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1.
The distribution of cells in the rostral medial mesencephalon and caudal diencephalon which project to the vestibular complex was mapped in the cat by using retrograde axonal transport of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP). Subsequent experiments using anterograde transport of WGA-HRP clarified the position of the terminations of the mesodiencephalic-derived afferents in the vestibular complex. After large injections which involved the entire vestibular complex, retrogradely labeled cells were seen in both the ipsilateral and contralateral interstitial nucleus of Cajal (INC) and were more numerous in its rostral pole. Labeled cells also occurred in the perifascicular region, both immediately adjacent to the fasciculus retroflexus and rostroventral to it. Fusiform midline cells of the Edinger-Westphal nucleus were also labeled, as well as a number of cells in the adjacent somatic portion of the oculomotor complex (OMC). Another group of labeled cells was observed within the contralateral medial terminal nucleus of the accessory optic tract (MTN) and in the posterior hypothalamic nucleus. Injections limited to subregions of the vestibular complex resulted in similar but slightly varying distributions and numbers of retrogradely labeled cells. After injections covering the caudal half of the medial vestibular nucleus (MVN) and descending vestibular nucleus (DVN), labeled cells in the INC and tegmentum dorsal to it were especially prominent, but none was seen in the MTN or OMC. Injections placed in the rostral MVN, lateral vestibular nucleus, y group, and superior vestibular nucleus resulted in a distribution of labeled cells similar to that seen following global vestibular injections, but these cells were fewer in number. After an injection confined to the y group, a small number of retrogradely labeled cells were seen in the rostral pole of the INC and immediately ventral to the fasciculus retroflexus. Projections from the rostral medial mesencephalon and caudal diencephalon to the MVN, DVN, and y group were confirmed by using anterograde transport of WGA-HRP. Direct projections from the INC-perifascicular regions and somatic neurons of the OMC to the caudal vestibular complex could play a role in eye-head coordination. Those projections from the rostral INC and MTN to the rostral vestibular complex may play a role in vertical eye movements and responses to visual stimuli which move in the vertical plane.  相似文献   

2.
We studied afferents to the parabrachial nucleus (PB) from the spinal cord and the spinal trigeminal nucleus pars caudalis (SNVc) in the rat by using the anterograde and retrograde transport of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP). Injections of WGA-HRP into medial PB retrogradely labeled neurons in the promontorium and in lamina I of the dorsal rostral SNVc, while injections into lateral PB and the K?lliker-Fuse nucleus retrogradely labeled neurons in these areas as well as in lamina I throughout the caudal SNVc and spinal dorsal horn. Injections of WGA-HRP into the caudal SNVc and dorsal horn of the spinal cord resulted in terminal labeling in the dorsal, central, and external lateral subnuclei of PB and the K?lliker-Fuse nucleus, all of which are known to receive cardiovascular and respiratory afferent information. Injections of WGA-HRP into the promontorium and dorsal rostral SNVc resulted in terminal labeling in the same PB subnuclei, as well as in the medial and the ventral lateral PB subnuclei, which are sites of relay for gustatory information ascending from the medulla to the forebrain. The spinal and trigeminal projection to PB may mediate the convergence of pain, chemosensory, and temperature sensibilities with gustatory and cardiorespiratory systems in PB.  相似文献   

3.
We examined the afferent projections to the subnuclei of the interpeduncular nucleus (IPN) in the rat by means of retrograde and anterograde transport of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP). We observed locations of retrogradely labeled cells following injections of WGA-HRP into the IPN, and distributions of anterogradely labeled fibers and terminals within the IPN following injections into the areas that contain cells of origin of afferents. Results of the retrograde and anterograde experiments have clarified the detailed organization of the IPN afferents. A part of the nucleus incertus, located dorsomedial to the dorsal tegmental nucleus, projects to the contralateral half of the rostral subnucleus of the IPN; the pars caudalis of the dorsal tegmental nucleus projects sparsely to the rostral lateral, dorsal lateral, lateral, caudal, and apical subnuclei predominantly contralaterally; the laterodorsal tegmental nucleus, to most of the subnuclei predominantly contralaterally; the ventromedial central gray rostral to the dorsal tegmental nucleus and lateral to the dorsal raphe nucleus projects to the rostral lateral and dorsal lateral subnuclei predominantly contralaterally; the median raphe nucleus, substantially to all subnuclei; the medial habenular nucleus, in a topographic manner, to the rostral, central, and intermediate subnuclei, to the rostral lateral and lateral subnuclei predominantly ipsilaterally, and to the dorsal lateral subnucleus predominantly contralaterally; the supramammillary nucleus and areas around the origin of the mammillothalamic tract and near the third ventricle project sparsely to the ventral part of the rostral subnucleus and to the central, lateral, caudal and apical subnuclei; the nucleus of the diagonal band, sparsely to the rostral, central, dorsal lateral, caudal, and apical subnuclei. These differential projections of the afferents to the subnuclei of the IPN may reflect its complex functions within the limbic midbrain circuit.  相似文献   

