Calbindin D28k-Immunoreactivity in Human Enteric Neurons

Zetzmann K, Strehl J, Geppert CI, Kürten S, Jabari S, Brehmer A (2018)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2018

Journal

Book Volume: 19

Journal Issue: 1

DOI: 10.3390/ijms19010194

Abstract

Calbindin (CALB) is well established as immunohistochemical marker for intrinsic primary afferent neurons in the guinea pig gut. Its expression by numerous human enteric neurons has been demonstrated but little is known about particular types of neurons immunoreactive for CALB. Here we investigated small and large intestinal wholemount sets of 26 tumor patients in order to evaluate (1) the proportion of CALB⁺ neurons in the total neuron population, (2) the colocalization of CALB with calretinin (CALR), somatostatin (SOM) and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and (3) the morphology of CALB+ neurons. CALB+ neurons represented a minority of myenteric neurons (small intestine: 31%; large intestine: 25%) and the majority of submucosal neurons (between 72 and 95%). In the submucosa, most CALB⁺ neurons co-stained for CALR and VIP (between 69 and 80%) or for SOM (between 20 and 3%). In the myenteric plexus, 85% of CALB+ neurons did not co-stain with the other markers investigated. An unequivocal correlation between CALB reactivity and neuronal morphology was found for myenteric type III neurons in the small intestine: uniaxonal neurons with long, slender and branched dendrites were generally positive for CALB. Since also other neurons displayed occasional CALB reactivity, this protein is not suited as an exclusive marker for type III neurons.

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How to cite

APA:

Zetzmann, K., Strehl, J., Geppert, C.-I., Kürten, S., Jabari, S., & Brehmer, A. (2018). Calbindin D28k-Immunoreactivity in Human Enteric Neurons. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 19(1). https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms19010194

MLA:

Zetzmann, Katharina, et al. "Calbindin D28k-Immunoreactivity in Human Enteric Neurons." International Journal of Molecular Sciences 19.1 (2018).

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