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1.
Corticotropin releasing factor (CRF)-containing afferents to the rat lateral septum (LS) have been determined by means of cobalt-enhanced immunohistochemistry, tracing of retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP), and by lesioning experiments. When unilateral lesions included the rostral part of the hypothalamus, CRF-like immunoreactive (CRFI) ipsilateral fibers in the LS decreased in number. Lesions in other brain regions did not cause alterations in the septal CRFI fibers. These findings suggest that the septal CRFI fibers originate in the rostral part of the hypothalamus. Furthermore, combined HRP and immunohistochemical staining on the same sections demonstrated double-labeled cells in two discrete areas within the rostral hypothalamus: one was the perifornical hypothalamic area (PeF) at the level of the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus, and the other was the most caudal part of the anterior hypothalamic nucleus (AHc). These findings show that a large proportion of the CRFI projections to the LS have their origins in the PeF and AHc.  相似文献   

2.
The nucleus isthmi is reciprocally connected to the ipsilateral optic tectum. Ablation of the nucleus isthmi compromises visually guided behavior that is mediated by the tectum. In this paper, horseradish peroxidase (HRP) histochemistry and electron microscopy were used to explore the synaptic interrelationships between the optic tectum and the ipsilateral nucleus isthmi. After localized injections of HRP into the optic tectum, there are retrogradely labeled isthmotectal neurons and orthogradely labeled fibers and terminals in the ipsilateral nucleus isthmi. These terminals contain round. Clear vesicles of medium diameter (40–52 nm). These terminals make synaptic contact with dendrites of nucleus isthmi cells. Almost half of these postsynaptic dendrites are retrogradely labeled, indicating that there are monosynaptic tectoisthmotectal connections. Localized HRP injection into the nucleus isthmi labels terminals primarily in tectal layers B, E, F, and 8. The terminals contain medium-sized clear vesicles and they form synaptic contacts with tectal dendrites. There are no instances of labeled isthmotectal terminals contacting labeled dendrites. Retrogradely labeled tectoisthmal neurons are contacted by unlabeled terminals containing medium-sized and small clear vesicles. Fifty-four percent of the labeled fibers connecting the nucleus isthmi and ipsilateral tectum are myelinated fibers (average diameter approximately 0.6 μm). The remainder are unmyelinated fibers (average diameter approximately 0.4 μm). © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
Neural tracing studies have revealed that the rat medial and lateral septum are targeted by ascending projections from the nucleus incertus, a population of tegmental GABA neurons. These neurons express the relaxin-family peptide, relaxin-3, and pharmacological modulation of relaxin-3 receptors in medial septum alters hippocampal theta rhythm and spatial memory. In an effort to better understand the basis of these interactions, we have characterized the distribution of relaxin-3 fibers/terminals in relation to different septal neuron populations identified using established protein markers. Dense relaxin-3 fiber plexuses were observed in regions of medial septum containing hippocampal-projecting choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)-, neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS)-, and parvalbumin (PV)-positive neurons. In lateral septum (LS), relaxin-3 fibers were concentrated in the ventrolateral nucleus of rostral LS and the ventral nucleus of caudal LS, with sparse labeling in the dorsolateral and medial nuclei of rostral LS, dorsal nucleus of caudal LS, and ventral portion nuclei. Relaxin-3 fibers were also observed in the septofimbrial and triangular septal nuclei. In the medial septum, we observed relaxin-3-immunoreactive contacts with ChAT-, PV-, and glutamate decarboxylase-67-positive neurons that projected to hippocampus, and contacts between relaxin-3 terminals and calbindin- and calretinin-positive neurons. Relaxin-3 colocalized with synaptophysin in nerve terminals in all septal areas, and ultrastructural analysis revealed these terminals were symmetrical and contacted spines, somata, dendritic shafts, and occasionally other axonal terminals. These data predict that this GABA/peptidergic projection modulates septohippocampal activity and hippocampal theta rhythm related to exploratory navigation, defensive and ingestive behaviors, and responses to neurogenic stressors.  相似文献   

