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1.
The branching pattern of inhibitory vestibuloocular neurons and their synaptic contacts with extraocular motoneurons were studied by means of spike-triggered averaging and local stimulation techniques. Individual vestibuloocular neurons activated by stimulation of the ampullary nerve of the anterior semicircular canal (ACN) inhibited motoneurons in both the ipsilateral (i-) trochlear nucleus and i-inferior rectus motoneuron pools. Individual vestibuloocular neurons receiving input from the ampullary nerve of the posterior semicircular canal (PCN) inhibited motoneurons in both the i-inferior oblique and i-superior rectus motoneuron pools. Probably, these axonal trajectories underlie conjugate eye movement during vertical head rotation. No conclusive evidence was found to indicate that single inhibitory vestibular neurons receiving input from the horizontal semicircular canal (HCN) give off axon collaterals to the i-abducens and the contralateral medial rectus motoneurons. A separate projection of HCN-related neurons to motoneurons supplying the lateral and medial rectus muscles might be useful for convergence during horizontal head movement.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Synaptic potentials were recorded in identified extraocular motoneurons in anesthetized cats, following stimulation of ampullary nerves of the anterior and posterior semicircular canals.Superior rectus motoneurons received disynaptic EPSPs and IPSPs following stimulation of the two ampullary nerves of the anterior and posterior semicircular canals, respectively. In the inferior rectus motoneurons, the effects of anterior and posterior semicircular canal stimulation were a mirror image of those on superior rectus motoneurons.Inferior oblique motoneurons developed disynaptic EPSPs and IPSPs following stimulation of the ampullary nerves of the contralateral anterior and ipsilateral posterior semicircular canals, respectively. In addition, some inferior oblique motoneurons displayed disynaptic IPSPs following stimulation of the contralateral ampullary nerve of the posterior semicircular canal. In the superior oblique (trochlear) motoneurons, disynaptic EPSPs and IPSPs were recorded after stimulation of the contralateral posterior and ipsilateral anterior semicircular canals, respectively.There was no significant connection between the ampullary nerves of the vertical semicircular canals and motoneurons innervating lateral and medial rectus muscles.Abbreviations i- Ipsilateral to the recorded motoneuron - c- Contralateral to the recorded motoneuron - ACN Ampullary nerve of the anterior semicircular canal - HCN Ampullary nerve of the horizontal semicircular canal - PCN Ampullary nerve of the posterior semicircular canal - IO Inferior oblique - IR Inferior rectus - LR Lateral rectus - MR Medial rectus - SO Superior oblique - SR Superior rectus - EPSP Excitatory postsynaptic potential - IPSP Inhibitory postsynaptic potential - PSP Postsynaptic potential - MLF Medial longitudinal fasciculus  相似文献   

3.
The peripheral and central oculomotor organization of the adult flatfish presents no morphological substrates that suffice to explain adaptive changes in its vestibuloocular reflex system. The necessity for an adaptation occurs because of a 90 degrees displacement of the vestibular with respect to the extraocular coordinate axes during metamorphosis. Since a reorganization of vestibuloocular pathways must be hypothesized (12), the location and termination of electrophysiologically identified secondary vestibular neurons with focus on the horizontal canal system was studied with the intracellular horseradish peroxidase method in adult winter flounders. Pseudopleuronectes americanus. The oculomotor target sites of vertical canal related neurons were similar to those described in mammals. Presumed excitatory anterior canal neurons bifurcated after the main axon had crossed the midline. The descending branch headed toward the spinal cord. The ascending branch reached the oculomotor nucleus via the contralateral medial longitudinal fasciculus and terminated in the superior rectus and inferior oblique subdivisions. Presumed inhibitory posterior canal neurons ascended ipsilaterally in the medial longitudinal fasciculus and terminated mainly in the superior rectus and inferior oblique subdivisions. Horizontal canal neurons exhibited characteristics distinctly different from mammalian ones. Two types of second-order neurons were observed. In the first case, cell bodies were located in the anterior portion of the vestibular nuclear complex. After crossing the midline, the axon ascended in the contralateral medial longitudinal fasciculus. Major termination sites were found in the inferior oblique and superior rectus subdivisions of the oculomotor nucleus. Axonal branches then recrossed the midline and terminated in identical locations on the ipsilateral side. In the second case, cell bodies were located in the descending vestibular nucleus. Their axons crossed the midline and also ascended in the contralateral medial longitudinal fasciculus. Major termination sites were in the trochlear nucleus and in the inferior rectus subdivision of the oculomotor nucleus. As in the first case, axonal branches also recrossed the midline and terminated in identical motoneuron pools on the ipsilateral side. The above target sites were exactly those expected to be used in a reciprocal excitatory-inhibitory fashion during compensatory eye movements. Head-down movement would be excitatory for the lower horizontal canal producing contractions of both superior recti and inferior obliques as well as relaxation of the antagonistic inferior recti and superior obliques.