4.
The central projections of the ethmoidal, glossopharyngeal, and superior laryngeal nerves were determined in the muskrat by use of the transganglionic transport of a mixture of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)-HRP. The ethmoidal nerve projected to discrete areas in all subdivisions of the ipsilateral trigeminal sensory complex. Reaction product was focused in ventromedial portions of the principal nucleus, subnucleus oralis, and subnucleus interpolaris. The subnucleus oralis also contained sparse reaction product in its dorsomedial part. Projections were dense to ventrolateral parts of laminae I and II of the rostral medullary dorsal horn, with sparser projections to lamina V. Label in laminae I and V extended into the cervical dorsal horn. A few labeled fibers were followed to the contralateral dorsal horn. The interstitial neuropil of the ventral paratrigeminal nucleus was densely labeled. Extratrigeminal primary afferent projections in ethmoidal nerve cases involved the K?lliker-Fuse nucleus and ventrolateral part of the parabrachial nucleus, the reticular formation surrounding the rostral ambiguous complex, and the dorsal reticular formation of the closed medulla. Retrograde labeling in the brain was observed in only the mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus in these cases. The cervical trunk of the glossopharyngeal and superior laryngeal nerves also projected to the trigeminal sensory complex, but almost exclusively to its caudal parts. These nerves terminated in the dorsal and ventral paratrigeminal nuclei as well as lamina I of the medullary and cervical dorsal horns. Lamina V received sparse projections. The glossopharyngeal and superior laryngeal nerves projected to the ipsilateral solitary complex at all levels extending from the caudal facial nucleus to the cervical spinal cord. At the level of the obex, these nerves projected densely to ipsilateral areas ventral and ventromedial to the solitary tract. Additional ipsilateral projections were observed along the dorsolateral border of the solitary complex. Near the obex and caudally, the commissural area was labeled bilaterally. Labeled fibers from the solitary tract projected into the caudal reticular formation bilaterally, especially when the cervical trunk of the glossopharyngeal nerve received tracer. Labeled fibers descending further in the solitary tract gradually shifted toward the base of the cervical dorsal horn. The labeled fibers left the solitary tract and entered the spinal trigeminal tract at these levels. Retrogradely labeled cells were observed in the ambiguous complex, especially rostrally, and in the rostral dorsal vagal nucleus after application of HRP and WGA-HRP to either the glossopharyngeal or superior laryngeal nerves. In glossopharyngeal nerve cases, retrogradely labeled neurons also were seen in the inferior salivatory nucleus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Previous anatomical and physiological studies have revealed a substantial projection from the periaqueductal gray (PAG) to the nucleus paragigantocellularis (PGi). In addition, physiological studies have indicated that the PAG is composed of functionally distinct subregions. However, projections from PAG subregions to PGi have not been comprehensively examined. In the present study, we sought to examine possible topographic specificity for projections from subregions of the PAG to PGi. Pressure or iontophoretic injections of wheat germ agglutinin-conjugated horseradish peroxidase, or of Fluoro-Gold, placed into the PGi of the rat retrogradely labeled a substantial number of neurons in the PAG from the level of the Edinger-Westphal nucleus to the caudal midbrain. Retrogradely labeled neurons were preferentially aggregated in distinct subregions of the PAG. Rostrally, at the level of the oculomotor nucleus, labeled neurons were i) compactly aggregated in the ventromedial portion of the PAG corresponding closely to the supraoculomotor nucleus of the central gray, ii) in the lateral and ventrolateral PAG, and iii) in medial dorsal PAG. More caudally, retrogradely labeled neurons became less numerous in the dorsomedial PAG but were more widely scattered throughout the lateral and ventrolateral parts of the PAG. Only few retrogradely labeled neurons were found in the ventromedial part of the PAG at caudal levels. Injections of retrograde tracers restricted to subregions of the PGi suggested topography for afferents from the PAG. Injections into the lateral portion of the PGi yielded the greatest number of labeled neurons within the rostral ventromedial PAG. Medially placed injections yielded numerous retrogradely labeled neurons in the lateral and ventrolateral PAG. Injections placed in the rostral pole of the PGi (medial to the facial nucleus) produced the greatest number of retrogradely labeled neurons in the dorsal PAG. To examine the pathways taken by fibers projecting from PAG neurons to the medulla, and to further specify the topography for the terminations of these afferents in the PGi, the anterograde tracer Phaseolus vulgaris-leucoagglutinin was iontophoretically deposited into subregions of the PAG that contained retrogradely labeled neurons in the above experiments. These results revealed distinct fiber pathways to the rostral medulla that arise from the dorsal, lateral/ventrolateral, and ventromedial parts of the PAG. These injections also showed that there are differential but overlapping innervation patterns within the PGi. Consistent with the retrograde tracing results, injections into the rostral ventromedial PAG near the supraoculomotor nucleus yielded anterograde labeling immediately ventral to the nucleus ambiguus in the ventrolateral medulla, within the retrofacial portion of the PGi.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The projection from the parabrachial nucleus (PB) to the cerbral cortex in the rat was studied in detail using the autoradiographic method for tracing anterograde axonal transport and the wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) method for both anterograde and retrograde tracing. PB innervates layers I, V and VI of a continuous sheet of cortex extending from the posterior insular cortex caudally, through the dorsal agranular and the granular anterior insular cortex and on rostrally into the lateral prefrontal cortex. Within the prefrontal area, PB fibers innervate primarily layer V of the ventrolateral cortex caudally, but more rostrally the innervated region includes progressively more dorsal portions of the prefrontal area, until by the frontal pole the entire lateral half of the hemisphere is innervated. This projection originates for the most part in a cluster of neurons in the caudal ventral part of the medial PB subdivision, although a few neurons in the adjacent parts of the PB, the Kolliker-Fuse nucleus and the subcoeruleus region also participate.After injection of WGA-HRP into the PB region, retrogradely labeled neurons were found in layer V of the same cortical areas which receive PB inputs. The importance of this monosynaptic reciprocal brainstem-cortical projection as a possible anatomical substrate for the regulation of cortical arousal is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Ascending projections from the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus (PPT) and the surrounding mesopontine tegmentum to the forebrain in the rat are here examined by using both retrograde and anterograde tracing techniques combined with choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) immunohistochemistry. The anterogradely transported lectin Phaseolus vulgaris-leukoagglutinin (PHA-L) was iontophoretically injected into the PPT in 12 rats. Anterogradely labelled fibers and varicosities were observed in the thalamic nuclei, confirming the findings of our previous retrograde studies (Hallanger et al: J. Comp. Neurol. 262:105-124, '87). In addition, PHA-L-labelled fibers and varicosities suggestive of terminal fields were observed in the anterior, tuberal, and posterior lateral hypothalamic regions, the ventral pallidum in the region of the nucleus basalis of Meynert, the dorsal and intermediate lateral septal nuclei, and in the central and medial nuclei of the amygdala. To determine whether these were cholinergic projections, the retrograde tracer WGA-HRP was injected into terminal fields in the hypothalamus, septum, ventral pallidum, and amygdala. Numerous ChAT-immunoreactive neurons in the PPT and laterodorsal tegmental nucleus (LDT) were retrogradely labelled from the lateral hypothalamus. These cholinergic neurons constituted over 20% of those retrogradely labelled in the dorsolateral mesopontine tegmentum; the balance consisted of noncholinergic neurons of the central tegmental field, retrorubral field, and cuneiform nucleus. Following placement of WGA-HRP into dorsal and intermediate lateral septal regions, the vast majority (greater than 90%) of retrogradely labelled neurons were cholinergic neurons of the PPT and LDT, with few noncholinergic retrogradely labelled neurons in the adjacent tegmentum. In contrast, fewer cholinergic neurons were retrogradely labelled following placement of tracer into the nucleus basalis of Meynert or into the central, medial, and basolateral nuclei of the amygdala, while numerous noncholinergic neurons of the central tegmental field rostral to the PPT and of the retrorubral field adjacent to the PPT were retrogradely labelled in these cases. These anterograde and retrograde studies demonstrate that cholinergic PPT and LDT neurons provide a substantial proportion of mesopontine tegmental afferents to the hypothalamus and lateral septum, while projections to the nucleus basalis and the amygdala are minimal.  相似文献   

