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1.
We have studied GABAergic projections from the thalamic reticular nucleus to the anterior thalamic nuclei of the rat by combining retrograde labelling with horseradish peroxidase and GABA-immunohistochentistry. Small iontophoretic injections of the tracer into subnuclei of the anterior thalamic nuclear complex resulted in retrograde labelling of cells in the rostrodorsal pole of the ipsilateral thalamic reticular nucleus. All of these cells were also GABA-positive. The projections were topographically organized. Neurons located in the most dorsal part of the rostral reticular nucleus projected to the dorsal half of both the posterior subdivision and the medial subdivision of the anteroventral thalamic nucleus, and to the rostral portion of the anterodorsal thalamic nucleus. Immediately ventral to this group of neurons, but still within the dorsal portion of the reticular nucleus, a second group of neurons, extending from the dorsolateral to the dorsomedial edge of the nucleus, projected to the ventral parts of the posterior and medial subdivisions of the anteroventral nucleus. Following injection of tracer into the dorsal part of the rostral anteroventral nucleus, retrograde labelled GABA-containing cell bodies were also found in the ipsilateral anterodorsal nucleus.  相似文献   

2.
Projections from the thalamic gustatory nucleus, i.e. the parvicellular part of the posteromedial ventral thalamic nucleus (VPMpc) to the forebrain regions were studied in the rat by the tract-tracing methods with anterograde tracer (biotinylated dextran amine, BDA) and anterograde/retrograde tracer (wheat-germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase, WGA-HRP). After BDA injection into the VPMpc, terminal labeling was observed in the insular cortex, amygdaloid complex, and fundus striati. The terminal labeling in the amygdaloid complex was distributed in dorsolateral area of the rostral part of the lateral amygdaloid nucleus and the rostral part of the lateral subdivision of the central amygdaloid nucleus. The terminal labeling in the central amygdaloid nucleus extended to the fundus striati. The retrograde tracing study with WGA-HRP revealed that the projection fibers from the VPMpc to the amygdaloid complex originated from the medial part of the VPMpc and also from the thalamic area medial to the VPMpc. In the rats injected with Fluoro-Gold and WGA-HRP, respectively into the insular cortex and amygdaloid complex, no double-labeled neuronal cell bodies were found in the VPMpc, although neurons labeled singly with Fluoro-Gold were intermingled with those singly labeled with WGA-HRP in the medial part of the VPMpc. The results indicated that VPMpc neurons projecting to the amygdaloid complex constituted a population different from VPMpc neurons projecting to the insular cortex.  相似文献   

3.
Thalamic neurons projecting to both the head of the caudate nucleus and the premotor cortex in the cat were studied by the retrograde fluorescent double labeling technique. After injections of Evans blue into the caudate nucleus, and diamidino-phenylindol into the premotor cortex, a small number of double labeled neurons appeared in the ventral anterior, ventral lateral, anteromedial, rhomboid, central dorsal, central lateral, central medial, paracentral and parafascicular nuclei, in addition to numerous single-labeled neurons. This indicates that some neurons in the thalamic nuclei send bifurcating axons to both the head of the caudate nucleus and the premotor cortex. The caudatal projections of these thalamic neurons are organized in a topical manner.  相似文献   

