The study was designed to reveal the distribution of various mast cell types in the forebrain of the adult
sheep, hedgehog and rat. Based on their histochemical and immunocytochemical characteristics, mast cells
were categorised as (1) connective tissue-type mast cells, staining metachromatically purple with the toluidine
blue method, or pale red with the Alcian blue/safranin method, (2) mucosal-type or immature mast cells
staining blue with the Alcian blue/safranin method and (3) serotonin immunopositive mast cells. All 3 types
of brain mast cells in all species studied were located in both white and grey matter, often associated with
intraparenchymal blood vessels. Their distribution pattern exhibited interspecies differences, while their
number varied considerably not only between species but also between individuals of each species. A
distributional left-right asymmetry, with more cells present on the left side, was observed in all species
studied but it was most prominent in the sheep brain. In the sheep, mast cells were abundantly distributed in
forebrain areas, while in the hedgehog and the rat forebrain, mast cells were less widely distributed and were
relatively or substantially fewer in number respectively. A limited number of brain mast cells, in all 3
species, but primarily in the rat, were found to react both immunocytochemically to 5-HT antibody and
histochemically with Alcian blue/safranin staining.