Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 15, 3273-3283, Copyright © 1995 by Society for Neuroscience
The density and distribution of serotonergic appositions onto identified neurons in the rat rostral ventromedial medulla
SB Potrebic, P Mason and HL Fields
Program in Neuroscience, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02143, USA.
Neurons in the rostral ventromedial medulla (RVM) contribute to the
modulation of nociceptive transmission and to the analgesic effects of
opioids. The RVM contains serotonergic terminal arbors, serotonergic
neurons and several types of serotonin (5-HT) receptors. Limited evidence
suggests that 5-HT acting within RVM decreases nociceptive responsiveness
and contributes to opioid analgesia. The present study examines the density
and distribution of serotonergic afferents onto physiologically identified
neurons in the RVM. In anesthetized rats, RVM neurons were characterized by
their response to noxious stimulation as either on (excited), off
(inhibited) or neutral (unaffected) cells. Tissue containing
intracellularly labeled RVM neurons was processed for 5-HT
immunocytochemistry. Five off, five on, and three serotonergic neutral
cells were examined with the confocal microscope for appositions between
5-HT immunoreactive (5-HT-IR) processes and intracellularly labeled
processes. Serotonergic neutral cells had the highest density of 5-HT-IR
appositions. The density of 5-HT-IR appositions onto off cells was slightly
lower. On cells demonstrated the lowest density of 5-HT-IR appositions.
These results indicate that 5-HT contributes to nociceptive modulation by
direct actions on the activity of RVM cells. Because the RVM has several
sources of serotonergic input and a number of different 5-HT receptor
subtypes, further understanding of the role of RVM 5-HT afferents will
require pharmacological studies to determine the action of 5-HT on each
cell class and anatomical studies to determine the brainstem origin of
serotonergic input to each cell class.