4.
The sources and distribution of subcortical afferents to the anterior neocortex were investigated in the rat using the horseradish peroxidase technique. Injections into the prefrontal cortex labelled, in addition to the mediodorsal thalamic nucleus, neurons in a total of fifteen subcortical nuclei, distributed in the basal telencephalon, claustrum, amygdala, thalamus, subthalamus, hypothalamus, mesencephalon and pons. Of these, the projections from the zona incerta, the lateroposterior thalamic nucleus, and the parabrachial region of the caudal mesencephalon to the prefrontal cortex have not previously been described.Different parts of the mediodorsal thalamic nucleus project to different areas of the frontal cortex. Thus, horseradish peroxidase injections in the most ventral pregenual part of the medial cortex labelled predominantly neurons in the medial anterior and dorsomedial posterior parts of the mediodorsal nucleus; injections into the more dorsal pregenual area labelled only neurons in the lateral and ventral parts of the nucleus; injections placed supragenually labelled neurons in the dorsolateral posterior part of the nucleus; and injections into the dorsal bank of the anterior rhinal sulcus labelled neurons in the centromedial part of the nucleus.Several other subcortical nuclei had projections overlapping with that of the mediodorsal thalamic nucleus. Five different types of such overlap were distinguished: (1) cell groups labelled after horseradish peroxidase injections into one of the subfields of the projection area of the mediodorsal nucleus (defined as the prefrontal cortex), but not outside this area (parataenial nucleus of the thalamus); (2) cell groups labelled both after injection into a subfield of the projection area of the mediodorsal nucleus and after injections in a restricted area outside this area (anteromedial, ventral and laterposterior thalamic nuclei); (3) cell groups labelled after injections into all subfields of the mediodorsal nucleus projection area, but not outside this area (ventral tegmental area, basolateral nucleus of amygdala); (4) cell groups labelled after injections into any area of the anterior neocortex, including the mediodorsal nucleus projection area (parabrachial neurons of the posterior mesencephalon); (5) cell groups labelled after all neocortical injections investigated (claustrum, magnocellular nuclei of the basal forebrain, lateral hypothalamus, zona incerta, intralaminar thalamic nuclei, nuclei raphe dorsalis and centralis superior, and locus coeruleus).We can draw the following conclusions from these and related findings. First, because of the apparent overlap of projections of the mediodorsal, the anteromedial and ventral thalamic nuclei in the rat, parts of the prefrontal cortex can also be called ‘cingulate’ and ‘premotor’. Second, on the basis of projections from parts of the mediodorsal nucleus, the prefrontal cortex of the rat can be subdivided into areas corresponding to those in other species. Third, the neocortex receives afferents from a large number of subcortical cell groups outside the thalamus, distributed from the telencephalon to the pons; however, the prefrontal cortex seems to be the only neocortical area innervated by the ventral tegmental area and amygdala. Finally, neither the prefrontal cortex nor the mediodorsal thalamic nucleus receives afferents from regions directly involved in sensory and motor functions.  相似文献   

5.
Fang PC  Stepniewska I  Kaas JH 《Neuroscience》2006,143(4):987-1020
Connections of motor areas in the frontal cortex of prosimian galagos (Otolemur garnetti) were determined by injecting tracers into sites identified by microstimulation in the primary motor area (M1), dorsal premotor area (PMD), ventral premotor area (PMV), supplementary motor area (SMA), frontal eye field (FEF), and granular frontal cortex. Retrogradely labeled neurons for each injection were related to architectonically defined thalamic nuclei. Nissl, acetylcholinesterase, cytochrome oxidase, myelin, parvalbumin, calbindin, and Cat 301 preparations allowed the ventral anterior and ventral lateral thalamic regions, parvocellular and magnocellular subdivisions of ventral anterior nucleus, and anterior and posterior subdivisions of ventral lateral nucleus of monkeys to be identified. The results indicate that each cortical area receives inputs from several thalamic nuclei, but the proportions differ. M1 receives major inputs from the posterior subdivision of ventral lateral nucleus while premotor areas receive major inputs from anterior parts of ventral lateral nucleus (the anterior subdivision of ventral lateral nucleus and the anterior portion of posterior subdivision of ventral lateral nucleus). PMD and SMA have connections with more dorsal parts of the ventral lateral nucleus than PMV. The results suggest that galagos share many subdivisions of the motor thalamus and thalamocortical connection patterns with simian primates, while having less clearly differentiated subdivisions of the motor thalamus.  相似文献   

6.
Ascending projections to the lateral thalamic nuclear group from the substantia grisea centralis (SGC) were studied by injections of wheat germ agglutinin-conjugated with HRP (WGA-HRP) into the laterodorsal (LD) and lateroposterior (LP) thalamic nuclei. The present study demonstrated that the pars ventralis of the SGC at the levels of the intercollicular region and of the locus ceruleus sent fibers to both the LD and LP on both sides with homolateral predominance. Distribution pattern and morphological characteristics of the LD-projection neurons in the SGC were similar to those of SGC-LP projection cells. WGA-HRP injections into the LD or LP labeled also a considerable number of neurons in the dorsal raphe nucleus and the dorsal tegmental nucleus bilaterally with homolateral predominance, but the nucleus of Darkschewitsch contained labeled neurons only after the LD injection.  相似文献   