4.
This study deals with two characteristic cell types in the rat septal complex i.e., cholinergic and GABAergic neurons, and their synaptic connections. Cholinergic elements were labeled with a monoclonal antibody against choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), the acetylcholine synthesizing enzyme. Antiserum against glutamate decarboxylase (GAD), the GABA synthesizing enzyme, was employed to identify GABAergic perikarya and terminals, by using either the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) technique or a biotinylated second antiserum and avidinated gold or ferritin. With these contrasting immunolabels we have studied the cholinergic-GABAergic interconnections in double-labeled sections of intact septal regions and the GABAergic innervation of medial septal area cholinergic neurons in sections taken from animals 1 week following lateral septal area lesion. In other electron microscopic experiments we have studied cholinergic and GABAergic neurons in the septal complex for synaptic contacts with hippocamposeptal fibers, which were identified by anterograde degeneration following fimbria-fornix transection. Our results are summarized as follows: (1) GAD-positive terminals form synaptic contacts on ChAT-immunoreactive dendrites in the medial septum/diagonal band complex (MSDB), (2) surgical lesion of the lateral septal area resulted in a dramatic decrease of the number of GABAergic boutons on MSDB cholinergic neurons, (3) cholinergic terminals establish synaptic contacts with GAD immunoreactive cell bodies and proximal dendrites in the MSDB as well as in the lateral septum (LS), (4) degenerated terminals of hippocampo-septal fibers were mainly observed in the LS, where they formed asymmetric synaptic contacts on dendrites of GABAergic neurons and on nonimmunoreactive spines. We did not observe degenerated boutons in contact with ChAT-positive dendrites or cell bodies in the MSDB. From these results and from data in the literature we conclude that excitatory hippocampo-septal fibers activate GABAergic cells, and as yet unidentified spiny neurons in the LS, which may control the discharge of medial septal cholinergic neurons known to project back to the hippocampal formation.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of an acute injection of morphine on the activities of mesotelencephalic, tuberoinfundibular and incertohypothalamic dopamine (DA) neurons was estimated by measuring: the rate of turnover of DA (decline after alpha-methyltyrosine); and the concentration of the DA metabolite, dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC), in brain regions containing cell bodies or terminals of these neurons (i.e. nucleus accumbens, striatum, median eminence and various hypothalamic nuclei). The rate of turnover of DA and the concentration of DOPAC were increased in nucleus accumbens and striatum and decreased in the median eminence 60 min after the administration of morphine (10 mg/kg, s.c.). Morphine increased the rate of turnover of DA and the concentration of DOPAC in brain regions containing both cell bodies (periventricular nucleus and medial zona incerta) and terminals (medial preoptic, preopticosuprachiasmatic and dorsomedial nuclei) of incertohypothalamic DA neurons. The effects of morphine in all brain regions were blocked by pretreatment with naltrexone. These results indicate that incertohypothalamic DA neurons are stimulated by the acute administration of morphine, and in this respect they resemble the extrahypothalamic mesotelencephalic DA neurons rather than hypothalamic tuberoinfundibular DA neurons.  相似文献   

