Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 8, 3306-3316, Copyright © 1988 by Society for Neuroscience
Distribution of somatostatin immunoreactivity in the human dentate gyrus
DG Amaral, R Insausti and MJ Campbell
Salk Institute for Biological Studies, San Diego, California 92138.
In previous immunohistochemical studies in the rat and monkey, a system of
somatostatin-positive neurons and fibers was observed in the dentate gyrus
of the hippocampal formation. In both species, somatostatin- immunoreactive
cell bodies are located primarily in the deep or polymorphic layer of the
dentate gyrus, and they give rise to a fiber system that terminates
principally in the outer two-thirds of the molecular layer. In the present
study, we employed the same antisera and staining procedures to determine
whether the organization of the somatostatin system in the human dentate
gyrus is similar to that seen in the rat and nonhuman primate. Sections of
human postmortem brain material incubated with antisera directed against
somatostatin 28 (S320) or somatostatin 28 (S309) demonstrated a
heterogeneous population of immunoreactive cells in the hilar region of the
human dentate gyrus. Fiber staining was observed both in the hilar region
and throughout the molecular layer, but the densest fiber and terminal
plexus were observed in the outer two-thirds of the molecular layer. In
addition, there were forms of somatostatin-immunoreactive profiles in the
human sections that were not previously observed in the rat or monkey.
Immunoreactive, grapelike clusters of apparently large, axonal varicosities
were commonly observed, for example, as were dendritic profiles containing
typical dendritic spines. In general, however, staining for somatostatin
immunoreactivity in the human dentate gyrus presented a picture
qualitatively similar to that observed in the rat and monkey. Thus,
immunohistochemical methods have allowed the analysis of a chemically
defined neural system in the human brain that has been extensively studied
in rat and monkey brains with both experimental and immunohistochemical
methods. That the pattern of labeling in the human sections closely
parallels that observed in the experimental animals provides support for
the contention that immunohistochemical methods can reliably be employed to
determine the normal neuroanatomical organization of the human brain. These
methods may also be particularly applicable for the analysis of
pathological brain conditions. In particular, alterations of the
hippocampal somatostatin system have been associated with both Alzheimer's
disease and temporal lobe epilepsy. It would be of interest, therefore, to
apply immunohistochemical procedures to determine whether the anatomical
organization of the human hippocampal somatostatin system is altered in
these diseases.