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Summary Unit activities of 148 secondary vestibular neurons related to the posterior semicircular canal were recorded extracellularly in anesthetized cats. Axonal projections of these neurons were examined by their antidromic responses to stimulation of the excitatory target motoneurons of the contralateral (c-) inferior rectus muscle (IR) and bilateral (bi-) motoneuron pools of longus capitis muscles, neck flexors, in the C1 segment (C1LC). The neurons were classified into 4 groups according to their axonal projections. The first group of neurons, termed vestibulo-oculo-collic (VOC) neurons, sent axon collaterals both to the c-IR motoneuron pool and to the c-C1LC motoneuron pool. The majority of them (72%) were located in the descending nucleus. The second group of neurons were termed vestibuloocular (VO) neurons and sent their axons to the c-IR motoneuron pool but not to the cervical cord. Most of them (86%) were located in the medial nucleus. The third group of neurons, termed vestibulo-collic (contralateral) (VCc) neurons, sent axons to the cC 1LC motoneuron pool via the contralateral ventral funiculus but not to the oculomotor nuclei. They were mostly (75%) found in the descending nucleus. The last group of neurons were vestibulo-collic (ipsilateral) (VCi) neurons, which gave off axons to the ipsilateral (i-) C1LC motoneuron pool via the ipsilateral ventral funiculus but not to the oculomotor nuclei. One of them also sent an axon collateral to the c-C1LC motoneuron pool. The majority of them (74%) were located in the ventral part of the lateral nucleus. It was also observed in some of the VOC and VCi neurons that they produced unitary EPSPs in the c-C1LC and i-C1LC motoneurons, respectively. Their synaptic sites were estimated to be on the cell somata and/or proximal dendrites of the motoneurons.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The morphology of vertical canal related second order vestibular neurons in the cat was studied with the intracellular horseradish peroxidase method. Neurons were identified by their monosynaptic potentials following electrical stimulation via bipolar electrodes implanted into individual semicircular canal ampullae. Anterior and posterior canal neurons projected primarily to contralateral or ipsilateral motoneuron pools (excitatory and inhibitory pathways, respectively). The axons of contralaterally projecting neurons crossed the midline at the level of the abducens nucleus and bifurcated into an ascending and a descending main branch which travelled in the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF). Two types of anterior canal neurons were observed, one with unilateral and one with bilateral oculomotor projection sites. For both neuron classes, the major termination sites were in the. contralateral superior rectus and inferior oblique subdivisions of the oculomotor nucleus. In neurons which terminated bilaterally, major collaterals recrossed the midline within the oculomotor nucleus to reach the ipsilateral superior rectus motoneuron pool. Other, less extensive, termination sites of both neuron classes were in the contralateral vestibular nuclear complex, the facial nucleus, the medullary and pontine reticular formation, midline areas within and neighboring the raphé nuclei, and the trochlear nucleus. The ascending main axons continued further rostrally to reach the interstitial nucleus of Cajal and areas around the fasciculus retroflexus. The descending branches proceeded further caudal in the medial vestibulo-spinal tract but were not followed to their spinal target areas. In addition to two previously described posterior canal related neuron types (Graf et al. 1983), we found neurons with bilateral oculomotor terminals and a spinal collateral. Typical for posterior canal neurons, the major termination sites were in the trochlear nucleus (superior oblique motoneurons) and in the inferior rectus subdivision of the oculomotor nucleus. Axon collaterals recrossed the midline to reach ipsilateral inferior rectus motoneurons. The axons of ipsilaterally projecting neurons ascended through the reticular formation to join the MLF caudal to the trochlear nucleus. The main target sites of anterior canal related neurons were in the trochlear nucleus and the inferior rectus subdivision of the oculomotor nucleus. Minor collaterals reached the pontine reticular formation and areas in between the fiber bundles of the ipsilateral MLF. In some cases, small collaterals crossed the midline within the oculomotor nucleus to terminate in the inferior rectus subdivision on the contralateral side. The axon proceeded further rostral to project to the interstitial nucleus of Cajal and beyond. The main termination sites of posterior canal neurons were in the superior rectus and inferior oblique subdivisions of the oculomotor nucleus. Minor collaterals were also observed to reach the midline area within the oculomotor nucleus, however, prospective contralateral termination sites could not be identified. More rostral projections were found in the interstitial nucleus of Cajal. The described axonal arborization of second order vestibular neurons reflects the organization of intrinsic coordinate systems as exemplified by the geometry of the semicircular canal and the extraocular muscle planes. These neurons are interpreted to provide a matrix for coordinate system transformation, i.e. from vestibular into oculomotor reference frames, and to play a role in gaze control and related reflexes by distributing their signals to multiple termination sites.Abbreviations DV descending vestibular nucleus - INC interstitial nucleus of Cajal - INT nucleus intercalatus - IQ inferior oblique subdivision - LV lateral vestibular nucleus - MLF medial longitudinal fasciculus - MRF medullary reticular formation - MV medial vestibular nucleus - nVII facial nerve - PH nucleus praepositus hypoglossi - PRF pontine reticular formation - RO nucleus Roller - SR superior rectus subdivision - SV superior vestibular nucleus - III oculomotor nucleus - IV trochlear nucleus - VI abducens nucleus - VII facial nucleus - XII hypoglossal nucleus Supported by NIH grants EY04613 and NS02619  相似文献   

6.
