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1.
The immunocytochemical distribution of proopiomelanocortin (POMC) peptides (beta-endorphin, ACTH, alpha-MSH, 16K fragment) was studied in the brain of the rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta). Some animals were administered colchicine intracerebroventricularly prior to sacrifice to enhance the visualization of perikaryal immunoreactivity. Immunoreactive perikarya are localized to hypothalamic infundibular nucleus, giving rise to several distinct projections. Rostral projections extend through midline diencephalic and preoptic areas, and enter the telencephalon. Along this course, immunoreactive fibers are seen in midline hypothalamic and preoptic nuclei, nucleus of the diagonal band, olfactory tubercle, nucleus accumbens, bed nucleus of stria terminalis, septum, and other limbic structures in telencephalon. Caudal to the anterior commissure, some fibers ascend dorsally to enter the midline thalamus, which they innervate. Lateral projections of the infundibular perikarya course through the medial-basal hypothalamus, dorsal to the optic tracts, and enter the amygdala region where they innervate more medially situated amygdaloid nuclei. Caudal projections of the POMC neurons also extend through midline diencephalon, some coursing along a periventricular path to innervate midline hypothalamic and thalamic nuclei. This projection extends into the mesencephalic substantia grisea centralis and may also contribute to the innervation of more dorsally situated nuclei in the pons and medulla, such as the parabrachial nuclei and nucleus tractus solitarius. Other caudal projections originating in the hypothalamus course through the ventral tegmentum of mesencephalon and pons and may contribute to the innervation of midline raphe and other ventrally situated nuclei in the pons and medulla. The distribution of immunoreactive perikarya and fibers in the brain of rhesus monkey is strikingly similar to that found in the rat brain. However, subtle differences appear to exist in the innervation patterns of particular brain regions.  相似文献   

2.
Recently, [Met]Enkephalin-Arg-Gly-Leu (MEAGL) was isolated from bovine adrenal glands, and it was found to be derived exclusively from proenkephalin. Therefore, we investigated the distribution of MEAGL-like immunoreactive neuronal perikarya and fibers in the rat diencephalon pretreated with colchicine by PAP immunocytochemistry. In the thalamus MEAGL immunoreactive neuronal perikarya were distributed in the paraventricular nucleus and the ventral part of the lateral geniculate nucleus. Immunoreactive fibers were found in the paraventricular, paracentral, anteroventral, reuniens and rhomboid nuclei. In addition, immunoreactive fibers were also noted in the anterior pretectal nucleus. In the hypothalamus, immunoreactive neuronal perikarya were observed in the medial preoptic area, anterior and lateral hypothalamic nuclei, perifornical region, parvocellular and postero-magnocellular regions of paraventricular nucleus, ventromedial nucleus, dorsomedial nucleus, arcuate nucleus, premammillary, medial mammillary and lateral mammillary nuclei. The distribution of immunoreactive fibers was similar to that of neuronal perikarya. However, immunoreactive fibers were also observed in the supraoptic and suprachiasmatic nuclei where no immunoreactive neuronal perikarya were detected. Numerous immunoreactive fibers were detected in the external layer of the median eminence, but there were few in the internal layer. The similarity and difference in the distribution between MEAGL and other proenkephalin peptides such as [Met]enkephalin were also discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The immunocytochemical distribution of authentic proenkephalin-containing perikarya and nerve fibers in the brain of Rana esculenta was determined with antisera directed toward different epitopes of preproenkephalin. The pattern of proenkephalinlike immunoreactivity was similar with antisera directed toward [Met5]-enkephalin, [Met5]-enkephalin-Arg6, [Met5]-enkephalin-Arg6-Phe7, [Leu5]-enkephalin, and metorphamide; however, the intensity of the labelling varied depending on the target antigen. Proenkephalin-containing perikarya were located in all major subdivisions of the brain except the metencephalon. In the telencephalon, immunoreactive perikarya were detected in the dorsal, medial, and lateral pallium; the medial septal nucleus; the dorsal and ventral striatum; and the amygdala. In the diencephalon, immunoreactive perikarya were detected in the preoptic nucleus, in the dorsal and ventral caudal hypothalamus, and in an area that appeared to be homologous to the paraventricular nucleus. In the mesencephalon, numerous immunoreactive perikarya were detected in layer 6 of the optic tectum and a few scattered perikarya were detected in layer 4 of the optic tectum. Immunoreactive perikarya also occurred in the laminar nucleus of the torus semicircularis. In the rhombencephalon, immunoreactive perikarya were detected in the obex region and the nucleus of the solitary tract. Immunoreactive fibers of varying density were observed in all major subdivisions of the brain with the densest accumulations of fibers occurring in the dorsal pallium, the lateral and medial forebrain bundles, the amygdala, the periventricular hypothalamus, the superficial region of the caudolateral brainstem, and in a tract that appeared to be homologous to the tractus solitarius. The extensive system of proenkephalin-containing perikarya and nerve fibers in the brain of an amphibian showed many similarities to the distribution of proenkephalin-containing perikarya and nerve fibers previously described for the amniote brain.  相似文献   