6.
A monoclonal antibody against choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), the acetylcholine synthesizing enzyme, was used to determine the morphological characteristics of cholinergic neurons and axon terminals within the rat septum. Light microscopy revealed numerous large fusiform or multipolar ChAT-immunoreactive neurons in the medial septal nucleus/diagonal band complex (MSDB). In contrast, virtually no immunostained cells were found in the lateral septum (Nc. septalis dorsalis and Nc. septalis lateralis). Fine immunostained fibers were most abundant close to the midline in the MSDB mainly following an ascending course. A few thin ChAT-immunoreactive fibers and terminallike pericellular punctate structures were observed in the inner part of the dorsal septal nucleus. Electron microscopy of ChAT-immunoreactive neurons revealed large cell bodies rich in cytoplasmic organelles. The cell nuclei regularly exhibited multiple invaginations of the nuclear membrane. Only rarely were terminals found that established synaptic contacts on the cell bodies of immunostained neurons. In contrast, numerous terminals formed synaptic contacts on immunoreactive dendrites. ChAT-immunopositive terminals were studied in thin sections from the MSDB and from the dorsal septal nucleus. In both regions they appeared as heavily immunostained vesicle-filled boutons that established symmetric and asymmetric synaptic contacts. In the dorsal septal nucleus immunostained terminals often showed a basketlike arrangement around immunonegative cell bodies. Our fine structural study provides evidence that cholinergic neurons in the MSDB are similar to cholinergic neurons in the basal nucleus and neostriatum, which have been described by other investigators. The presence of cholinergic synapses in the septal complex indicates that this region not only contains cholinergic projection neurons, but receives a cholinergic input itself.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Using a modified cobalt-glucose oxidase-diaminobenzidine (Co-GOD) method in a combination of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) retrograde tracing and immunohistochemistry, a widespread localization of corticotropin releasing factor-like immunoreactive (CRFI) structures in the rat inferior colliculus (IC), and a CRFI-containing pathway from the subthalamus and the hypothalamus to the IC have been observed. By means of the modified Co-GOD method, CRFI cells were detected in almost all the subdivisions of the IC, including the dorsomedial part of the central nucleus, the ventrolateral part of the central nucleus, the pericentral nucleus and the external nucleus. Neural processes with CRFI were observed in all of the above areas. Following HRP injection into the IC, double-labeled cells which contained a homogeneous brown immunoreaction product of CRF and a granular black reaction product of retrogradely transported HRP were identified in the lateral hypothalamic area (LH), zona incerta (ZI) and perifornical hypothalamic area (PeF). These double-labeled cells provide direct evidence for CRFI projections from the LH, ZI and PeF to the IC. Thus, the present study supports the view that CRF may act as a neurotransmitter or neuromodulator in the brain.  相似文献   

9.
Injections of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) or wheat-germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) into the nucleus reticularis parvocellularis (RPc) produced anterograde labeling of axon terminals within the hypoglossal nucleus. Based on morphological parameters of vesicle population, membrane specializations, and postsynaptic articulations, two types of axon terminals derived from neurons in RPc end on hypoglossal neurons. More than half of the terminals contained spherical vesicles (S-type), established asymmetrical membrane specializations and contacted proximal and medium-sized dendrites. The remaining labeled terminals had flattened vesicles (F-type), symmetrical membrane densities and apposed medium and small dendrites. The morphological differences expressed in the two types of terminals may reflect physiological and/or pharmacological differences in the action of RPc neurons on motoneurons in the hypoglossal nucleus.  相似文献   

10.
Dopamine (DA) afferents to the prefrontal cortex (PFC) play an important role in the cognitive functions subserved by this cortical area. Within the PFC, DA terminals synapse onto the distal dendrites of both local circuit neurons and pyramidal projection cells. We have previously demonstrated in the rat PFC that some of the dendrites and spines postsynaptic to DA terminals arise from pyramidal neurons that project to the nucleus accumbens. However, it is not known whether the pyramidal cells that give rise to callosal intercortical connections of the PFC also receive DA synaptic input. To address this question, retrograde tract tracing using an attenuated strain of pseudorabies virus (PRV-Bartha) was combined with immunocytochemistry for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) to identify DA terminals in the PFC. Thirty-six to 40 hours following injection of PRV into the contralateral PFC, numerous callosal projection neurons were extensively labeled throughout their dendritic trees, with no evidence of PRV trans-synaptic passage. In tissue prepared for electron microscopy, labeling for PRV was distributed throughout pyramidal cell somata and extended into distal dendrites and dendritic spines. Some PRV-labeled dendrites and spines received symmetric synaptic input from terminals containing peroxidase labeling for TH. These results demonstrate that DA terminals synapse onto the distal dendrites of callosally projecting PFC neurons and suggest substrates through which DA may modulate interhemispheric cortical communication.  相似文献   