We compared the spatial organization patterns of linear and angular vestibuloocular reflexes in frogs by recording the multiunit spike activity from cranial nerve branches innervating the lateral rectus, the inferior rectus, or the inferior obliquus eye muscles. Responses were evoked by linear horizontal and/or vertical accelerations on a sled or by angular accelerations about an earth-vertical axis on a turntable. Before each sinusoidal oscillation test in darkness, the static head position was systematically altered to determine those directions of horizontal linear acceleration and those planes of angular head oscillation that were associated with minimal response amplitudes. Inhibitory response components during angular accelerations were clearly present, whereas inhibitory response components during linear accelerations were absent. Likewise was no contribution from the vertical otolith organs (i.e., lagena and saccule) observed during vertical linear acceleration. Horizontal linear acceleration evoked responses that originated from eye muscle-specific sectors on the contralateral utricular macula. The sectors of the inferior obliquus and lateral rectus muscles on the utricle had an opening angle of 45 and 60 degrees, respectively and overlapped to a large extent in the laterorostral part of the utricle. Both sectors were coplanar with the horizontal semicircular canals. The sector of the inferior rectus muscle was narrow (opening 5 degrees), laterocaudally oriented, and slightly pitched up by 6 degrees. Angular acceleration evoked maximal responses in the inferior obliquus muscle nerve that originated from the ipsilateral horizontal and the contralateral anterior vertical canals in a ratio of 50:50. Lateral rectus excitation originated from the contralateral horizontal and anterior vertical semicircular canals in a ratio of 80:20. The excitatory responses of the inferior rectus muscle nerve originated exclusively from the contralateral posterior vertical canal. Measured data and known semicircular canal plane vectors were used to calculate the spatial orientation of maximum sensitivity vectors for the investigated eye muscle nerves in semicircular canal coordinates. Comparison of the directions of maximal sensitivity vectors of responses evoked by linear or angular accelerations in a given eye muscle nerve showed that the two vector directions were oriented about orthogonally with respect to each other. With this arrangement the linear and the angular vestibuloocular reflex can support each other dynamically whenever they are co-activated without a change in the spatial response characteristics. The mutual adaptation of angular and linear vestibuloocular reflexes as well as the differences in their organization described here for frogs may represent a basic feature common for vertebrates in general.  相似文献   

7.
Summary In the anesthetized cat, the posterior canal nerve (PCN) was stimulated by electric pulses and synaptic responses were recorded intracellularly in the three antagonistic pairs of extraocular motoneurons. Pure reciprocal effects were obtained in the motoneurons innervating the antagonistic pair of ipsilateral oblique muscles and the antagonistic pair of contralateral vertical rectus muscles. These responses consisted of low threshold disynaptic excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in either the contralateral superior oblique (c-SO) (trochlear) or contralateral inferior rectus (c-IR) motoneurons and of disynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) in either the ipsilateral inferior oblique (i-IO) or ipsilateral superior rectus (i-SR) motoneurons. In addition, disynaptic IPSPs were also found in (i-SO) motoneurons. Mixtures of low threshold (dior trisynaptic) EPSPs and IPSPs were found in all other extraocular motoneurons except for the contralateral lateral rectus (c-LR) motoneurons. These results may afford a basis for the characteristic eye movements induced by vertical canal nerve stimulation.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Unit activites of secondary vestibular neurons that selectively responded to stimulation of the anterior semicircular canal nerve (ACN) were recorded extracellularly in the anesthetized cat. Axonal pathways and projections in the spinal cord of the ACN-activated neurons were examined by recording their antidromic responses to stimulation of the lateral and medial vestibulospinal tracts (LVST and MVST), and the bilateral neck extensor motoneuron pools in the C1segment (C1dorsal rami [DR] motoneuron pools). In order to determine whether the neurons had ascending axon collaterals to the extraocular motoneurons, the contralateral (c-) inferior oblique (IO) motoneuron pool was also stimulated. Twenty-seven neurons sent their axons to the ipsilateral (i-) C1DR motoneuron pool via the LVST without any projection to the extraocular motoneuron pool. All the cells except one were located in the ventral part of the lateral vestibular nucleus. This pathway produced monosynaptic EPSPs with short time-to-peak and short half-width in C1DR motoneurons (16/16 motoneurons). Eight neurons sent axons to the i-C1DR motoneuron pool via the MVST without any to the extraocular motoneuron pool. Cell somata were located in the descending nucleus or in the ventral part of the lateral nucleus. These neurons did not produce postsynaptic potentials (PSPs) in any C1DR motoneurons. All thirty-five neurons sending axons to the c-C1DR motoneuron pool have ascending axon collaterals to the c-IO motoneuron pool.  相似文献   

9.