4.
The distribution of avian pancreatic polypeptide-like (APP) immunoreactivity within the rat hypothalamus was investigated with the indirect immunoperoxidase method. APP immunoreactive perikarya are found in largest numbers in the retrochiasmatic area, the arcuate nucleus, and the supracommissural portion of the interstitial nucleus of the stria terminalis. Small clusters of immunoreactive neurons are also consistently observed in the ventral aspect of the medial preoptic area and lateral hypothalamic area, immediately dorsolateral to the optic chiasm and tracts. These neurons are apparent in all animals but are more intensely strained and occur in larger numbers following colchicine pretreatment. Other immunoreactive neurons are visible only in colchine-treated rats and are scattered throughout the anterior and lateral hypothalamic areas and the supramammillary nucleus. Immunoreactive axons and terminal fields present an extensive and highly characteristic distribution throughout the hypothalamus, which in many instances exhibits differential distribution within specific subfields of hypothalamic nuclei and areas. The heaviest concentrations of APP immunoreactive axons are present in the periventricular nucleus throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the hypothalamus, the ventrolateral portion of the suprachiasmatic nucleus, the retrochiasmatic area, the parvocellular paraventricular nucleus, the ventral supraoptic nucleus, the perifornical nucleus, the ventral dorsomedial nucleus, and the arcuate nucleus. Moderate plexuses of immunoreactive fibers are also present in the medial preoptic area, the anterior and lateral hypothalamic areas, the nucleus circularis, the median eminence, and the ventral premammillary area. Other areas, such as the ventromedial nucleus, contain virtually no immunoreactive axons but are encapsulated by a dense plexus of immunoreactive terminals. The distribution of a major component of APP immunoreactive fibers exhibits a marked similarity to that of previously described norepinephrine-containing hypothalamic afferents. Other groups of APP immunoreactive perikarya and fibers appear to represent components of intrinsic diencephalic systems.  相似文献   

5.
The distributions of fibers and terminals immunoreactive for somatostatin (SRIF), neuropeptide Y (NPY), substance P (SP) and cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK), were studied in the diencephalon of cynomolgus monkeys. Immunoreactivity for all 4 peptides is found in extrinsic afferent fibers innervating the dorsal thalamus, ventral thalamus and epithalamus. The distributions of such fibers are more extensive than previously described and include many relay nuclei in their zones of terminations. SP fibers are particularly concentrated in the ventral posteromedial nucleus. All peptides are especially concentrated in fibers in the intralaminar and reticular nuclei. Afferent fibers immunoreactive for each of the 4 peptides approach the thalamus by two pathways. An anterior route is formed by the classical periventricular system ascending from the hypothalamus to the epithalamus. A posterior pathway ascends in the lateral midbrain tegmentum and provides innervation to posterior, intralaminar, and many relay nuclei, plus the ventral thalamus. A basal forebrain pathway, containing SRIF and NPY immunoreactive fibers, enters the thalamus in association with the ansa lenticularis and SP fibers also ascend from the substantia nigra.  相似文献   