8.
We previously defined a functional area in the caudal medulla oblongata that elicits an increase in arterial pressure when stimulated (Sun and Panneton [2002] Am. J. Physiol. 283:R768-R778). In the present study, anterograde and retrograde tracing techniques were used to investigate the projections of this caudal pressor area (CPA) to the medulla and pons. Injections of biotinylated dextran amine into the CPA resulted in numerous labeled fibers with varicosities in the ipsilateral subnucleus reticularis dorsalis, commissural subnucleus of the nucleus tractus solitarii, lateral medulla, medial facial nucleus, A5 area, lateral vestibular nucleus, and internal lateral subnucleus of the parabrachial complex. Sparser projections were found ipsilaterally in the pressor and depressor areas of the medulla and the spinal trigeminal nucleus and contralaterally in the CPA. Injections of the retrograde tracer Fluoro-Gold into these areas labeled neurons in the CPA as well as the nearby medullary dorsal horn and reticular formation. However, we conclude that the CPA projects preferentially to the subnucleus reticularis dorsalis, commissural nucleus tractus solitarii, lateral medulla, A5 area, and internal lateral parabrachial nucleus. Weaker projections were seen to the CVLM and RVLM and to the contralateral CPA. The projection to the facial nucleus arises from nearby reticular neurons, whereas projections to the vestibular nucleus arise from the lateral reticular nucleus. Labeled neurons in the CPA consisted mostly of small bipolar and some triangular neurons. The projection to the CVLM, or to A5 area, may provide for the increase in arterial pressure with CPA stimulation. However, most of the projections described herein are to nuclei implicated in the processing of noxious information. This implies a unique role for the CPA in somatoautonomic regulation.  相似文献   