The flatfish species constitute a natural paradigm for investigating adaptive changes in the vertebrate central nervous system. During metamorphosis all species of flatfish experience a 90 degree change in orientation between their vestibular and extraocular coordinate axes. As a result, the optic axes of both eyes maintain their orientation with respect to earth horizontal, but the horizontal semicircular canals become oriented vertically. Since the flatfish propels its body with the same swimming movements when referenced to the body as a normal fish, the horizontal canals are exposed to identical accelerations, but in the flatfish these accelerations occur in a vertical plane. The appropriate compensatory eye movements are simultaneous rotations of both eyes forward or backward (i.e., parallel), in contrast to the symmetric eye movements in upright fish (i.e., one eye moves forward, the other backward). Therefore, changes in the extraocular muscle arrangement and/or the neuronal connectivity are required. This study describes the peripheral and central oculomotor organization in the adult winter flounder, Pseudopleuronectes americanus. At the level of the peripheral oculomotor apparatus, the sizes of the horizontal extraocular muscles (lateral and medial rectus) were considerably smaller than those of the vertical eye muscles, as quantified by fiber counts and area measurements of cross sections of individual muscles. However, the spatial orientations and the kinematic characteristics of all six extraocular muscles were not different from those described in comparable lateral-eyed animals. There were no detectable asymmetries between the left and the right eye. Central oculomotor organization was investigated by extracellular horseradish peroxidase injections into individual eye muscles. Commonly described distributions of extraocular motor neurons in the oculomotor, trochlear, and abducens nuclei were found. These motor neuron pools consisted of two contralateral (superior rectus and superior oblique) and four ipsilateral populations (inferior oblique, inferior rectus, medial rectus, and lateral rectus). The labeled cells formed distinct motor neuron populations, which overlapped little. As expected, the numbers of labeled motoneurons differed in horizontal and vertical eye movers. The numerical difference was especially prominent in comparing the abducens nucleus with one of the vertical recti subdivisions. Nevertheless, there was bilateral symmetry between the motoneurons projecting to the left and right eyes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Second-order vestibular nucleus neurons which were antidromically activated from the region of the oculomotor nucleus (second-order vestibuloocular relay neurons) were studied in alert cats during whole-body rotations in many horizontal and vertical planes. Sinusoidal rotation elicited sinusoidal modulation of firing rates except during rotation in a clearly defined null plane. Response gain (spike/s/deg/s) varied as a cosine function of the orientation of the cat with respect to a horizontal rotation axis, and phases were near that of head velocity, suggesting linear summation of canal inputs. A maximum activation direction (MAD) was calculated for each cell to represent the axis of rotation in three-dimensional space for which the cell responded maximally. Second-order vestibuloocular neurons divided into 3 non-overlapping populations of MADs, indicating primary canal input from either anterior, posterior or horizontal semicircular canal (AC, PC, HC cells). 80/84 neurons received primary canal input from ipsilateral vertical canals. Of these, at least 6 received input from more than one vertical canal, suggested by MAD azimuths which were sufficiently misaligned with their primary canal. In addition, 21/80 received convergent input from a horizontal canal, with about equal number of type I and type II yaw responses. 4/84 neurons were HC cells; all of them received convergent input from at least one vertical canal. Activity of many vertical second-order vestibuloocular neurons was also related to vertical and/or horizontal eye position. All AC and PC cells that had vertical eye position sensitivity had upward and downward on-directions, respectively. A number of PC cells had MADs centered around the MAD of the superior oblique muscle, and 2/3 AC cells recorded in the superior vestibular nucleus had MADs near that of the inferior oblique. Thus, signals with spatial properties appropriate to activate oblique eye muscles are present at the second-order vestibular neuron level. In contrast, none of the second-order vestibuloocular neurons had MADs near those of the superior or inferior rectus muscles. Signals appropriate to activate these eye muscles might be produced by combining signals from ipsilateral and contralateral AC neurons (for superior rectus) or PC neurons (for inferior rectus). Alternatively, less direct pathways such as those involving third or higher order vestibular or interstitial nucleus of Cajal neurons might play a crucial role in the spatial transformations between semicircular canals and vertical rectus eye muscles.  相似文献   

11.