6.
Orexins/hypocretins, two isoforms of the same prepropeptide, are widely distributed throughout the brain and are involved in several physiological and neuroendocrine regulatory patterns, mostly related to feeding, sleep, arousal, and cyclic sleep-wake behaviors. Orexin-A and orexin-B bind with different affinities to two G-protein-coupled transmembrane receptors, orexin-1 and orexin-2 receptors (OR-R1 and OR-R2, respectively). Because of the similarities between the human and the swine brain, we have studied the pig to investigate the orexinergic system in the diencephalon, with special emphasis on the neuroanatomical projections to the epithalamic region. By using antibodies against orexin-A and orexin-B, immunoreactive large multipolar perikarya were detected in the hypothalamic periventricular and perifornical areas at the light and electron microscopic levels. In the region of the paraventricular nucleus, the orexinergic neurons extended all the way to the lateral hypothalamic area. Immunoreactive nerve fibers, often endowed with large varicosities, were found throughout the hypothalamus and the epithalamus. Some periventricular immunoreactive nerve fibers entered the epithalamic region and continued into the pineal stalk and parenchyma to disperse among the pinealocytes. Immunoelectron microscopy confirmed the presence of orexinergic nerve fibers in the pig pineal gland. After extraction of total mRNA from the hypothalamus and pineal gland, we performed RT-PCR and nested PCR using primers specific for porcine orexin receptors. PCR products were sequenced, verifying the presence of both OR-R1 and OR-R2 in the tissues investigated. These findings, supported by previous studies on rodents, suggest a hypothalamic regulation of the pineal gland via central orexinergic nervous inputs.  相似文献   

7.
The distribution of cholecystokinin (CCK)-immunoreactive nerve fibers and cell bodies was studied in the forebrain of control and colchicine-treated guinea pigs by using an antiserum directed against the carboxyterminus of CCK octapeptide (CCK-8) in the indirect immunoperoxidase technique. Virtually all forebrain areas examined contained immunoreactive nerve fibers. A dense innervation was visualized in; neocortical layers II-III, piriform cortex, the medial amygdala, the medial preoptic area, a circumventricular organ-like structure located at the top of the third ventricle in the preoptic area, the subfornical organ, the posterior bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, the posterior globus pallidus (containing labeled woolly fiber-like profiles), the ventromedial hypothalamus, the median eminence, and the premammillary nucleus. A moderately dense innervation was visualized elsewhere excepted in the septum and thalamus where labeled axons were comparatively few. Immunoreactive perikarya were abundant in: neocortex (especially layers II-III), piriform cortex, amygdala, the median preoptic nucleus, the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, the hypothalamic paraventricular (parvicellular part), arcuate, and dorsomedial (pars compacta) nuclei, the dorsal and perifornical hypothalamic areas, and throughout the thalamus. Areas also containing a moderate number of labeled cell bodies were the medial preoptic area, the globus pallidus, the caudate-putamen, and the periventromedial area in the hypothalamus. Immunostained perikarya were absent or only occasionally observed in the septum, the suprachiasmatic nucleus, the magnocellular hypothalamoneurohypophyseal nuclei, and the ventral mesencephalon. In the adenohypophysis, corticomelanotrophs were labeled in both males and females, and thyrotrophs were labeled in females only. This distribution pattern of CCK-8 immunoreactivity is compared to those previously recorded in other mammals. This shows that very few features are peculiar to the the guinea pig. It is discussed whether some interspecific differences in immunostaining are real rather than methodological.  相似文献   