11.
The perigeniculate nucleus of carnivores is thought to be a part of the thalamic reticular nucleus related to visual centers of the thalamus. Physiological studies show that perigeniculate neurons, which are primarily GABAergic, provide feedback inhibition onto neurons in the lateral geniculate nucleus. However, little is known about the anatomical organization of this feedback pathway. To address this, we used two complementary tracing methods to label perigeniculate axons for electron microscopic study in the geniculate A-laminae: intracellular injection of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) to fill an individual perigeniculate cell and its axon; and anterograde transport of Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin to label a population of perigeniculate axons. Labeled perigeniculate terminals display features of F1 terminals in the geniculate neuropil: they are small, contain dark mitochondria, and form symmetric synaptic contacts. We found that most of the perigeniculate terminals (greater than 90%) contact geniculate cell dendrites in regions that also receive a rich innervation from terminals deriving from visual cortex (e.g., "cortico-recipient" dendrites). The remainder of the perigeniculate synapses (10%) contacted dendrites in regions that also received direct retinal input (e.g., "retino-recipient" dendrites). Serial reconstruction of segments of dendrites postsynaptic to perigeniculate terminals suggests that these terminals contact both classes of relay cell in the A-laminae (X and Y), although our preliminary conclusion is that an individual perigeniculate cell contacts only one class. Finally, our quantitative comparison between labeled perigeniculate terminals and unlabeled F1 terminals indicates that these perigeniculate terminals form a distinct subset of F1 terminals. We quantitatively compared the labeled perigeniculate terminals to unlabeled F1 terminals. Although the parameters of the perigeniculate terminals fell entirely within the range of those for the unlabeled F1 terminals, as populations, we found consistent differences between these two groups. We thus conclude that, as populations, other sources of F1 terminals are morphologically distinct from perigeniculate terminals and innervate different targets.  相似文献   

12.
Axonal projections from hypothalamic nuclei to the basal forebrain, and their relation to cholinergic projection neurons in particular, were studied in the rat by using the anterograde tracer Phaseolus vulgaris-leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) in combination with choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) immunocytochemistry. Discrete iontophoretic PHA-L injections were delivered to different portions of the caudal lateral hypothalamus, as well as to various medial hypothalamic areas, including the ventromedial, dorsomedial, and paraventricular nuclei, and anterior hypothalamic and medial preoptic areas. The simultaneous detection of PHA-L-labeled fibers/terminals and ChAT-positive neurons was performed by using nickel-enhanced diaminobenzidine (DAB) and nonenhanced DAB as chromogens. Selected cases were investigated at the electron microscopic level. Ascending hypothalamic projections maintained an orderly lateromedial arrangement within the different components of the medial forebrain bundle, as well as with respect to their terminal projection fields (e.g., within the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis and lateral septal nucleus). The distribution pattern of hypothalamic inputs to cholinergic projection neurons corresponded to the topography of ascending hypothalamic axons. Axons originating from neurons in the far-lateral hypothalamus reached cholinergic neurons in a zone that extended from the dorsal part of the sublenticular substantia innominata (SI) caudolaterally, to the lateral portion of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis rostromedially, encompassing a narrow band along the ventral part of the globus pallidus and medial portion of the internal capsule. Axons originating from cells in the medial portion of the lateral hypothalamus reached cholinergic cells primarily in more medial and ventral parts of the SI, and in the magnocellular preoptic nucleus and horizontal limb of the diagonal band nucleus (HDB). Axons from medial hypothalamic cells appeared to contact cholinergic neurons primarily in the medial part of the HDB, and in the medial septum/vertical limb of the diagonal band complex. Electron microscopic double-labeling experiments confirmed contacts between labeled terminals and cholinergic cells in the HDB and SI. Individual hypothalamic axons established synapses with both cholinergic and noncholinergic neuronal elements in the same regions. These findings have important implications for our understanding of the organization of afferents to the basal forebrain cholinergic projection system.  相似文献   