Sacculo-ocular reflex connectivity in cats   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The otolith system contributes to the vestibulo-ocular reflexes (VOR) when the head moves linearly in the horizontal plane or tilts relative to gravity. The saccules are thought to detect predominantly accelerations along the gravity vector. Otolith-induced vertical eye movements following vertical linear accelerations are attributed to the saccules. However, information on the neural circuits of the sacculo-ocular system is limited, and the effects of saccular inputs on extraocular motoneurons remain unclear. In the present study, synaptic responses to saccular-nerve stimulation were recorded intracellularly from identified motoneurons of all twelve extraocular muscles. Experiments were successfully performed in eleven cats. Individual motoneurons of the twelve extraocular muscles--the bilateral superior recti (SR), inferior recti (IR), superior obliques (SO), inferior obliques (IO), lateral recti (LR), and medial recti (MR) were identified antidromically following bipolar stimulation of their respective nerves. The saccular nerve was selectively stimulated by a pair of tungsten electrodes after removing the utricular nerve and the ampullary nerves of the semicircular canals. Stimulus intensities were determined from the stimulus-response curves of vestibular N1 field potentials in order to avoid current spread. Intracellular recordings were performed from 129 extraocular motoneurons. The majority of the neurons showed no response to saccular-nerve stimulation. In 17 (30%) of 56 extraocular motoneurons related to vertical eye movements (bilateral SR and IR), depolarizing and/or hyperpolarizing postsynaptic potentials (PSPs) were observed in response to saccular-nerve stimulation. The latencies of PSPs ranged from 2.3 to 8.9 ms, indicating that the extraocular motoneurons received neither monosynaptic nor disynaptic inputs from saccular afferents. The majority of the latencies of the depolarization, including depolarization-hyperpolarization, were in the range of 2.3-3.3 ms. Latencies of hyperpolarizations were typically longer than those of depolarizations. Only one contralateral SO motoneuron of 43 recorded oblique extraocular motoneurons (bilateral SO and IO) showed a depolarization-hyperpolarization in response to saccular-nerve stimulation at a latency of 2.5 ms. None of 30 recorded horizontal extraocular motoneurons (bilateral LR and MR) responded to stimulation of the saccular nerve. The neural linkage in the sacculo-ocular system is relatively weak in comparison to the utriculo-ocular and sacculo-collic systems, suggesting that the role of the sacculo-ocular system in stabilizing eye position may be reduced when compared with utriculo-ocular and semi-circular canal-ocular reflexes.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Somatic location, axonal trajectories and synaptic effects of inhibitory vestibulocollic neurons which were activated by selective stimulation of the anterior semicircular canal nerve (ACN) were studied in the anesthetized cat. ACN stimulation evoked disynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) in neck flexor motoneurons. This was seen in all the (64/64) tested motoneurons innervating the ipsilateral (i-) longus capitis (LC) and the i-sternocleidomastoideus (SCM) muscles and in 86% (38/44) of the motoneurons innervating the contralateral (c-) LC muscle. The inhibitory relay neurons, identified by orthodromic and antidromic responses to stimulation of the ACN and the i- and c-LC motoneuron pools, were classified as VCi (vestibulocollic neurons sending an axon to the i-LC motoneuron pool) and VCc (vestibulocollic neurons sending an axon to the c-LC motoneuron pool) neurons. Neither VCi nor VCc neurons were activated antidromically by localized stimulation of the ascending medial longitudinal fasciculus (asc. MLF) or the 3rd nuclei. They were located in the medial, descending and ventral lateral vestibular nuclei. It was also observed that VCi neurons produced unitary IPSPs in i-LC and i-SCM motoneurons in the C1 segment. Inhibitory synapses were estimated to be on the cell somata and/or the proximal dendrites of the motoneurons.  相似文献   

13.