9.
Projections from the spinal cord and the dorsal column nuclei (DCN) to the ventrobasal complex of the thalamus (VB) were studied in the rat by using double anterograde labeling strategy. This strategy was based on the injection of 3H-leucine into the DCN and of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) into the spinal cord and their subsequent transport. Adjacent 30-micron-thick sections were then processed differentially for autoradiography or for HRP by using tetramethyl benzidine (TMB) as a chromogen. Similar areas of the ventrobasal complex were labeled, in adjacent sections, after a large injection of 3H-leucine into the DCN and when wheat germ agglutinin-HRP had been injected in any part of the spinal cord. If, however, a small injection of the radioactive tracer was centered in the gracile nucleus and compared with an injection of WGA-HRP placed in the lumbar enlargement of the cord, the rostral and dorsal portions of the lateral VB were labeled from both sources. On the other hand, if tritiated leucine was injected into the cuneate nucleus, and WGA-HRP placed in the cervical enlargement, then the caudal and ventral portions of the lateral VB demonstrated overlap of both labels. The present results show that, in the rat, areas of termination of both the spinothalamic tract and the lemniscal pathway originating from the DCN overlap in the lateral VB. This overlap is somatotopically organized, thus indicating that the same area of the VB receives somatic inputs from one particular part of the body through both pathways. These results are discussed in comparison to those of comparable studies performed in the cat and in the monkey and with reference to the electrophysiological data that have demonstrated that, in the rat VB, neurons responding to noxious stimulation are intermingled with neurons exclusively responding to non-noxious stimulation.  相似文献   

10.
We have analysed the pathways through which somatosensory information from the face reaches the inferior olive and the cerebellum in rabbits. We used wheatgerm agglutinin - horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) to trace projections from all parts of the somatosensory trigeminal system to the olive, cerebellar cortex, the cerebellar deep nuclei and the pontine nuclei. Projections to the cerebellar cortex and inferior olive were verified using retrograde transport of WGA-HRP. Two regions of the inferior olive–the medial dorsal accessory olive and the ventral leaf of the principal olive–receive inputs from pars interpolaris (Vi) and rostral pars caudalis (Vc) of the spinal trigeminal nucleus and from the principal trigeminal nucleus (Vp). Another area in the caudal medial accessory olive receives inputs from rostral Vo (pars oralis of the spinal trigeminal nucleus), caudal Vi and Vc. There are trigemino-olivo-cortical inputs to lobule HVI via all these olivary areas and to the paramedian lobe via the principal olive only. Cerebellar cortex–lobules HVI, crus I and II, paramedian lobe and IX–receives direct mossy fibre inputs from Vp, Vo and rostral Vi. The pontine nuclei receive an input only from rostral Vi. We saw no trigeminal projections to other precerebellar nuclei or to the deep cerebellar nuclei. The concentration of face somatosensory cortical inputs, via several pathways, upon lobule HVI may underlie its important role in the regulation of learned and unlearned eyeblinks.  相似文献   