8.
The anatomic distribution and biochemical characteristics of the neuropeptide pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) were investigated in the central nervous system of the frog, Rana ridibunda, during development. Three to four days after hatching, at stages IV-VII, PACAP-immunoreactive perikarya were detected in the dorsal thalamus within the anterior ventral area, and a few fibers were found in the medial pallium. Positive cell bodies were first observed in the hypothalamus at stages VIII-IX, at the level of the dorsal and ventral infundibular nuclei. In these regions, the number of positive perikarya increased during ontogeny. In tadpoles, during the mid- and late premetamorphosis, a more complex organization of the PACAP-immunoreactive system was found in the thalamus with the appearance, at stages IX-XII, of two additional groups of positive neurons in the ventrolateral area and posterocentral nucleus. At stages XIII-XVIII of larval development and subsequent larval stages, PACAP-immunoreactive fibers were found in the median eminence. In newly metamorphosed animals, several additional groups of positive perikarya appeared in the medial pallium, the preoptic nucleus, the torus semicircularis, the tegmentum of the mesencephalon, and the cerebellum. The immunoreactive peptide contained in the tadpole brain was characterized by high performance liquid chromatography analysis combined with radioimmunoassay quantification. At all stages investigated, the predominant form of PACAP-immunoreactive material coeluted with synthetic frog PACAP38. The occurrence of PACAP soon after hatching indicates that the peptide may exert neurotrophic activities. The existence of immunoreactive elements in several thalamic regions at mid- and late premetamorphic stages suggests that PACAP may act as a neurotransmitter, neuromodulator, or both, during ontogenesis. Finally, the presence of PACAP-immunoreactive perikarya in hypothalamic nuclei and nerve fibers in the median eminence supports the view that PACAP may play a role in the control of pituitary hormone secretion during larval development.  相似文献   

9.
The topographic distribution of aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC)-immunoreactive (IR) neurons was investigated in the cat hypothalamus, limbic areas, and thalamus by using specific antiserum raised against porcine kidney AADC. The perikarya and main axons were mapped on an atlas in ten cross-sectional drawings from A8 to A16 of the Horsley Clarke stereotaxic plane. AADC-IR neurons were widely distributed in the anterior brain. They were identified in the posterior hypothalamic area, rostral arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus, dorsal hypothalamic area, and periventricular complex of the hypothalamus, which contain tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-IR cells and are known as A11 to A14 dopaminergic cell groups. AADC-IR perikarya were also found in the other hypothalamic areas where few or no TH-IR cells have been reported: the supramamillary nucleus, tuberomamillary nucleus, pre- and anterior mamillary nuclei, caudal arcuate nucleus, dorsal hypothalamic area immediately ventral to the mamillothalamic tract, anterior hypothalamic area, area of the tuber cinereum, retrochiasmatic area, preoptic area, suprachiasmatic and dorsal chiasmatic nuclei. We also identified them in the anterior commissure nucleus, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, stria terminalis, medial and central amygdaloid nuclei, lateral septal nucleus, and nucleus of the diagonal band of Broca. AADC-IR neurons were localized in the ventromedial part of the thalamus, lateral posterior complex, paracentral nucleus and lateral dorsal nucleus of the thalamus, medial habenula, parafascicular nucleus, subparafascicular nucleus, and periaqueductal gray. Conversely, we detected only a few AADC-IR cells in the supraoptic nucleus whose rostral portion contains TH-IR perikarya. Comments are made on the relative localizations of the AADC-IR and TH-IR neurons, on species differences between the cat and rat, as well as on the possible physiological functions of the enzyme AADC.  相似文献   

