Fetal hypothalamic transplants in the third ventricle of the adult rat brain
- 1 October 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Cell and tissue research
- Vol. 211 (2) , 191-206
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00236442
Abstract
Blocks of anterior hypothalamus were transplanted from 19 day-old fetuses of Wistar/Lewis rats into the third ventricle of adult male Brattleboro rats. Physiological changes in graft recipients and in sham-operated animals were monitored daily. Twenty days after surgery, the graft recipients and shamoperated animals were killed and their brains examined by correlative scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Host animals that exhibited both decreased polydipsia and increased urine concentration were found to have viable grafts within the third ventricle. The observed physiological changes suggested that synthesis and release of vasopressin occurred in the transplanted neurons. Grafts were well vascularized by vessels arising from the host hypothalamus. Neurons, with perikarya ranging from 8 to 30 μm in diameter, glial cells, and neurites were located throughout the transplants. A neurohemal contact zone, similar to that normally seen in the median eminence, could not be demonstrated in the grafts. The absence of complete glial and ependymal barriers indicates a relatively close association between cells in the transplants and the cerebrospinal fluid. A large increase in supraependymal neurons and their processes, including an eruption of neurons through the floor of the third ventricle in one animal, was observed in graft recipients but not in shamoperated animals.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cytodifferentiation of the supraoptic nucleus correlated with vasopressin synthesis in the ratBrain Research, 1980
- Regeneration and myelination in autonomic ganglia transplanted to intact brain surfacesJournal of Neurocytology, 1979
- Transplantation of central and peripheral monoamine neurons to the adult rat brain: Techniques and conditions for survivalBrain Research, 1976