13.
Direct cortical projections to the parabrachial nucleus in the cat   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Direct projections from the cerebral cortex to the parabrachial nucleus in the cat were examined by the horseradish peroxidase (HRP)method. When HRP was injected into the parabrachial nucleus, retrogradely labeled neuronal cell bodies were seen, bilaterally with an ipsilateral predominance, mainly in the orbital gyrus, the lateral bank of the presylvian sulcus, and a restricted region in the infralimbic cortex on the medial surface of the frontal lobe (stereotaxic coordinates; Fr: 22, L: 1, H: -1); all labeled neurons were in deep pyramidal cell layer. After injecting HRP conjugated to wheat germ agglutinin (WGA-HRP) into the cortical regions where retrogradely labeled neurons were found after injecting HRP into the parabrachial nucleus, anterogradely labeled cortical fibers were traced to the parabrachial nucleus. Corticoparabrachial fibers originating from the orbital gyrus and the lateral bank of the presylvian sulcus ran ipsilaterally through the internal capsule and the cerebral peduncle down to the lower brainstem, whereas those from the infralimbic cortex coursed down ipsilaterally through the medial forebrain bundle. These cortical fibers to the parabrachial nucleus were distributed bilaterally with an ipsilateral predominance. Cortical fiber terminals in the parabrachial nucleus were topographically arranged: Corticoparabrachial fibers from the lateral bank of the presylvian sulcus ended most massively in the dorsal part of the lateral parabrachial nucleus. Corticoparabrachial fibers from the orbital gyrus ended most heavily in the medial parabrachial nucleus and less heavily in the lateral parabrachial nucleus. Corticoparabrachial fibers from the infralimbic cortex ended mostly in the parabrachial regions surrounding the brachium conjunctivum.  相似文献   

14.
Electron microscopic study of the rubrocerebellar projection in the cat   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Rubral neurons sending axons to the cerebellar anterior interpositus nucleus (AIN) in the cat were identified light microscopically by labeling them with horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The synaptic organization of these rubral neurons and of their afferents from the cerebral motor cortex and the AIN was also analyzed electron microscopically by combined anterograde degeneration and retrograde HRP-labeling techniques. In the light microscopic study, either HRP or a mixture of HRP and kainic acid was injected into the AIN. Both of the injections resulted in retrograde labeling of rubrocerebellar projection neurons in the red nucleus on the contralateral side. The labeled neurons were distributed throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the red nucleus: some lay in clusters. Most labeled neurons were small to medium-sized, although some were large. The injection of HRP into the AIN also resulted in anterograde labeling of cerebellorubral projection fibers terminating in a wider area of the red nucleus on the contralateral side of the injection, whereas the injection of a mixture of HRP and kainic acid showed no anterograde labeling of fibers or terminals. In one set of electron microscopic observations, HRP injections into the AIN were combined with ablation of the motor cortex. Degenerating axon terminals were occasionally found to synapse with both dendrites and neuronal somata labeled with HRP retrogradely. In another set of electron microscopic observations, a mixture of HRP and kainic acid was injected into the AIN in order to label rubrocerebellar projection neurons retrogradely and to bring about degeneration in the cerebellorubral projection fibers anterogradely. Abundant degenerating axon terminals were observed to make axosomatic synaptic contacts with rubral neurons labeled with HRP retrogradely and also with unlabeled rubral neurons. These results indicate that cerebrorubrocerebellar and rubrocerebellorubral monosynaptic circuitries exist which constitute one of the cerebrocerebellar linkages, as well as those linkages via the inferior olivary complex and the pontine nuclei.  相似文献   