We studied the ascending and descending axonal trajectories of excitatory vestibular neurons related to the anterior semicircular canal, by means of local stimulation and spike-triggered signal averaging techniques in anesthetized cats. More than 200 vestibular neurons related to the ampullary nerve of the anterior semicircular canal (ACN) were identified as vestibulo-ocular neurons by antidromic stimulation of the contralateral inferior oblique (IO) muscle motoneuron pool. In the descending, medial and ventral lateral nuclei, about 60% of these vestibulo-ocular neurons were also activated antidromically by upper cervical spinal cord stimulation (vestibulo-ocular-collic (cervical) = VOC). These VOC neurons produced unitary EPSPs in the majority of neck extensor motoneurons located at the C1 segment. None of the VOC neurons had axons descending as far as the thoracic level. Most of these VOC neurons were activated monosynaptically following stimulation of the ACN. The conduction velocity of the descending axons of VOC neurons was approximately 63 m/s, which was significantly faster than that of the ascending axons. The remaining 40% of the vestibulo-ocular neurons were not activated antidromically following spinal cord stimulation at intensities of 1 mA or more (vestibulo-ocular = VO). Most of the VO neurons were activated polysynaptically by ACN stimulation. The superior vestibular nucleus contained VO neurons that were activated mono- and polysynaptically following ACN stimulation.  相似文献   

14.
Summary In anesthetized albino rabbits, ampullary branches of the vestibular nerve were stimulated electrically. Prominent and stable reflex contraction was induced in extra-ocular muscles by applying single current pulses of relatively long duration, 3–5 msec. Survey with a glass microelectrode revealed that, during application of relatively wide pulses to a canal, primary vestibular fibers discharged impulses repetitively at a rate as high as 300–1400/sec and that after being transmitted across second-order vestibular neurons these impulses built up summated EPSPs in oculomotor neurons, large enough to trigger off motoneuronal discharges. From each semicircular canal, prominent reflex contraction was evoked selectively in two muscles; from the anterior canal in the ipsilateral superior rectus and contralateral inferior oblique; from the horizontal canal in the ipsilateral medial rectus and contralateral lateral rectus; and from the posterior canal in the ipsilateral superior oblique and contralateral inferior rectus. Acute lesion experiments indicated that signals for this excitation reached IIIrd and IVth nuclei via three different pathways; from the anterior canal through the ipsilateral brachium conjunctivum, from the horizontal canal through the ipsilateral fasciculus longitudinalis medialis and from the posterior canal through the contralateral fasciculus longitudinalis medialis.This work was supported by a grant from Educational Ministry of Japan (844021).  相似文献   

15.
In juvenile flatfish the vestibuloocular reflex (VOR) circuitry that underlies compensatory eye movements adapts to a 90 degrees relative displacement of vestibular and oculomotor reference frames during metamorphosis. VOR pathways are rearranged to allow horizontal canal-activated second-order vestibular neurons in adult flatfish to control extraocular motoneurons innervating vertical eye muscles. This study describes the anatomy and physiology of identified flatfish-specific excitatory and inhibitory vestibular pathways. In antidromically identified oculomotor and trochlear motoneurons, excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) were elicited after electrical stimulation of the horizontal canal nerve expected to provide excitatory input. Electrotonic depolarizations (0.8-0.9 ms) preceded small amplitude (<0.5 mV) chemical EPSPs at 1.2-1.6 ms with much larger EPSPs (>1 mV) recorded around 2.5 ms. Stimulation of the opposite horizontal canal nerve produced inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) at a disynaptic latency of 1.6-1.8 ms that were depolarizing at membrane resting potentials around -60 mV. Injection of chloride ions increased IPSP amplitude, and current-clamp analysis showed the IPSP equilibrium potential to be near the membrane resting potential. Repeated electrical stimulation of either the excitatory or inhibitory horizontal canal vestibular nerve greatly increased the amplitude of the respective synaptic responses. These observations suggest that the large terminal arborizations of each VOR neuron imposes an electrotonic load requiring multiple action potentials to maximize synaptic efficacy. GABA antibodies labeled axons in the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF) some of which were hypothesized to originate from horizontal canal-activated inhibitory vestibular neurons. GABAergic terminal arborizations were distributed largely on the somata and proximal dendrites of oculomotor and trochlear motoneurons. These findings suggest that the species-specific horizontal canal inhibitory pathway exhibits similar electrophysiological and synaptic transmitter profiles as the anterior and posterior canal inhibitory projections to oculomotor and trochlear motoneurons. Electron microscopy showed axosomatic and axodendritic synaptic endings containing spheroidal synaptic vesicles to establish chemical excitatory synaptic contacts characterized by asymmetrical pre/postsynaptic membrane specializations as well as gap junctional contacts consistent with electrotonic coupling. Another type of axosomatic synaptic ending contained pleiomorphic synaptic vesicles forming chemical, presumed inhibitory, synaptic contacts on motoneurons that never included gap junctions. Altogether these data provide electrophysiological, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural evidence for reciprocal excitatory/inhibitory organization of the novel vestibulooculomotor projections in adult flatfish. The appearance of unique second-order vestibular neurons linking the horizontal canal to vertical oculomotor neurons suggests that reciprocal excitation and inhibition are a fundamental, developmentally linked trait of compensatory eye movement circuits in vertebrates.  相似文献   

16.