10.
The efferent projections of the infralimbic region (IL) of the medial prefrontal cortex of the rat were examined by using the anterograde transport of Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHA-L). Major targets of the IL were found to include the agranular insular cortex, olfactory tubercle, perirhinal cortex, the whole amygdaloid complex, caudate putamen, accumbens nucleus, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, midline thalamic nuclei, the lateral preoptic nucleus, paraventricular nucleus, supramammillary nucleus, medial mammillary nucleus, dorsal and posterior areas of the hypothalamus, ventral tegmental area, central gray, interpeduncular nucleus, dorsal raphe, lateral parabrachial nucleus and locus coeruleus. Previously unreported projections of the IL to the anterior olfactory nucleus, piriform cortex, anterior hypothalamic area and lateroanterior hypothalamic nucleus were observed. The density of labeled terminals was especially high in the agranular insular cortex, olfactory tubercle, medial division of the mediodorsal nucleus of the thalamus, dorsal hypothalamic area and the lateral division of the central amygdaloid nucleus. Several physiological and pharmacological studies have suggested that the IL functions as the 'visceral motor' cortex, involved in autonomic integration with behavioral and emotional events. The present investigation is the first comprehensive study of the IL efferent projections to support this concept.  相似文献   

11.
The distribution of serotonin immunoreactive cell bodies and fibers was studied in the chameleon brain by using the immunohistochemical technique with antisera against serotonin coupled to a carrier with glutaraldehyde. Serotonin perikarya were found in the caudal midbrain tegmentum, in the lateral part of the nucleus reticularis isthmi, the lateral part of the nucleus interpeduncularis and along the midline in the raphe superior. More caudally, the serotonin immunoreactive cell bodies were located along the nucleus raphe inferior and ventrolaterally in the vicinity of the olivary complex. No immunoreactive cell bodies were found in the spinal cord nor in the paraventricular organ (PVO) of the hypothalamus. Immunoreactive fibers were observed in the entire brain. Prominent concentrations were found in the dorsal cortex, lateral septum, lateral geniculate nucleus, median eminence, pretectal nucleus, nucleus interpeduncularis, vestibular nucleus and olivary complex. Descending serotonin immunoreactive fibers were found in particular in the ventral motoneuron area in the spinal cord. One of the most interesting findings in this study was the lack of immunoreactive CSF contacting neurons in the PVO and the observation of an extensive plexus of supraependymal fibers, a feature reported so far only in mammals.  相似文献   

12.
The distribution of neuropeptide Y (NPY)-like immunoreactivity within the hypothalamus of the adult golden hamster was investigated with conventional immunohistochemical techniques. Neuropeptide Y immunoreactive cell bodies were found in greatest numbers in the arcuate nucleus while a few stained perikarya were seen in the internal and subependymal zones of the median eminence. Isolated perikarya were observed in the anterior commissure and supracommissural portion of the interstitial nucleus of the stria terminalis. Immunoreactive axons were located throughout the hypothalamus with the highest concentrations in the subependymal and internal zones of the median eminence, the interstitial nucleus of the stria terminalis, the medial preoptic area, and in the following nuclei: periventricular, suprachiasmatic, paraventricular, perifornical, median preoptic, and arcuate. Moderate to dense plexuses of immunoreactive fibers were observed in the anterior, lateral, and posterior hypothalamic areas and in the infundibular stalk. The supraoptic nucleus and lateral preoptic area displayed a small number of labeled axons whereas the ventromedial nucleus contained only a few fibers. NPY immunoreactive fibers were present in the optic tract and in the dorsomedial aspect of the optic chiasm. Labeled fibers penetrated the ependymal lining of the third ventricle throughout the ventral aspect of the periventricular zone. Additional fibers were observed in the pia lining the ventral aspect of the hypothalamus. This systematic analysis of hypothalamic NPY immunoreactivity in the adult golden hamster suggests that a portion of the labeled fibers display a distribution that is similar to previously described noradrenergic fibers in the hypothalamus.  相似文献   

