Volume 17, Number 4,
Issue of February 15, 1997
pp. 1377-1396
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
AMPA and NMDA Glutamate Receptor Subunits in Midbrain
Dopaminergic Neurons in the Squirrel Monkey: An Immunohistochemical and
In Situ Hybridization Study
Received July 11, 1996; revised Oct. 4, 1996; accepted Dec. 3, 1996.
Maryse Paquet1, 2,
Martine Tremblay1,
Jean-Jacques Soghomonian1, and
Yoland Smith1, 2
1 Centre de Recherche en Neurobiologie, Hôpital
de l'Enfant-Jésus, Université Laval, Québec, Canada
G1J 1Z4, and 2 Division of Neuroscience, Yerkes Primate
Center and Department of Neurology, Emory University, Atlanta,
Georgia 30322
The objective of the present study was to analyze the cellular and
subcellular localization of ionotropic glutamate receptor subunits in
midbrain dopaminergic neurons in the squirrel monkey. This was achieved
by means of immunohistochemistry at light and electron microscopic
levels and in situ hybridization histochemistry.
Colocalization studies show that nearly all dopaminergic neurons in
both the ventral and dorsal tiers of the substantia nigra compacta
(SNc-v, SNc-d) and the ventral tegmental area (VTA) are immunoreactive for AMPA (GluR1, GluR2/3, and GluR4) and NMDAR1 receptor
subunits, but not for NMDAR2A/B subunits. The immunoreactivity of the
receptor subunits is associated mainly with perikarya and dendritic
shafts. Apart from the intensity of immunolabeling for the GluR4
subunit, which is quite similar for the different groups of midbrain
dopaminergic neurons, the overall intensity of immunostaining for the
other subunits is higher in the SNc-v and SNc-d than in the VTA. In
line with these observations, in situ hybridization shows that the average level of labeling for the GluR2 and NMDAR1 subunit mRNAs is significantly higher in the SNc-v than in the VTA, and
for the NMDAR1 subunit, higher in the SNc-v than in the SNc-d. In
contrast, no significant difference was found for the level of GluR1
mRNA labeling among the three groups of midbrain dopaminergic neurons.
At the subcellular level in the SNc-v, AMPA (GluR1 and GluR2/3) and
NMDAR1 receptor subunit immunoreactivity is preferentially associated
with the postsynaptic densities of asymmetric synapses, but
occasionally some immunoreactivity is found along nonsynaptic portions
of plasma membranes of dendrites. A small number of preterminal axons,
axon terminals, and glial cell processes are also immunoreactive.
Our observations indicate that the different groups of midbrain
dopaminergic neurons in primates exhibit a certain degree of
heterogeneity with regard to the level of expression of some ionotropic
glutamate receptor subunits. The widespread neuronal and glial
localization of glutamate receptor subunits suggests that excitatory
amino acids may act at different levels to control the basal activity
and, possibly, to participate in the degeneration of midbrain
dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's disease.
Key words:
excitotoxicity;
Parkinson's disease;
substantia nigra;
ventral tegmental area;
dopamine;
glutamate receptor