11.
The projections of primary afferents from rostral cervical segments to the brainstem and the spinal cord of the rat were investigated by using anterograde and transganglionic transport techniques. Projections from whole spinal ganglia were compared with those from single nerves carrying only exteroceptive or proprioceptive fibers. Injections of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) or wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase conjugate (WGA-HRP) were performed into dorsal root ganglia C2, C3, and C4. Free HRP was applied to the cut dorsal rami C2 and C3, greater occipital nerve, sternomastoid nerve, and to the C1/2 anastomosis, which contains afferents from suboccipital muscles and the atlanto-occipital joint. WGA-HRP injections into ganglia C7 and L5 were performed for comparative purposes. Injections of WGA-HRP or free HRP into rostral cervical dorsal root ganglia and HRP application to C2 and C3 dorsal rami produced labeling in dorsal and ventral horns at the level of entrance, the central cervical nucleus, and in external and main cuneate nuclei. From axons ascending to pontine and descending to upper thoracic spinal levels, medial collaterals were distributed to medial and descending vestibular, perihypoglossal and solitary nuclei, and the intermediate zone and Clarke's nucleus dorsalis in the spinal cord. Lateral collaterals projected mainly to the trigeminal subnucleus interpolaris and to lateral spinal laminae IV and V. Results from HRP application to single peripheral nerves indicated that medial collaterals were almost exclusively proprioceptive, whereas lateral collaterals were largely exteroceptive with a contribution from suboccipital proprioceptive fibers. WGA-HRP injections into dorsal root ganglia C7 and L5 failed to produce significant labeling within vestibular and periphypoglossal nuclei, although they demonstrated classical projection sites within the brainstem and spinal cord. The consistent collateralisation pattern of rostral cervical afferents along their whole rostrocaudal course enables them to contact a variety of precerebellar, vestibulospinal, and preoculomotor neurons. These connections reflect the well-known significance of proprioceptive neck afferents for the control of posture, head position, and eye movements.  相似文献   

12.
The cells of origin of ascending and descending internuclear pathways in the trigeminal sensory nuclear complex were studied by the method of retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase in the cat. The cells of origin of the ascending internuclear pathways are distributed in all laminae of the caudal part of the spinal trigeminal nucleus (Vc) except for lamina II and the caudal regions of the pars interpolaris of the spinal trigeminal nucleus (Vi). The cells arising from the Vc project to all rostral trigeminal nuclei except the caudal Vi and dorsal part of the principal trigeminal nucleus (Vpd), and neurons of the caudal Vi project to the dorsomedial (Vo.dm) and rostrodorsomedial (Vo.r) divisions of the spinal trigeminal nucleus and the ventral part of the principal trigeminal nucleus (Vpv), although the main ascending fibers from the Vc arise from laminae III-V and project to the rostral Vi and pars oralis. By contrast, the cells of origin of the descending internuclear pathways are distributed in all trigeminal nuclei, with chain-like connections between the neighboring nuclei, while the caudal regions of the Vi and laminae I-II do not receive any descending projections. The main ascending fibers from the paratrigeminal nucleus (or interstitial nucleus) at the caudal level of the Vi project to the parabrachial nucleus. These findings indicate that the internuclear pathways are differentially organized between the ascending and descending projections, and suggest that the internuclear trigeminal connections have a smaller influence on the trigeminothalamic tract cells in the Vpd, caudal Vi, and lamina I.  相似文献   

13.
The connections of the cerebellar cortex with vestibular premotor neurons of the oculomotor and collimotor systems in the pigeon were delineated in experiments using WGA-HRP as an anterograde and retrograde tracer. Putative premotor neuron pools were identified by injections into the oculomotor (mIII) and trochlear nuclei (mIV) and into the most rostral portion of the cervical neck motor nucleus, nucleus supraspinalis (SSp). The retrograde data indicate that ipsilateral projections upon oculomotor neurons arise from the medial portions of the superior (VeS) and tangential (Ta) nuclei. Contralateral projections originate from the infracerebellar nucleus, the interstitial vestibular region including the main (lateral) portion of the tangential nucleus, and from the descending and medial vestibular nuclei (VeD, VeM). These projections were confirmed in anterograde studies that also defined the connections of these vestibular premotor regions with specific subnuclear divisions of the pigeon's "oculomotor" nuclei (mIII, mIV, mVI). The organization of projections from the vestibular nuclei to the pigeon's extraocular motoneurons is similar to that reported in mammals. Projections upon neck premotor neurons arise primarily from neurons in the interstitial region of the vestibular nuclear complex. After injections in SSp, retrogradely labeled neurons were found, contralaterally, in the lateral part of the tangential and superior vestibular nuclei and in the dorsolateral vestibular nucleus (VDL). Ipsilateral labeling was seen in the medial interstitial region (VeM, VeD, and medial Ta). These projections were confirmed in anterograde experiments. With the exception of VDL, vestibular nuclei projecting to neck motoneurons also project to extraocular motoneurons. Thus the infracerebellar nucleus projects exclusively, and the superior vestibular nucleus predominantly, upon oculomotor (mIII, mIV) nuclei; VDL projects predominantly upon the neck motor nucleus, whereas the interstitial vestibular regions (medial Ta, rostral VeD, intermediate VeM) project upon both collimotor and oculomotor neurons. The pattern of retrograde labeling seen in the cerebellar cortex after injections into vestibular premotor nuclei was used to define the projections of specific cerebellar cortical zones upon vestibular eye and neck premotor neurons. Corticovestibular projections upon these regions arise from the auricle and lateral unfoliated cortex, the posterior lobe components of cortical zones B and E, and from the vestibulocerebellum. Each of these cortical zones projects upon components of the vestibular nuclear complex, which are premotor to either oculomotor nuclei or collimotor nuclei. The hodological findings are related to the functional organization of the oculomotor and collimotor systems in the pigeon and compared with the mammalian data.  相似文献   