In 35 monkeys attempts were made to produce localized unilateral lesions in individual vestibular nuclei in order to study vestibular projections to nuclei of the extraocular muscles. Portions of the medial, superior and inferior vestibular nuclei were destroyed selectively; lesions in Deiters' nucleus involved small portions of either the superior or inferior vestibular nuclei. Fiber degeneration was studied by the Nauta-Gygax technic. Exclusively ascending fibers from the superior vestibular nucleus project to ipsilateral extraocular nuclei. Ascending fibers from the inferior vestibular arise only from rostral portions of the nucleus, are not numerous and pass to all extraocular nuclei. The medial vestibular nucleus projects ascending fibers via the MLF bilaterally, asymmetrically and differentially to all extraocular nuclei. Prominent projections pass to: (a) the contralateral trochlear nucleus, and (b) the contralateral intermediate cell column and the ipsilateral ventral nucleus of the oculomotor complex. Ascending fibers from Deiters' nucleus, arising only from ventral portions of the nucleus, project primarily to: (a) the contralateral abducens and trochlear nuclei, and (b) specific asymmetrical portions of the oculomotor complex. Ascending vestibular fibers from the medial and lateral vestibular nuclei appear capable of mediating all patterned eye movements resulting from stimulation of ampullary nerves from individual semicircular canals. Vestibular projections to nuclei of the extraocular muscles are most abundant to those nuclei innervating muscles whose primary functions concern horizontal and rotatory eye movements.  相似文献   

17.
1. The preceding study in the alert cat has shown that many secondary vestibular axons that ascend in the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF) increase their firing rate in proportion to downward eye position. In the present study, projection and termination of these downward-position-vestibular (DPV) neurons within extraocular motoneuron pools were studied electrophysiologically by spike-triggered averaging techniques and morphologically be reconstructing their axonal trajectory after intra-axonal injection of horseradish peroxidase (HRP). 2. Extracellular field potentials recorded within the trochlear nucleus and/or the inferior rectus subdivision of the oculomotor nucleus were averaged by the use of spike potentials of single DPV neurons as triggers. All the crossed-DPV axons tested induced negative unitary field potentials in the trochlear nucleus (n = 9) and in the inferior rectus subdivision of the oculomotor nucleus (n = 5), suggesting that they made monosynaptic excitatory connection with motoneurons in these nuclei. The four crossed-DPV axons tested in the two motoneuron pools induced unitary field potentials in both. The majority of crossed-DPV axons terminated in these nuclei were directly activated from the caudal MLF, indicating that they had descending collaterals projecting to the spinal cord as well. The uncrossed-DPV axons did not induce such unitary field potentials either in the trochlear nucleus (n = 4) or in the inferior rectus subdivision (n = 3). 3. All the uncrossed-DPV axons examined (n = 14) induced positive unitary field potentials in the superior rectus subdivision of the oculomotor nucleus, suggesting that they made monosynaptic inhibitory connections with motoneurons innervating the superior rectus muscle. These uncrossed-DPV axons displayed regular firing patterns and were not activated from the caudal MLF. None of the crossed-DPV axons tested (n = 4) induced unitary field potentials in the superior rectus subdivision. 4. Five crossed-DPV axons were injected with HRP. All these axons ascended in the MLF contralateral to their soma, gave off many collaterals to the trochlear nucleus, and projected more rostrally. For three well-stained axons, numerous terminal branches were also found in the rostroventral part of the contralateral oculomotor nucleus, the area corresponding to the inferior rectus subdivision. Some collaterals in the oculomotor nucleus recrossed the midline to terminate in the medial part of the ipsilateral oculomotor nucleus. Other terminations were observed in the interstitial nucleus of Cajal and in the periaqueductal gray adjacent to the oculomotor nucleus. The crossed axons injected included both regular and irregular types, and three of the four examined were activated from the caudal MLF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Billig I  Balaban CD 《Neuroscience》2004,125(2):507-520
Much literature has studied the relationship between the organization of neurons in the flocculus/ventral paraflocculus and vestibulo-ocular reflex pathways. Although activation of a flocculus central zone produces ipsilateral horizontal eye movement, anatomical tracing evidence in rats suggests that there may not be a simple one-to-one correspondence between flocculus/ventral paraflocculus zones and control of single extraocular muscles or coplanar pairs of antagonistic extraocular muscles. This study used the retrograde transynaptic transport of pseudorabies virus to identify the topographical organization of Purkinje cells in the flocculus/ventral paraflocculus that control the lateral rectus (LR) and medial rectus (MR) muscles in rats. A survival time of 80 h and 84 h was necessary to observe consistent transynaptically labeled cells in the flocculus/ventral paraflocculus following injections of pseudorabies virus into the MR and LR, respectively. The organization of Purkinje cells in the dorsal flocculus and ventral paraflocculus abided by the traditional boundaries, whereas the labeling pattern in the ventral flocculus showed a more complex, interdigitated arrangement. In agreement with prior studies, transynaptically labeled neurons were also observed in specific vestibular nuclear regions within the medial and superior vestibular nuclei and dorsal Y group. The distribution of labeled neurons in ipsilateral and contralateral vestibular nuclei was associated with features of ipsilateral and contralateral retrograde labeling of Purkinje cells in flocculus/ventral paraflocculus. Importantly, this study provides the first evidence of vestibulo-cerebellar zones controlling individual extraocular muscles and also overlapping distribution of neurons in flocculo-vestibular zones that influence the LR and MR motoneuron pools. This suggests that some of these neurons may be responsible for controlling both muscles.  相似文献   

19.
