Ashwell_2006_Brain.Behav.Evol_67_85

Reference

Title : Cyto- and chemoarchitecture of the monotreme olfactory tubercle - Ashwell_2006_Brain.Behav.Evol_67_85
Author(s) : Ashwell KW
Ref : Brain Behavior & Evolution , 67 :85 , 2006
Abstract :

This study was undertaken to determine whether the olfactory tubercles of two monotremes (platypus and echidna) showed cyto- or chemoarchitectural differences from the tubercles of therian mammals. Nissl staining was applied in conjunction with enzyme reactivity for NADPH diaphorase and acetylcholinesterase, and immunoreactivity for calcium binding proteins (parvalbumin, calbindin and calretinin) and tyrosine hydroxylase (echidna only). Golgi impregnations of the tubercle were also available for the echidna. The olfactory tubercle is a poorly laminated structure in the echidna, despite the pronounced development of other components of the echidna olfactory system, and the dense cell layer of the olfactory tubercle was found to be discontinuous and irregular. Granule cell clusters (islands of Calleja) were present, but were small, poorly defined and did not show the intense NADPH diaphorase activity seen in marsupial and placental mammals. A putative small island of Calleja magna was seen in only one echidna out of four. In Golgi impregnations of the echidna olfactory tubercle, the most abundant neuron type was a medium-sized densely spined neuron similar to that seen in the olfactory tubercle of some therians. Large spine-poor neurons were also seen in the polymorphic layer. In the platypus, the olfactory tubercle was very small but showed more pronounced lamination than the echidna, although no granule cell clusters were seen. In both monotremes, the development of the olfactory tubercle was poor relative to other components of the olfactory system (bulb and piriform cortex). The small olfactory tubercle region in the platypus is consistent with poor olfaction in that aquatic mammal, but the tubercle in the echidna is more like that of a microsmatic mammal than other placentals occupying a similar niche (e.g., insectivores).

PubMedSearch : Ashwell_2006_Brain.Behav.Evol_67_85
PubMedID: 16244467

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Citations formats

Ashwell KW (2006)
Cyto- and chemoarchitecture of the monotreme olfactory tubercle
Brain Behavior & Evolution 67 :85

Ashwell KW (2006)
Brain Behavior & Evolution 67 :85