14.
The reticular nucleus of the thalamus (NRT) projects to virtually all thalamic nuclei ipsilaterally. In addition, recent studies suggest that NRT sends contralateral projections through an intrathalamic commissural fiber system to several thalamic nuclei, including the NRT itself. In the present study we used retrograde cell labeling, multi-unit anterograde labeling and immunohistochemical methods to study both ipsi- and contralateral NRT projection to the parafascicular nucleus (Pf) in the rat. Injections of the fluorescent tracers true blue or fluorogold in Pf led to massive retrograde cell labeling in rostral and dorsal portions of the ipsilateral NRT, whereas the same sectors of the contralateral NRT were devoid of labeling. Some retrogradely labeled cells were nevertheless present on the contralateral side in the borderline region between NRT and the zona incerta (ZI). Retrograde cell labeling experiments with cholera toxin B subunit (CTb) combined to immunohistochemistry for parvalbumin (PV) and calbindin D-28k (CB) indicated that the few retrogradely labeled cells encountered at the border between NRT and ZI displayed immunoreactivity for CB but not for PV. Since PV and CB label neurons belonging to NRT and ZI, respectively, it is concluded that these contralateral retrogradely labeled cells belong to ZI and not to NRT. Multi-unit cell anterograde labeling experiments with biocytin showed that NRT cells that project to Pf arborize extensively only on the ipsilateral side. The same approach, however, has revealed NRT cells projecting to both ipsi- and contralateral ventromedial thalamic nuclei. The axon of these NRT neurons arborizes more profusely ipsilaterally than contralaterally. These results reveal that the NRT projection to Pf in rodents is strictly unilateral. These findings are at variance with the emerging concept that NRT exerts a prominent bilateral influence upon most thalamic nuclei.  相似文献   

15.
Projection neurons in the rat dorsolateral septal nucleus (DLSN) were retrogradely labeled following intraseptal injection of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP). Injections of WGA-HRP centered in the medial septum (MS) and parts of the intermediate and ventrolateral subdivisions of the lateral septum retrogradely labeled only a few centrally scattered multipolar-shaped neurons. In contrast, injections placed in the nucleus of the diagonal band of Broca (DBB) consistently resulted in labeling of DLSN neurons of all sizes and shapes. Large injections in rostral DBB appeared to retrogradely label every DLSN neuron, while similar injections in caudal DBB only labeled neurons in restricted regions of the nucleus. A collection of small cells forming the ventricular border of caudal DLSN and a group of larger cells situated in the dorsolateral tip of rostral DLSN were consistently labeled following each DBB injection. The pattern of retrogradely labeled neurons in the DLSN appeared in a complementary fashion to that seen in the other lateral septal nuclei. Our findings support the conclusion that the DLSN is a morphologically heterogeneous nucleus consisting almost entirely of projection neurons. The pattern of retrograde labeling in the lateral septum suggests that these projection neurons may be topographically organized since distinct subpopulations of cells were labeled following different injections in the MS/DBB complex. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
The organization of the corticocuneate pathway was investigated in monkeys by using the anterograde and retrograde axonal transport of either horseradish peroxidase (HRP) or wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP). Injection of either tracer into the precentral cortex (centered on area 4) results in heavy anterograde labeling in the tegmental region, which lies immediately ventrolateral to the cuneate nucleus, particularly at levels caudal to the obex. On the other hand, injections of the same tracers involving areas 3b, 1, and 2 cause anterograde labeling mainly within the core (pars rotunda of Ferraro and Barrera, '35, Arch. Neurol. Psychol. 33:262-75) of the cuneate nucleus. Anterograde labeling is also evident in the rostral parts of the cuneate nucleus, especially after injections involving areas 1 and 2. Injections restricted largely to area 3b cause anterograde labeling preferentially in the core of the cuneate nucleus. After injection of HRP or WGA-HRP into the dorsal medulla, retrogradely labeled neurons are present both in the pre- and postcentral gyrus, but their location depends upon the sites and extent of the injection site. When the tracer diffuses into the underlying tegmental area, many retrogradely labeled neurons appear in the precentral motor cortex, principally in area 4 although some of them also occur in area 6. With smaller injections, largely restricted within the cuneate nucleus, most labeled neurons are present in the postcentral gyrus, with the largest population in areas 1 and 2; a smaller number of small neurons in area 3b are best demonstrated with WGA-HRP; and area 3a contains the smallest complement of retrogradely labeled neurons. The data from these studies suggest a segregation of pre- and postcentral afferents in the ventral tegmental region and the cuneate nucleus, respectively. These findings pertaining to the corticocuneate projection in the monkey are discussed in relation to the parallelism between monkeys and cats possible physiological implications of the anatomical organization described, and conflicting evidence in the neurophysiological observations obtained, by earlier investigators, by antidromic and orthodromic activation of this pathway.  相似文献   