The retrograde tracer wheat germ agglutinin-conjugated horseradish peroxidase was used to establish the organization of the extraocular muscle motoneuron pools in a prosimian, Galago senegalensis, for comparison with the organization in monkeys and non-primates. Medial rectus motoneurons were distributed in three subgroups in the ipsilateral oculomotor nucleus, a pattern similar to that of the monkey. Furthermore, the other component of the near response system, the preganglionic parasympathetic motoneurons, were confined within the Edinger-Westphal nucleus, as in the monkey. In contrast, the distribution of the levator palpebrae and superior rectus motoneurons was similar to that of the cat. Specifically, the majority of levator palpebrae motoneurons were located contralaterally, in the caudal central subdivision of the oculomotor nucleus, and the superior rectus motoneurons had a dorsocaudal location in the contralateral oculomotor nucleus. The distributions of motoneurons supplying the superior oblique and lateral rectus muscles were similar to those of other mammals. Unlike previously studied species, the galago was found to have two accessory muscles, that lie beneath the medial and lateral rectus muscles. Motoneurons supplying the accessory rectus muscles were found ventrolateral to the main abducens nucleus, in a position similar to that occupied by the cat accessory abducens nucleus; although others may be present in the main nuclei. Taken together, these results suggest that the organization of extraocular and preganglionic motoneurons in the galago exhibits both monkey and non-primate features. These observations are consistent with the notion that the galago is a primate species whose oculomotor organization is more similar to the general mammalian scheme. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
K Ezure  W Graf 《Neuroscience》1984,12(1):95-109
The neuronal connectivity underlying the vestibulo-ocular reflexes in cat and rabbit was evaluated in the light of quantitative data of the spatial orientation on semicircular canals and extraocular muscles. Neuronal connectivity was calculated using a matrix-analysis of the sensory and motor periphery, and of the brain stem pathways connecting semicircular canals and extraocular muscles. Two cases of vestibulo-ocular reflex compensation were considered. In the first case, vestibulo-oculor reflex compensation was assumed to be isotropic, i.e. the vestibulo-ocular reflex gain is the same for all directions of rotation. In the second case, the vestibulo-oculor reflex gain was assumed to be anisotropic with the "torsional" gain smaller than the "horizontal" and "vertical" gains. The theoretical calculation predicts that besides the principal vestibulo-ocular reflex pathways (classical three-neuron-arc connectivity), several accessory connections (other than principal connections, regardless of the synapses involved) exist which are characteristic for each species. These accessory connections were compared to physiological and anatomical data. In the cat theoretical connections for an isotropic vestibulo-ocular reflex gain agree with pathways observed experimentally, of which the most characteristic are excitatory connections to the superior rectus and inhibitory connections to the inferior rectus muscle from both of the anterior canals, and a mirror image pattern of connections from the posterior canals. In the rabbit experimentally obtained data and calculated connections rarely agree. However, for an anisotropic gain we find a higher rate of coincidence between experimental and theoretical connections. Our evaluation indicates, that accessory vestibulo-ocular reflex pathways serve to compensate for the incongruence between semicircular canal and extraocular muscle planes, at least in the cat. Available experimental data suggest an important role of a special subclass of accessory pathways via axon collaterals of principal projections (three-neuron-arc nature). With certain restrictions, the presented method of calculation promises to be a useful tool for a quantitative analysis of the vestibulo-ocular reflex.  相似文献   

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