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The disposition of intraventricularly injected 14C-5,6-DHT-Melanin in, and possible routes of elimination from the rat CNS

An autoradiographic study

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Summary

14C-5,6-DHT-Melanin was injected into the left lateral ventricle of adult rats and its fate followed by light and EM autoradiography and by TEM of structures identified as labeled in preceding light micrographs. Shortly after injection, melanin particles were seen ingested by supraependymal and epiplexus cells, by cells residing in the pia-arachnoid, i.e. free subarachnoidal cells and perivascular cells, and by subependymally located microglia-like cells with intraventricular processes. Up to day four, an increase in the number of labelled phagocytes in the CSF was noted which transformed into typical reactive macrophages. After this time, many intraventricular melanin-laden phagocytes formed rounded clusters; cells of such clusters were subsequently found to invade the brain parenchyma by penetrating the ependymal lining and to accumulate in the perivascular space of brain vessels. 14C-Melanin-storing macrophages were found in the marginal sinus of the deep jugular lymph nodes suggesting emigration of CNS-derived phagocytes via lymphatics or prelymphatics that contact the subarachnoidal space compartment. This does not exclude the possibility that some of the macrophages leave the brain via the systemic circulation by penetrating the vascular endothelium; these may be disposed of in peripheral organs other than the lymph nodes.

The ability of supraependymal, epiplexus, free subarachnoidal and perivascular cells in the pia and of subependymal microglia cells to accumulate synthetic melanin by phagocytosis suggests that these cells are local variants of the same type of resting potential phagocytes of the mammalian brain. The present study shows that 14C-5,6-DHT-melanin is an ideal phagocytic stimulant and marker for phagocytosis.

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Supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

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Baumgarten, F.v., Baumgarten, H.G. & Schlossberger, H.G. The disposition of intraventricularly injected 14C-5,6-DHT-Melanin in, and possible routes of elimination from the rat CNS. Cell Tissue Res. 212, 279–294 (1980). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00233961

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