17.
Projections from the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) to autonomic control regions of the ventrolateral medulla, particularly the nucleus reticularis rostroventrolateralis (RVL), which serves as a tonic vasomotor center, were analyzed in rat by anterograde, retrograde, and combined axonal transport techniques. Autonomic portions of the NTS, including its commissural, dorsal, intermediate, interstitial, ventral, and ventrolateral subnuclei directly project to RVL as well as to other regions of the ventrolateral medulla. The projections are organized topographically. Rostrally, a small cluster of neurons in the intermediate third of NTS, the subnucleus centralis, and neurons in proximity to the solitary tract selectively innervate neurons in the retrofacial nucleus and nucleus ambiguus. Neurons generally located in more caudal and lateral sites in the NTS innervate the caudal ventrolateral medulla (CVL). The RVL, CVL, and nucleus retroambiguus are interconnected. A combined retrograde and anterograde transport technique was developed so as to prove that projections from the NTS to the ventrolateral medulla specifically innervate the region of RVL containing neurons projecting to the thoracic spinal cord or the region of the nucleus containing vagal preganglionic neurons. When the retrograde tracer, fast blue, was injected into the thoracic spinal cord, and wheat germ agglutinin-conjugate horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was injected into the NTS, anterogradely labeled terminals from the NTS surrounded the retrogradely labeled neurons in the RVL and in the nucleus retroambiguus in the caudal medulla. Among the bulbospinal neurons in the RVL innervated by the NTS were adrenaline-synthesizing neurons of the C1 group. When fast blue was applied to the cervical vagus, and HRP was injected into the NTS, anterogradely labeled terminals from the NTS surrounded retrogradely labeled neurons in the rostral dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus, the region of the nucleus ambiguus, the retrofacial nucleus, and the dorsal portion of the RVL, a region previously shown to contain cardiac vagal preganglionic neurons. This combined anterograde and retrograde transport technique provides a useful method for tracing disynaptic connections in the brain. These data suggest that the RVL is part of a complex of visceral output regions in the ventrolateral medulla, all of which receive afferent projections from autonomic portions of the NTS. Bulbospinal neurons in the RVL, in particular the C1 adrenaline neurons, may provide a portion of the anatomic substrate of the baroreceptor and other visceral reflexes.  相似文献   