7.
The projections from the midline and intralaminar thalamic nuclei to the cerebral cortex were studied in the rat by means of anterograde tracing with Phaseolus vulgaris-leucoagglutinin. The midline and intralaminar nuclear complex taken as a whole projects to widespread, predominantly frontal, cortical areas. Each of the constituent thalamic nuclei has a restricted cortical projection field that overlaps only slightly with the projection fields of adjacent midline and intralaminar nuclei. The projections of the intralaminar nuclei cover a larger cortical area than those of the midline nuclei. The laminar distributions of fibres from individual midline and intralaminar thalamic nuclei are different and include both deep and superficial cortical layers. The parataenial, paraventricular and intermediodorsal midline nuclei each project to circumscribed parts of the prefrontal cortex and the hippocampal and parahippocampal regions. In the prefrontal cortex, the projections are restricted to the medial orbital, infralimbic, ventral prelimbic and agranular insular fields, and the rostral part of the ventral anterior cingular cortex. In contrast to the other midline nuclei, the rhomboid nucleus projects to widespread cortical areas. The rostral intralaminar nuclei innervate dorsal parts of the prefrontal cortex, i.e. the dorsal parts of the prelimbic, anterior cingular and dorsal agranular insular cortical fields, the lateral and ventrolateral orbital areas, and the caudal part of the ventral anterior cingular cortex. Additional projections are aimed at the agranular fields of the motor cortex and the caudal part of the parietal cortex. The lateral part of the parafascicular nucleus sends fibres predominantly to the lateral agranular field of the motor cortex and the rostral part of the parietal cortex. The medial part of the parafascicular nucleus projects rather sparsely to the dorsal part of the prelimbic cortex, the anterior cingular cortex and the medial agranular field of the motor cortex. Individual midline and intralaminar thalamic nuclei are thus in a position to directly influence circumscribed areas of the cerebral cortex. In combination with previously reported data on the organization of the midline and intralaminar thalamostriatal projections and the prefrontal corticostriatal projections the present results suggest a high degree of differentiation in the convergence of thalamic and cortical afferent fibres in the striatum. Each of the recently described parallel basal ganglia-thalamocortical circuits can thus be expanded to include projections at both the cortical and striatal levels from a specific part of the midline and intralaminar nuclear complex. The distinctive laminar distributions of the fibres originating from the different nuclei emphasize the specificity of the midline and intralaminar thalamocortical projections.  相似文献   

8.
本实验应用微量注射和离子透入法经三种不同入路,将HRP输入大鼠脚间核内,追踪脚间核的传入性联系。三种不同进针方向,共同出现标记神经元的核团除了缰内侧核、缰外侧核、中缝背核、中央上核、被盖背核、被盖背外侧核、导水管周围灰质外侧与腹外侧区和蓝斑以外,尚有Broca氏斜角带核和伏隔核。组内侧核和脚间核的联系存在着明显的局部定位关系,即双侧缰内侧核内侧投射至脚间核中部的腹侧和腹外侧;双侧缰内侧核外侧投射至脚间核中部的背侧;同侧缰内侧核投射至脚间核中部的外侧;双侧缰内侧核纤维并不投射至脚间核的吻端和尾端。本研究还发现其它核团对脚间核的投射也存在一定的局部定位关系,如缰外侧核、被盖背核腹内侧和被盖背外侧核均投射到脚间核的尾侧;伏隔核尾端也有投射纤维至脚间核。  相似文献   

9.
10.
The present study is focused on the analysis of the vesicular glutamate transporters 1 and 2 (VGLUT1 and VGLUT2) used by thalamic neurons giving rise to the thalamostriatal system. Instead of studying the distribution of VGLUT proteins at the level of thalamostriatal terminals, this report is focused on identifying the expression of the VGLUT mRNAs within the parent cell bodies of thalamic neurons innervating the striatum. For this purpose, we have combined dual in situ hybridization to detect both VGLUT1 and VGLUT2 mRNAs together with retrograde tracing with cholera toxin. Our results show that VGLUT2 is the only vesicular glutamate transporter expressed in thalamostriatal-projecting neurons located in the midline and intralaminar nuclei, whereas all neurons from the ventral thalamic nuclei innervating the striatum express both VGLUTs, at least at the mRNA level. Indeed, the mRNAs encoding for VGLUT1 and VGLUT2 displayed a sharp complementary subcellular distribution within neurons from the ventral thalamic nuclei giving rise to thalamostriatal projections. The differential distribution of VGLUT mRNAs lead us to conclude that the thalamostriatal pathway is a dual system, composed by a preponderant projection arising from the midline and intralaminar nuclei using VGLUT2 as the glutamate transporter, together with another important source of striatal afferents arising from neurons in the ventral thalamic relay nuclei containing both kinds of vesicular glutamate transporters.  相似文献   

