The N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) is an ionotropic
glutamate receptor that is important in neurotransmission
as well as in processes of synaptic plasticity in the mammalian
superior colliculus (SC). Despite the importance of this
receptor in synaptic transmission, there is as yet no evidence
that demonstrates directly the synaptic localization of
the NMDAR receptor in SC. We have used electron-microscope
(EM) immunocytochemistry to localize the NMDAR1 subunit
of this receptor protein and its association with sensory
afferents in the cat SC. Retinal synaptic terminals were
identified by normal morphology and cortical synaptic terminals
by degeneration after lesions of areas 17–18 of the
visual cortex. At the light-microscope level, label was
densest within the superficial gray and upper optic layers,
but also present in all other layers. Label was contained
within cell bodies, dendrites, and a few putative axons.
At the EM level, antibody labeling was found along postsynaptic
densifications and internalized within the cytoplasm of
a variety of dendrites and some cell bodies. Postsynaptic
profiles labeled by NMDAR1 included conventional dendrites
and presynaptic dendrites which contained pleomorphic synaptic
vesicles and are known to be GABAergic. Many of the labeled
postsynaptic densifications of both of these profile types
received synaptic inputs from retinal or cortical terminals.
Virtually no NMDAR1 immunoreactivity was found on thin
dendritic thorns or putative spines, even when these were
postsynaptic to retinal or cortical terminals. In summary,
these results show that the NMDAR1 subunit is postsynaptic
to both retinal and cortical afferents, which are known
to be glutamatergic, and are consistent with physiological
evidence showing that stimulation of either pathway can
activate the NMDA receptor.