13.
The present work studies the distribution of calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive (CGRP-li) neurons and fibers in the brain of a reptile, the lizard Podarcis hispanica. CGRP-li perikarya were not present in the telencephalon. In the thalamus, CGRP-li perikarya were restricted to the posteromedial and posterolateral nuclei. In the hypothalamus, CGRP-li cells were found mainly in the supramammillary and mammillary nuclei. In the midbrain and brainstem, CGRP-li cells appeared in the ventral tegmental area, the parabrachial nucleus, and the motor nuclei of the III-VII, IX, X, and XII cranial nerves. Motoneurons of the ventral horn of the spinal cord were also immunoreactive for CGRP. CGRP-li fibers were seen in the telencephalic hemispheres, where a dense plexus of reactive fibers appeared in the septum and in the lateral striatoamygdaloid transition area. From the latter, CGRP-li fibers entered the posterior dorsal ventricular ridge, the cell layer and deep stratum of the ventral lateral cortex, and various amygdaloid nuclei. Parts of the striatum (nucleus accumbens) and pallidum also displayed CGRP-li innervation. In the diencephalon, CGRP-li innervation was observed in parts of the dorsal thalamus and in the periventricular and medial hypothalamus. The pretectum and deep layers of the optic tectum also showed CGRP-li fibers, and numerous CGRP-li fibers were observed in the midbrain central gray, tegmentum, and pons. Some of the sensory fibers of the trigeminal, vagal, and spinal nerves were also CGRP-li. These results show that the distribution of CGRP-li structures in the reptilian brain is similar to that described for other vertebrates and suggest that the thalamotelencephalic CGRPergic projections appear to be conserved among amniote vertebrates.  相似文献   

14.
The distribution of perikarya and nerve fibers containing neuromedin U-like immunoreactivity in the brain of Rana esculenta was determined with an antiserum directed toward the carboxyl terminus of the peptide. In the telencephalon, immunoreactive perikarya were found in the olfactory bulb, the medial septum, and the diagonal band. In the diencephalon, labeled perikarya were detected in the anterior and posterior preoptic areas, the dorsal nucleus of the hypothalamus, the caudal part of the infundibulum, and the posterior tuberculum. In the mesencephalon, immunoreactive cell bodies were found only in the laminar nucleus of the torus semicircularis and the anterodorsal tegmental nucleus. In the rhombencephalon, labeled perikarya were detected in the secondary visceral nucleus, the cerebellar nucleus, the central gray, and the nucleus of the solitary tract. Immunoreactive nerve fibers were observed in all areas of the brain that contained labeled perikarya. The densest accumulations were found in the nucleus accumbens; the dorsal part of the lateral septum; the periventricular region of the ventral thalamus; the lateral part of the infundibulum; the anterodorsal, anteroventral, posterodorsal, and posteroventral tegmental nuclei; and the periaqueductal region of the tegmentum. The distribution of neuromedin U-like immunoreactivity in the frog brain was substantially different from the distribution described for the rodent brain. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
Using antisera generated in rabbits against salmon melanin concentrating hormone (MCH) coupled to human thyroglobulin, the distribution of MCH-like immunoreactivity was mapped throughout the rat central nervous system. The distribution of MCH-like immunoreactivity in rat brain is unique and different from the distribution of other neuropeptides. MCH-like immunoreactive perikarya and fibers are predominant in the posterior hypothalamic area, mostly in the medial forebrain bundle-lateral hypothalamic area subzona incerta and the perifornical area. Cell bodies are located mainly in the medial forebrain bundle and in proximity to well defined hypothalamic nuclei. Fibers are seen throughout the rat brain in all neocortical areas, the neostriatum and the amygdala, in the diencephalon in most hypothalamic nuclei, the habenula, the mamillary body and very dense in the medial forebrain bundle and just ventral to the zona incerta ("subzona incerta"). In the mesencephalon there are fibers in the central gray; in the pons-medulla fibers are contained in the dorsal and ventral parabrachial nuclei; in the tegmental area ventral to the fourth ventricle; in the spinal trigeminal area, the substantia gelatinosa and the reticular nuclei. In the spinal cord there are more fibers in the dorsal than in the ventral horn. The posterior pituitary also contained few MCH-like fibers. It is suggested that a peptide similar, but not identical, to salmon MCH is present in the rat central nervous system.  相似文献   