11.
In order to understand better the organisation of the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus of the ventral thalamus, this paper has examined the patterns of connections that this nucleus has with various nuclei of the dorsal thalamus in rats. Injections of biotinylated dextran or cholera toxin subunit B were made into the parafascicular, central lateral, posterior thalamic, medial dorsal, lateral dorsal, lateral posterior, dorsal lateral geniculate, anterior, ventral lateral, ventrobasal and medial geniculate nuclei of Sprague-Dawley rats and their brains were processed using standard tracer detection methods. Three general patterns of ventral lateral geniculate connectivity were seen. First, the parafascicular, central lateral, medial dorsal, posterior thalamic and lateral dorsal nuclei had heavy connections with the parvocellular (internal) lamina of the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus. This geniculate lamina has been shown previously to receive heavy inputs from many functionally diverse brainstem nuclei. Second, the visually related dorsal lateral geniculate and lateral posterior nuclei had heavy connections with the magnocellular (external) lamina of the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus. This geniculate lamina has been shown by previous studies to receive heavy inputs from the visual cortex and the retina. Finally, the anterior, ventral lateral, ventrobasal and medial geniculate nuclei had very sparse, if any, connections with the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus. Overall, our results strengthen the notion that one can package the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus into distinct visual (magnocellular) and non-visual (parvocellular) components.  相似文献   

12.
Y Smith  A Parent 《Neuroscience》1986,18(2):347-371
The organization of the subcortical connections of caudate nucleus and putamen in the squirrel monkey was studied using horseradish peroxidase conjugated to wheat germ agglutinin as anterograde and retrograde neuronal tracer. The tracer was injected in similar quantities in the putamen on the left side and in the caudate nucleus on the right side in 10 monkeys, and its presence was revealed by means of the tetramethylbenzidine method. The study of anterogradely labeled fibers visualized after such injections shows that putaminofugal fibers terminate massively in the ventral two-thirds of the globus pallidus, where they display a band-like arrangement, and much less abundantly in the caudal third of the substantia nigra. In contrast, caudatofugal fibers occupy only the dorsal third of globus pallidus but arborize profusely in the rostral two-thirds of substantia nigra. In the pars reticulata of the substantia nigra the caudatonigral fibers form a highly complex network composed of fiber trabeculae while the putaminonigral fibers occur as more discrete fascicles confined to the dorsolateral region of the structure. In the pars compacta of the substantia nigra the retrogradely labeled cells occur in the form of clusters that are closely intermingled with clusters of unlabeled neurons. The labeled-cell clusters are particularly dense on the putamen-injected side and more loosely organized on the caudate-injected side. On both sides, however, the striatonigral fibers that reach the substantia nigra pars compacta can be seen to terminate almost exclusively upon clusters composed of retrogradely labeled cells, suggesting the existence of a precise reciprocal link between nigral and striatal neuronal aggregates. At thalamic levels the retrogradely labeled cells are distributed according to a strikingly asymmetric pattern. For instance, a prominent labeling of neurons in the central superior lateral nucleus is seen only on the caudate-injected side. Furthermore, in the centromedian/parafascicular complex retrograde cell labeling is seen exclusively in parafascicular nucleus on the caudate-injected side and only in the centromedian nucleus, except its lateralmost portion, on the putamen-injected side. Control experiments involving injection of the tracer in cerebral cortex overlying the striatum reveal that the neurons in the lateral segment of the centromedian, which do not project to striatum, are in fact reciprocally connected with the cerebral cortex. In addition, our data show that some of the so-called "specific" thalamic nuclei contribute significantly to the thalamostriatal projection in monkey.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Desbois C  Villanueva L 《Neuroscience》2001,102(4):885-898
We have used several anatomical tracing techniques to study the organization of the lateral ventromedial thalamic nucleus in the rat, a region that is selectively activated by cutaneous nociceptive inputs from any part of the body. The lateral ventromedial thalamic projections are organized as a widespread dense band covering mainly layer I of the dorsolateral anterior-most aspect of the cortex. This band diminishes progressively as one moves caudally, disappearing completely at 1mm caudal to bregma level. These widespread projections contrast with the circumscribed projections to the deep layers of the primary somatosensory and insular cortices from the adjacent ventral posteromedial and ventroposterior parvicellular thalamic regions, respectively. Injections into the lateral part of the ventromedial thalamic nucleus of an anterograde/retrograde tracer showed that the cortical layer I areas showing the densest projections from this thalamic region also contain the greatest number of retrogradely labeled cells in cortical layers V and VI. The same injections retrogradely labeled numerous cells which were confined to the dorsal subnucleus reticularis dorsalis in an area that contains a concentration of neurons with widespread nociceptive convergence. Finally, the lateral part of the ventromedial thalamic nucleus was also differentially labeled following a topical application of tetramethylrhodamine-labeled dextran on the dorsolateral anterior cortex. These findings suggest that lateral ventromedial thalamic neurons could be part of a spino-reticulo-thalamo-cortical network that allows signals of pain from any part of the body surface to spread across widespread cortical areas.  相似文献   