15.
Primary afferent input to the cat sacral parasympathetic nucleus (SPN) has been examined by injury filling sacral dorsal roots, ventral roots, or both with horseradish peroxidase (HRP). Appropriate spinal segments were processed for the demonstration of HRP with diaminobenzidine and prepared for sequential light (LM) and electron (EM) microscopy. At the LM level, a large fascicle of primary afferent fibers was observed passing ventrally along the lateral edge of the dorsal horn into the region of the SPN. Varicosities were seen throughout the course of the axons but were particularly abundant within the SPN. Injury filling of the ventral roots with HRP resulted in a Golgi-like labelling of preganglionic neurons and their dendritic arbors, as well as ventral root afferent fibers. Swellings on both dorsal and ventral root afferent axons were observed in close apposition to labelled preganglionic neurons and their dendrites. At the ultrastructural level, afferent terminals were found to contain clear spherical vesicles; 66% of these terminals also contained at least one dense-cored vesicle. Of particular interest was the presence of labelled dorsal and ventral root afferent terminals synapsing on labelled preganglionic neurons. Preganglionic neurons were also postsynaptic to unlabelled terminals containing clear spherical (79.7%) or pleomorphic vesicles (20.3%). These data indicate that preganglionic neurons receive direct input from several sources, and provide the first demonstration of direct input to these cells from sensory fibers in the dorsal and ventral roots. The connections described in the present study provide interesting and, as yet, unexplored possibilities for sensory and autonomic reflex integration.  相似文献   

16.
A recent physiological report suggested that neurotensin could inhibit the vasopressin releasing from vasopressin-producing neurons in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus but not in the supraoptic nucleus. In the present study, the synaptic relationship between the neurotensin-like immunoreactive and vasopressin-like immunoreactive neurons has been examined using a pre-embedding double immunostaining technique in the rat hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus. At the light microscopic level, many neurotensin-like immunoreactive fibers were found near the vasopressin-like immunoreactive neurons. At the electron microscopic level, the neurotensin-like immunoreactive fibers were identified as axon terminals that made many synapses on the vasopressin-like immunoreactive perikarya and dendrites. The synapses were both asymmetrical and symmetrical. These findings of the present study suggest that the inhibitory effect of neurotensin on the vasopressin neurons in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus may be due to the direct synapses made by neurotensin-like immunoreactive axon terminals on the vasopressin-like immunoreactive neurons.  相似文献   

17.
A reciprocal connection is known to exist between the cuneate nucleus, which is a first-order somatosensory nucleus, and the cochlear nucleus, which is a first-order auditory nucleus. We continued this line of study by investigating the fiber endings of this projection in the cochlear nucleus of rats using the neuronal tracer Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin in combination with ultrastructural and immunocytochemical analyses. In the cochlear nucleus, mossy fiber terminals had been described and named for their morphologic similarity to those in the cerebellum, but their origins had not been discovered. In the present study, we determined that the axonal projections from the cuneate region gave rise to mossy fiber terminals in the granule cell regions of the ipsilateral cochlear nucleus. The cuneate mossy fibers appear to be excitatory in nature, because they are filled with round synaptic vesicles, they make asymmetric synapses with postsynaptic targets, and they are labeled with an antibody to glutamate. The postsynaptic targets of the mossy fibers include dendrites of granule cells. This projection onto the granule cell interneuron circuit of the cochlear nucleus indicates that somatosensory cues are intimately involved with information processing at this early stage of the auditory system. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
A retrograde tracer, WGA-apo-HRP-gold (WG), was injected into each subdivision of the dorsal raphe (DR) nucleus, and subsequent orexin-A immunostaining was performed for the tuberal region of the hypothalamus in order to investigate orexin projections to the DR. Similar to previous studies, the majority of orexin-single-labeled neurons were observed at the dorsal half of the lateral hypothalamus (LH), the circle around the fornix, i.e., perifornical nucleus (PeF), and the area dorsal to the fornix. The present study reports that hypothalamic neurons exhibited differential projections to each subdivision of the DR. Following WG injections into rostral DR, WG-single-labeled cells were observed at the dorsal half of the LH as well as dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus. The major input to the intermediate DR originates from the ventromedial portion of the LH, PeF, and the area dorsal to the PeF, whereas one to lateral wing DR derived from PeF as well as the ventrolateral portion of the LH. Following WG injections into caudal DR, WG-single-labeled cells were located at ventromedial LH and the ventrolateral portion of the posterior hypothalamus. Following WG injections into each DR subdivision, WG/orexin-double-labeled neurons were observed at LH, PeF, and the area dorsal to the PeF. Only a few double-labeled cells were observed in dorsomedial and posterior hypothalamic nuclei. Our observations suggest that various hypothalamic neurons differentially project to each subdivision of the DR, a portion of which is orexin-immunoreactive. These orexin-immunoreactive DR-projecting hypothalamic neurons might have wake-related influences over a variety of brain functions subject to DR efferent regulation, including affective behavior, autonomic control, nociception, cognition, and sensorimotor integration.  相似文献   