16.
The distribution of Cholecystokinin (CCK-8)-like immunoreactivity was mapped in the brain of the little brown bat, Myotis lucifugus, at three different and discrete levels of physiological activity: euthermic, hypothermic, and hibernating. Immunoreactive perikarya were present in the cerebral cortex, hippocampal formation, several nuclei of the olfactory and limbic systems, the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus, suprachiasmatic nucleus, medial geniculate nucleus, and caudate-putamen. Immunoreactive fibers were present in plexuses throughout the brain and in three major projection pathways: the medial forebrain bundle, the mammillary peduncle, and dorsal longitudinal fasciculus. Our data suggest two possible loci for CCK regulation of feeding behavior: a hypothalamic locus in the dorsomedial nucleus and a brainstem locus in the nucleus tractus solitarius.  相似文献   

17.
The ascending projections of the mammillary region of the hypothalamus and adjacent posterolateral hypothalamus were investigated by autoradiographic and horseradish peroxidase histochemical techniques. Analysis of the anterograde data revealed that the main contingent of mammillary fibers ascends in the medial forebrain bundle (MFB) in the lateral hypothalamic area. These fibers distribute to a number of telencephalic regions via three pathways. (1) Fibers course dorsomedially into the medial and lateral parts of the septum and continue into the hippocampus with a dense terminal field in the parahippocampal area. (2) Laterally coursing fibers project to area corticoidea dorsolateralis, area temporo-parieto-occipitalis, cortex piriformis, and the posterior part of archistriatum. (3) The fibers remaining in the MFB ascend into the "ventral paleostriatum," olfactory tubercle, and into the lateral and ventral borders of the rostral portion of lobus parolfactorius (LPO). Numerous fibers leave the LPO region and course dorsally into the deep layer of the Wulst, hyperstriatum dorsale (HD). Many fibers continue dorsolaterally through the HD and enter an unnamed region of the dorsolateral telencephalon (lateral to the vallecula) at the level of the olfactory bulb. Retrograde transport experiments revealed that the perikarya of origin-of-fiber projections to the parahippocampal area and to the rostral, dorsolateral telencephalon reside not only in nucleus mammillaris lateralis but also in posterolateral hypothalamic cells rostral and dorsal to this nucleus. The projection of these hypothalamic cells to the hippocampal formation and many other telencephalic regions in birds suggests that these cells are similar to the mammalian supramammillary nucleus and posterolateral hypothalamus rather than the mammillary nuclei.  相似文献   

18.
Medial anterior hypothalamic connections were studied with H3-proline and autoradiography. Most of the axons projected to other hypothalamic nuclei. The major pathways were found ventral medial to the fornix and in the periventricular tract. Substantial projections were apparent in the ventromedial and dorsomedial nuclei with less label in the arcuate nucleus. The dorsal premammillary nuclei were labeled bilaterally, particularly with more caudal injections of anterior hypothalamus. Efferents were evident in the posterior hypothalamus and continued into the central gray of the midbrain. Labeled fibers reached the ventral tegmental area and in the reticular formation were traced only through pons. Rostral projections were to the medial and lateral preoptic areas and ventral lateral septum. The bed nucleus of stria terminalis was labeled and a very few fibers reached the medial amygdaloid nucleus. The periventricular nucleus of thalamus was labeled.  相似文献   