14.
Physiological evidence indicates that vestibular signals modulate the activity of motoneurons innervating the masseter muscle. Recently, experiments using transynaptic retrograde transport of pseudorabies virus provided anatomical evidence that many neurons concentrated in the dorsomedial part of the parvicellular division of the medial vestibular nucleus (MVePC) and the caudal prepositus hypoglossi (PH) provide inputs to motoneurons innervating the lower third of the superficial layer of the masseter muscle. However, it was not clear whether this vestibulo-trigeminal projection was monosynaptic or polysynaptic. The present study sought to determine whether neurons in the MVePC or PH project directly to motoneurons controlling the masseter muscle in rats. For this purpose, an anterograde tracer (biotinylated dextran amine, BDA) was injected into vestibular nuclei (mainly MVePC) or PH and a retrograde tracer (the β-subunit of cholera toxin, b-CT) was injected into the masseter muscle ipsilateral or contralateral to the BDA injection site. Following injections of BDA into the vestibular nuclei or PH, anterogradely labeled axon terminals were observed bilaterally in the motor trigeminal nucleus (Mo5), particularly in the ventral, medial, and lateral portions of the nucleus; projections to dorsal Mo5 were sparse. In addition, retrogradely labeled motoneurons were located in the ventral and lateral portions of the ipsilateral Mo5. Moreover, anterogradely labeled terminals were observed to be in close proximity to motoneurons in the Mo5 that were retrogradely labeled from b-CT injections into the masseter muscle. This study provides direct evidence that a monosynaptic pathway exists between the MVePC and PH and masseter motoneurons.  相似文献   

15.
Neurochemical and key connectional characteristics of the anterior entopeduncular nucleus (Enta) of the turtle (Testudo horsfieldi) were studied by axonal tracing techniques and immunohistochemistry of parvalbumin, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD). We showed that the Enta, which is located within the dorsal peduncle of the lateral forebrain bundle (Pedd), has roughly topographically organized reciprocal connections with the dorsal thalamic visual nuclei, the nucleus rotundus (Rot) and dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (GLd). The Enta receives projections from visual telencephalic areas, the anterior dorsal ventricular ridge and dorsolateral cortex/pallial thickening. Most Enta neurons contained GABA and parvalbumin, and some of them were retrogradely labeled when the tracer was injected into the visual dorsal thalamic nuclei. Further experiments using double immunofluorescence revealed colocalization of GAD and parvalbumin in the vast majority of Enta neurons, and many of these cells showed retrograde labeling with Fluoro-gold injected into the Rot and/or GLd. According to these data, the Enta may be considered as a structural substrate for recurrent inhibition of the visual thalamic nuclei. Based on morphological and neurochemical similarity of the turtle Enta, caiman Pedd nucleus, the superior reticular nucleus in birds, and the thalamic reticular nucleus in mammals, we suggest that these structures represent a characteristic component which is common to the thalamic organization in amniotes.  相似文献   

