Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1988690 Journal of Chemical Neuroanatomy 2016 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•CB1R and FAAH immunoreactivity was detected in the dog claustrum.•FAAH immunostaining was described in the somata.•CB1 labeling was mainly localized in fibers.•CB1 and FAAH complementary immunostaining provides evidence for the existence of the endocannabinoid system in the claustrum.

Cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1R) and fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) are part of the endocannabinoid system (ECB) which exerts a neuromodulatory activity on different brain functions and plays a key role in neurogenesis. Although many studies have reported FAAH and CB1R expression in the brain of different animal species, to the best of our knowledge they have never been described in the canine claustrum. Claustrum samples, obtained from necropsy of four neurologically normal dogs, were formalin fixed for paraffin embedding. Sections were either stained for morpho-histological analysis or immunostained for CB1R and FAAH. Analysis of adjacent sections incubated with the two antisera showed a complementary labeling pattern in the claustrum, with CB1R antibody staining fibers while anti-FAAH antibody stained cell bodies and the proximal portion of dendrites; this particular anatomical relationship suggests a retrograde endocannabinoid action via CB1R. CB1R and FAAH complementary immunostaining and their cellular localization reported here provide the first anatomical evidence for existence of the ECB in the dog claustrum.

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