were nearly panneuronal, SgII was more restricted in distribution. The cells most intensely immunoreactive for SgII were a class of small, excitatory interneurons enriched in the granular layer of the vestibulocerebellum, the unipolar brush cells (UBCs), although larger neurons likely to be a subset of the Golgi-Lugaro-globular cell population were also distinctly immunopositive; by contrast, Purkinje cells and granule cells were, at best, faintly stained and, stellate, basket cells were unstained. SgII was also present in subsets of mossy fibers, climbing fibers and varicose fibers. Neurons in the cerebellar nuclei and inferior olive were distinctly positive for the three granins. Double-labeling with subset-specific cell class markers indicated that, while both CgA and CgB were present in most UBCs, SgII immunoreactivity was present in the calretinin (CR)-expressing subset, but lacked in metabotropic glutamate receptor 1alpha (mGluR1alpha)-expressing UBCs. Thus, we have identified an additional cell class marker, SgII, which serves to study subtype properties in the UBC population. The abundance of SgII in only one of the two known subsets of UBCs is remarkable, as its expression in other neurons of the cortex was moderate or altogether lacking. The data suggest that the CR-positive UBCs represent a unique neuroendocrine component of the mammalian cerebellar cortex, presumably endowed with transynaptically regulated autocrine or paracrine action/s. Because of the well-known organization of the cerebellar system, several of its neuron classes may represent valuable cellular models to analyze granin functions in situ, in acute slices and in dissociated cell and organotypic slice cultures.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Neuroscience
          Neuroscience
          Elsevier BV
          1873-7544
          0306-4522
          Sep 01 2009
          : 162
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, The Feinberg School of Medicine of Northwestern University, Searle 5-474, 320 East Superior Street, Chicago, IL 60611, USA. mg-nunzi@northwestern.edu
          Article
          S0306-4522(09)00196-1
          10.1016/j.neuroscience.2009.02.017
          19217926
          3d04db37-e77a-4afc-a822-84a3ff8e59dd
          History

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