16.
The thalamic neurons projecting to the superficial layers of areas 5 and 7 in the cat, and area 5 in the monkey, were investigated by using superficial deposits of either horseradish peroxidase or Fast Blue in one hemisphere. In the contralateral hemisphere injections of the same tracer involving the full cortical depth were made in homotopical locations, and the distribution and soma size of retrogradely labeled thalamocortical neurons in each side of the thalamus were compared. It was found that, in the cat, labeled neurons in the lateral posterior pulvinar complex, and in paralaminar regions of the ventrolateral complex, were fewer in number and smaller in size in cases of superficial deposits than in cases of deep injection. In more lateral portions of the ventrolateral complex, however, there were no size differences. In the monkey, similar differences in number and size appeared in the caudal division of the ventrolateral complex and in the lateral posterior and pulvinar nuclei, whereas no such differences were found for neurons labeled in the oral and medial divisions of the ventrolateral complex, and in the ventral posteroinferior nucleus. In all cases the intralaminar and midline nuclei exhibited retrogradely labeled neurons only when deep layers were injected. These and previous findings point to the existence of a widely distributed layer I-projecting system of neurons which, in most nuclei, are interspersed among neurons projecting mainly to middle or deep layers. In some nuclei, however, as is the case with the ventromedial nucleus proper, layer I-projecting system neurons would make up the whole nucleus. The cell groups located in a paralaminar position, which would be but a part of this system, could provide through their projections to layer I in the posterior parietal and frontal cortical regions a final path for recruiting responses and spontaneous spindling activities.  相似文献   

17.
We combined the retrograde transport of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated with horseradish peroxidase with choline acetyltransferase immunohistochemistry to study the projections of cholinergic and non-cholinergic neurons of the upper brainstem core to rostral and caudal intralaminar thalamic nuclei, reticular thalamic complex and zona incerta in the cat. After wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase injections in the rostral pole of the reticular thalamic nucleus, the distribution and amount of retrogradely labeled brainstem neurons were similar to those found after tracer injection in thalamic relay nuclei (see preceding paper). After wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase injections in the caudal intralaminar centrum medianum-parafascicular complex, rostral intralaminar central lateral-paracentral wing, and zona incerta, the numbers of retrogradely labeled brainstem neurons were more than three times higher than those found after injections in thalamic relay nuclei. The larger numbers of horseradish peroxidase-positive brainstem reticular neurons after tracer injections in intralaminar or zona incerta injections results from a more substantial proportion of labeled neurons in the central tegmental field at rostral midbrain (perirubral) levels and in the ventromedial part of the pontine reticular formation, ipsi- and contralaterally to the injection site. Of all retrogradely labeled neurons in the caudal midbrain core at the level of the cholinergic peribrachial area and laterodorsal tegmental nucleus, 45-50% were also choline acetyltransferase-positive after the injections into central lateral-paracentral and reticular nuclei, while only 25% were also choline acetyltransferase-positive after the injection into the centrum medianum-parafascicular complex. These findings are discussed in the light of physiological evidence of brainstem cholinergic mechanisms involved in the blockade of synchronized oscillations and in activation processes of thalamocortical systems.  相似文献   

18.
The thalamic paralaminar nuclei that border the medial and ventral edges of the medial geniculate body, viz. the suprageniculate nucleus (SG), the posterior intralaminar nucleus (PIN), the medial division of the medial geniculate nucleus (MGm), and the peripeduncular nucleus (PP), are regarded as important extralemniscal relay nuclei for sensory stimuli and as an important link for the direct transmission of sensory stimuli to the amygdala. Each of these thalamic nuclei receives a unique pattern of afferent input but an unresolved question is, how each of these thalamic nuclei project to the amygdala and whether there are zones of convergence and/or non-overlapping regions within amygdaloid target nuclei. Small injections of PHA-L or Miniruby, which were made into single thalamic nuclei at different rostrocaudal levels, revealed a non-uniform distribution of anterogradely labeled axons within the amygdaloid complex. Injections into the SG, MGm, and rostral PIN predominantly labeled axons in the laterodorsal and lateroventral portions of the lateral nucleus of the amygdala (LA). Axons from the MGm were located rather in the dorsal part of the LA, whereas SG-derived axons were concentrated in the ventrolateral part of the LA. Injections into the PP labeled axons predominantly in the medial part of the LA, whereas after injections into the caudal PIN axons were seen in the entire LA. In addition, the PIN projects heavily to the anterior basomedial nucleus and medial division of the central nucleus, whereas this projection is virtually absent from the other thalamic nuclei. The lateral part of the central nucleus and the basal nucleus of the amygdala are spared by axons from the thalamic paralaminar nuclei. The present results suggest that, despite a considerable degree of convergence of the thalamoamygdaloid projection in the lateral nucleus, each thalamic nucleus plays a unique role in the transmission of sensory stimuli to the amygdala and in the modulation of intraamygdaloid circuits.  相似文献   