19.
In the present study an attempt has been made to analyze the ascending reticular projections in the lizard Varanus exanthematicus by means of the horseradish peroxidase (HRP) technique. Reticular projections ascending to the telencephalon were found to arise in the mesencephalon, but not caudal to the mesorhombencephalic border. HRP injections into the dorsal thalamus have demonstrated retrogradely labeled cells in the mesencephalic reticular formation, particularly at the level of the oculomotor nerve and in the medial magnocellular zone of the rhombencephalic reticular formation, predominantly rostrally. HRP infiltrations at the mesodiencephalic border damaged most of the fibers passing beyond this junction, resulting in the uptake of HRP by the damaged axons and subsequent labeling of the cell bodies or origin of ascending reticular projections to the diencephalon and telencephalon. From a comparison of cell-labeling patterns in cases of HRP injections of, respectively, the dorsal thalamus and the mesodiencephalic border, it seems likely that the nucleus reticularis medius and more sparsely the nucleus reticularis inferior project to ventral diencephalic structures (ventral thalamus and hypothalamus), whereas the midbrain reticular formation and the rostral parts of the rhombencephalic reticular formation (nuclei reticulares isthmi and superior) project to both the dorsal thalamus and more ventral diencephalic structures. Projections arising throughout the rhombencephalic reticular formation, but predominantly in the nucleus reticularis inferior, were found to ascend to the midbrain reticular formation. The present experimental data in the lizard Varanus exanthematicus are comparable to the findings in mammals, with the exception of the reticulo-oculomotor pathways which have not been analyzed so far in reptiles. In addition to the aforementioned ascending reticular projections, the present study has demonstrated projections ascending from monoamine cell groups, various diencephalics structures, as well as from neuronal groups involved in somatosensory, auditory, and gustatory systems. Projections were found from the locus coeruleus and the nucleus raphes superior to the telencephalon, as well as from the substantia nigra and the presumable reptilian homologue of the mammalian ventral tegmental area to the basal forebrain and the dorsal thalamus. Bilateral projections were demonstrated from the principal trigeminal nucleus to the telencephalon, reminiscent of the quintofrontal tract of birds. Ascending projections to the diencephalon were found to originate bilaterally in the descending trigeminal nucleus and the dorsal funicular nucleus. Auditory projections to the midbrain arise bilaterally in the superior olivary complex and in the cochlear nuclear complex. Finally, the ascending gustatory pathway arising in the nucleus of the solitary tract was found to project to the “parabrachial region”, which in its turn has extensive projections to the forebrain.  相似文献   

20.
Ascending tectal axons carrying visual information constitute a fiber pathway linking the mesencephalon with the dorsal thalamus and then with a number of telencephalic centers. The sauropsidian nucleus rotundus and its mammalian homologue(s) occupy a central position in this pathway. The aim of this study was analyzing the rotundic connections in reptiles and birds in relation with comparable connections in mammals, by using biotinylated dextran amines and the lipophilic carbocyanine dye DiI as tracing molecules. In general, rotundic connections in reptiles and birds are quite similar, especially with regards to pretectal and tectal afferences; as a novel finding, we describe varicose fibers arising from nucleus rotundus that reached the developing chick striatum. In addition, this study described the dorsal claustrum as a novel telencephalic target for the suprageniculate nucleus in mammals. Overall, telencephalic projections from the posterior/intralaminar complex of the mammalian thalamus can be compared with the telencephalic projections of the reptilian nucleus rotundus. With the exception of the isocortical connections, the mouse suprageniculate nucleus shares a number of afferent and efferent connections with the sauropsidian nucleus rotundus. Especially significant were the suprageniculate fibers reaching the striatum and then following to reach pallial derivatives such as the lateral amygdala (ventral pallium) and the dorsal claustrum (lateral pallium). These connections can be compared with the rotundic fibers reaching the ventromedial part of the anterior dorsal ventricular ridge in reptiles/entopallium in birds (ventral pallium) and the dorsolateral part of the anterior dorsal ventricular ridge in reptiles (lateral pallium), and probably the mesopallium in birds.  相似文献   

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