18.
The avian nucleus of the solitary tract has an extensive subnuclear organization. Several subnuclear cell groups can be distinguished on the basis of cytoarchitectonic criteria. In general, the subnuclei of the medial division of the nucleus of the solitary tract receive gastrointestinal afferents, whereas the subnuclei of the lateral division of the nucleus of the solitary tract receive cardiopulmonary afferents. Forebrain afferents to the nucleus of the solitary tract are segregated to medial and lateral subnuclei, which are located at the periphery of the nucleus. These peripheral subnuclei of the nucleus of the solitary tract are also the source of ascending axonal projections to the forebrain. In this study, the tyrosine hydroxylase (initial enzyme for catecholamine synthesis) content of the anteromedial hypothalamic projecting neurons of the nucleus of the solitary tract is determined by use of a combined retrograde fluorescent dye-immunofluorescence method. Fast Blue implanted into the anteromedial hypothalamus (in the region of the nucleus periventricularis magnocellularis) resulted in the retrograde labeling of neurons in the caudal two-thirds of the nucleus of the solitary tract. At levels rostral to the obex, dye-labeled cells were mostly observed in the dorsally located subnuclei medialis superficialis pars posterior and lateralis dorsalis pars posterior and in the ventrally located subnucleus medialis ventralis pars posterior. More centrally located subnuclei contained few labeled cells, if any. For example, subnucleus medialis intermedius pars posterior only had a few retrogradely labeled cells, whereas the centrally located subnucleus medialis dorsalis pars posterior was almost devoid of labeled cells. At levels caudal to the obex, many retrogradely labeled neurons of the nucleus of the solitary tract were observed. Neurons immunoreactively labeled for tyrosine hydroxylase were mostly found within subnuclei, which contain anteromedial hypothalamic projection neurons. In subnuclei medialis superficialis pars posterior and lateralis dorsalis pars posterior, 87% of the retrogradely dye-labeled cells were also immunoreactively labeled, whereas in the caudal nucleus of the solitary tract (at levels caudal to the obex), 68% of the retrogradely labeled cells were immunoreactively labeled. Not all tyrosine hydroxylase containing cells had projections to the implantation site in the anteromedial hypothalamus since only 40% of the immunoreactive cells in the caudal nucleus of the solitary tract and 59% of the immunoreactive cells in the subnucleus medialis superficialis pars posterior were retrogradely labeled with Fast Blue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The anterograde and retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase conjugated to wheat germ agglutinin (WGA-HRP) was used to study the anatomical organization of descending projections from the mamillary body (MB) to the mesencephalon and pons at light and electron microscopic levels. Injections of WGA-HRP into the medial mamillary nucleus resulted in dense anterograde and retrograde labeling in the ventral tegmental nucleus, while injections in the lateral mamillary nucleus resulted in dense anterograde labeling in the dorsal tegmental nucleus pars dorsalis and dense anterograde and retrograde labeling in the pars ventralis of the dorsal tegmental nucleus. Anterogradely labeled fibers in the mamillotegmental tract diverged from the principal mamillary tract in an extensive dorsocaudally oriented swath of axons which extended to the dorsal and ventral tegmental nuclei, and numerous axons turned sharply ventrally and rostrally to terminate topographically in the dorsomedial nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis and rostromedial pontine nuclei. The anterograde labeling in these two precerebellar relay nuclei was distributed near the midline such that projections from the lateral mamillary nucleus terminated mainly dorsomedial to the terminal fields of projections from the medial mamillary nucleus. In the dorsal and ventral tegmental nuclei, labeled axon terminals contained round synaptic vesicles and formed asymmetric synaptic junctions primarily with small diameter dendrites and to a lesser extent with neuronal somata. A few labeled terminals contained pleomorphic vesicles and formed symmetric synaptic junctions with dendrites and neuronal somata. Labeled axon terminals were also frequently found in synaptic contact with retrogradely labeled dendrites and neuronal somata in the dorsal and ventral tegmental nuclei. These findings indicate that neurons in the dorsal and ventral tegmental nuclei are reciprocally connected with MB projection neurons. In the nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis and medial pontine nuclei, labeled axon terminals contained round synaptic vesicles and formed asymmetric synaptic junctions primarily with small diameter dendrites. The present study demonstrates that projections from the medial and lateral nuclei of the MB are topographically organized in the mesencephalon and pons. The synaptic morphology of mamillotegmental projections suggests that they may have excitatory influences primarily on the distal dendrites of neurons in these brain regions.  相似文献   

20.
A nucleus that possibly relays both somatosensory and auditory information was identified in the well-known autonomic control region in the rostral part of the ventrolateral medulla (RVL) of the cat by four sets of experiments using the WGA-HRP (wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase conjugate) method. First, after injecting WGA-HRP into the dorsal column nuclei (DCN), anterograde and retrograde labeling was found bilaterally within and around a small cluster of medium-sized neurons in the RVL; more labeled neuronal cell bodies were seen in the cluster ipsilateral to the injection than in the contralateral cluster, whereas labeled axon terminals were distributed more densely on the contralateral side than on the ipsilateral side. The neuronal cluster in the RVL was located close to the ventrolateral surface of the medulla oblongata, constituting a short, slender column extending from a caudal level of the facial nucleus to the level of the rostral one-third of the inferior olive. This cluster of neurons was named the ventrolateral medullary nucleus (VLMN). In the second set of experiments, WGA-HRP was injected into the VLMN. Labeled neuronal cell bodies were seen in the reticular zone of the DCN bilaterally, with a slight dominance on the side contralateral to the injection, and further in the anteroventral division of the cochlear nuclei (CN) bilaterally, with a predominantly contralateral distribution. Labeled presumed axon terminals were seen bilaterally not only in the DCN and granular layer of the CN but also in the intercollicular region (IcR), lateral division of the posterior group of the thalamus (Pol), and medial geniculate nuclei (MG). Labeled terminals in the DCN were more numerous on the side ipsilateral to the injection than on the contralateral side, whereas those in other regions were distributed with a clear-cut contralateral dominance. In the third set of experiments, WGA-HRP injection into the CN resulted in anterograde and retrograde labeling in the VLMN. The labeling was bilateral, but more marked in the VLMN contralateral to the injection. In the fourth set of experiments, after WGA-HRP injection into the IcR, Pol, or MG, labeled neuronal cell bodies were located in the VLMN bilaterally with a dominant contralateral distribution. The results indicate that the VLMN possibly relays somatosensory and auditory information from the reticular zone of the DCN and anteroventral division of the CN to the IcR, Pol, and MG.  相似文献   

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