19.
Fast blue (FB), rhodamine microspheres (RH), horseradish peroxidase (HRP), and wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase conjugate (WGA-IIRP) were used as retrograde tracers to study the innervation of the rat superficial pineal gland (SP). One of the tracers was injected into the gland of each animal. All four retrograde tracers injected into the gland always labeled neurons in the superior cervical ganglia (SCG). No retrograde labeling was ever seen in the suprachiasmatic nuclei, paraventricular hypothalamic nuclei, lateral hypothalamus, habenular nuclei, amygdalar nuclei, or superior salivatory nuclei. Retrograde labeling was seen in the anterior hypothalamic nuclei, anterior thalamic nuclei, lateral geniculate bodies, and midbrain tectal structures when a tracer spread from the injection site to the overlying cortex, tectum, or commissures. Control studies included injection of tracer into the subarachnoid space around the SP or into structures adjacent to the SP. Only the injection of FB or WGA-HRP into the subarachnoid space labeled neurons in the SCG. This labeling was probably due to the spread of tracer to the choroid plexus. These results agree with recent work confirming the existence of a direct projection of the SCG into the interstitium around pinealocytes. The evidence does not substantiate an innervation originating in the habenular nuclei; the superior salivatory nuclei; or any other diencephalic, midbrain, pontine, or medullary structure.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Tecto-thalamic projections in the hereditary bilaterally microphthalmic rat were studied by means of WGA-HRP injection into the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNd) and the lateroposterior thalamic nucleus (LP). Histological study in the mutant rats showed that whereas LGNd and superficial layers of the superior colliculus (SC) suffered from a remarkable reduction in size, LP had no histological changes as compared to the normal animals. Unilateral injection of the tracer into the microphthalmic LGNd showed that WGA-HRP positive neurons were present mostly in the ipsilateral str. griseum superficiale (SGS) of the SC. However, the number of labeled SGS neurons of the microphthalmic animals was about 3% of the normal. Although cell bodies of the normal tecto-LGNd neurons in the SGS were spindle-form in shape and issued one or two proximal dendrites from each pole, the microphthalmic tecto-LGNd neurons showed an irregular contour and their dendrites were not so intensively labeled. Unilateral injections of WGA-HRP into the LP revealed that the tecto-LP neurons were mainly distributed in the ipsilateral str. opticum of the colliculus. (SO) in both normal and microphthalmic animals. However, the number of labeled SO cells in the microphthalmic rat was about one-half of the normal. Furthermore, the size of labeled tecto-LP neurons was smaller than that of the normal ones, and they showed irregular round to oval cell bodies with equivocally labeled dendrites, in contrast to the normal tecto-LP neurons with polygonal cell bodies extending three or more dendrites in a radial fashion. These results indicate that there exist the tecto-LGNd and -LP projection neurons in the microphthalmic rat and that their laminally segregated projection is fundamentally preserved. However, the number of the tecto-thalamic projection neurons, especially of the tecto-LGNd cells, was markedly diminished in the mutant tectum compared to normals.Abbreviations CST cortico-spinal tract - DRN dorsal raphe nucleus - DTN dorsal tegmental nucleus - LGNd pars dorsalis of the lateral geniculate nucleus - LLN nucleus of the lateral lemniscus - LM medial lemniscus - LP lateroposterior thalamic nucleus - MGN medial geniculate nucleus - MRF midbrain reticular formation - OT optic tract - P pretectal area - PAG periaqueductal gray - PB parabigeminal nucleus - PN pontine nuclei - PCS superior cerebellar peduncle - SGS superficial gray layer of the superior colliculus - SO stratum opticum of the superior colliculus - SN substantia nigra - Vm motor nucleus of the trigeminar nerve - Vs sensory nucleus of the trigeminar nerve  相似文献   

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