19.
The origins of the brain stem and temporal cortical projections to the septal region in the squirrel monkey were investigated with the horseradish peroxidase (HRP) retrograde axonal transport technique. After HRP injections placed into the septal region, labeled cells were observed in brain stem sites which generally correspond to regions which are associated with known monoamine cell groups previously identified in the primate. These structures include the nucleus locus ceruleus, dorsal tegmental nucleus of Gudden, nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis, nucleus annularis, ventral tegmental region, and the medial aspect of the lateral hypothalamus. Temporal cortical efferent fibers to the septal region arise principally from layers II and III of the perirhinal region, suggesting the presence of a second-order olfactory innervation of this structure.  相似文献   

20.
Projections from the nucleus subceruleus (nSC) to the hypoglossal nucleus (XII) were investigated with complementary retrograde and anterograde axonal transport techniques at the light and electron microscopic level in the rat. Injections of WGA-HRP into XII resulted in labeling of neurons in and around the nSC. Labeled nSC neurons were few in number (less than 4 per 40-60 microns sections) and variable in size and shape. Most labeled nSC neurons were medium-sized (mean = 16.89 microns), fusiform, triangular, or oval, with 3-4 dendrites typically oriented dorsomedially and ventrolaterally. These neurons were found throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the nSC but were most numerous medial, dorsomedial, and ventromedial to the motor trigeminal nucleus. Others were observed rostral to the motor trigeminal nucleus and ventral to the parabrachial nuclear complex. Confirmation of retrograde results was obtained following injections of tritiated amino acids or WGA-HRP into the nSC. This resulted in labeling throughout the rostrocaudal extent of XII mainly ipsilaterally. Labeled fibers descended the brainstem in the dorsolateral and, to a lesser extent, in the ventromedial component of Probst's tract. Fibers entered XII mainly rostrally along the lateral border of the nucleus. All regions of XII were recipients of nSC afferents, but the caudoventromedial quadrant contained the greatest density of terminal labeling. Electron microscopic evaluation confirmed that nSC afferents synapsed on motoneurons in XII. Axon terminals containing WGA-HRP reaction product were found contacting dendrites and somata, but primarily the former (81.3% versus 10.6%). Axodendritic terminals synapsed mainly on medium-to-small sized dendrites (less than 3 microns in diameter). The majority of labeled axodendritic terminals (90.1%) contained small, round, and clear synaptic vesicles (S-type: 20-50 nm) and were associated with an asymmetric (60.6%), symmetric (11.4%), or no (18%) postsynaptic specialization. By contrast, most axosomatic terminals contained flattened vesicles (F-type) and formed a symmetric or no postsynaptic specialization (75%). Large dense core vesicles (55-90 nm) were observed within a small proportion of all labeled axon terminals (1.3%). The results from this study demonstrate that the nSC projects to XII, preferentially targets a specific subgrouping of protrusor motoneurons, and synapses on both somata and dendrites, although mainly on the latter. The implications of these data are discussed relative to tongue control.  相似文献   

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