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1.
Localization and possible co-localization of glutamate, aspartate and GABA immunoreactivities was examined in the anterior thalamic nuclei, retrosplenial granular cortex, thalamic reticular nucleus and mammillary nuclei of the rat by double antigen immunohistochemistry using diaminobenzidine and benzidine dihydrochloride in one series and double immunofluorescence labelling with rhodamine and fluorescein in a second series of animals. In three of these regions, retrosplenial granular cortex, anterior thalamic nuclei, and mammillary nuclei, glutamate immunoreactivity was co-localized with aspartate immunoreactivity in a majority of the projection neurons (pyramidal neurons, predominantly in layers V and VI in retrosplenial granular cortex; rounded polygonal multipolar neurons throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the anterior thalamic and mammillary nuclei). None of the cells showing glutamate and/or aspartate immunoreactivity in these regions also displayed GABA immunoreactivity, which was present in non-pyramidal cells in the retrosplenial granular cortex (chiefly in layers I–III) and in small numbers of cells within the anterior thalamic nuclei. In the thalamic reticular nucleus, in contrast, most neurons were immunoreactive for GABA and in the majority of these neurons glutamate (and/or aspartate) immunoreactivity was co-localized with GABA.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
V.M. Montero  G.L. Scott 《Neuroscience》1981,6(12):2561-2577
(3H)-proline was injected in the caudodorsal part (visual segment) of the thalamic reticular nucleus to study its projection to the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus. This was done by autoradiographic tracing of anterograde axonal transport of tritium at the light- and electron microscopic level. The results of the light-microscope autoradiography show that connections of the thalamic reticular nucleus are distributed along lines of projections in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus, indicating a retinotopic arrangement of this projection. The results of the electron microscope autoradiography provide direct evidence that axons of cells in the thalamic reticular nucleus terminate in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus as synaptic boutons that contain flattened synaptic vesicles, dark mitochondria and establish symmetrical synapses with perikarya and with proximal, intermediate and distal dendrites. They do not take part in intraglomerular synapses (as boutons with pleomorphic synaptic vesicles do) and are not postsynaptic to other vesicle-containing boutons in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus.The present results, taken in conjunction with physiological studies that have shown postsynaptic inhibitory effects of the thalamic reticular nucleus on dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus relay cells in the rat, establish a correlation of an inhibitory synapse with the presence of flattened synaptic vesicles in the corresponding synaptic boutons. Also, the observation that thalamic reticular nucleus terminals in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus avoid forming synapses with boutons containing pleomorphic vesicles, believed to be synaptic processes of interneurons, is indicative that the inhibitory effects are exerted monosynaptically on geniculate relay cells.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Afferent pathways to the rostral reticular thalamic nucleus (Rt) in the rat were studied using anterograde and retrograde lectin tracing techniques, with sensitive immunocytochemical methods. The analysis was carried out to further investigate previously described subregions of the reticular thalamic nucleus, which are related to subdivisions of the dorsal thalamus, in the paraventricular and midline nuclei and three segments of the mediodorsal thalamic nucleus. Cortical inputs to the rostral reticular nucleus were found from lamina VI of cingulate, orbital and infralimbic cortex. These projected with a clear topography to lateral, intermediate and medial reticular nucleus respectively. Thalamic inputs were found from lateral and central segments of the mediodorsal nucleus to the lateral and intermediate rostral reticular nucleus respectively and heavy paraventricular thalamic inputs were found to the medial reticular nucleus. In the basal forebrain, afferents were found from the vertical and horizontal limbs of the diagonal band, substantia innominata, ventral pallidum and medial globus pallidus. Brainstem projections were identified from ventrolateral periaqueductal grey and adjacent sites in the mesencephalic reticular formation, laterodorsal tegmental nucleus, pedunculopontine nucleus, medial pretectum and ventral tegmental area. The results suggest a general similarity in the organisation of some brainstem Rt afferents in rat and cat, but also show previously unsuspected inputs. Furthermore, there appear to be at least two functional subdivisions of rostral Rt which is reflected by their connections with cortex and thalamus. The studies also extend recent findings that the ventral striatum, via inputs from the paraventricular thalamic nucleus, is included in the circuitry of the rostral Rt, providing further evidence that basal ganglia may function in concert with Rt. Evidence is also outlined with regard to the possibility that rostral Rt plays a significant role in visuomotor functions.Abbreviations ac anterior commissure - aca anterior commissure, anterior - Acb accumbens nucleus - AI agranular insular cortex - AM anteromedial thalamic nucleus - AV anteroventral thalamic nucleus - BST bed nucleus of stria terminalis - Cg cingulate cortex - CG central gray - CL centrolateral thalamic nucleus - CM central medial thalamic nucleus - CPu caudate putamen - DR dorsal raphe nucleus - DTg dorsal tegmental nucleus - EP entopeduncular nucleus - f fornix - Fr2 Frontal cortex, area 2 - G gelatinosus thalamic nucleus - GP globus pallidus - Hb habenula - HDB horizontal limb of diagonal band - IAM interanterodorsal thalamic nucleus - ic internal capsule - INC interstitial nucleus of Cajal - IF interfascicular nucleus - IL infralimbic cortex - IP interpeduncular nucleus - LC locus coeruleus - LDTg laterodorsal tegmental nucleus - LH lateral hypothalamus - LHb lateral habenular nucleus - ll lateral lemniscus - LO lateral orbital cortex - LPB lateral parabrachial nucleus - MD mediodorsal thalamic nucleus - MDL mediodorsal thalamic nucleus, lateral segment - Me5 mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus - MHb medial habenular nucleus - mlf medial longitudinal fasciculus - MnR median raphe nucleus - MO medial orbital cortex - mt mammillothalamic tract - OPT olivary pretectal nucleus - pc posterior commissure - PC paracentral thalamic nucleus - PF parafascicular thalamic nucleus - PPTg pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus - PrC precommissural nucleus - PT paratenial thalamic nucleus - PV paraventricular thalamic nucleus - PVA paraventricular thalamic nucleus, anterior - R red nucleus - Re reuniens thalamic nucleus - RRF retrorubral field - Rt reticular thalamic nucleus - Scp superior cerebellar peduncle - SI substantia innominata - sm stria medullaris - SNR substantia nigra, reticular - st stria terminalis - TT tenia tecta - VL ventrolateral thalamic nucleus - VO ventral orbital cortex - VP ventral pallidum - VPL ventral posterolateral thalamic nucleus - VTA ventral tegmental area - 3 oculomotor nucleus - 3V 3rd ventricle - 4 trochlear nucleus  相似文献   

6.
The corticothalamic feedback pathway provides excitatory synaptic input to both the thalamic reticular nucleus and the lateral geniculate nucleus. We studied excitatory postsynaptic currents elicited from corticothalamic stimulation in the visual sector of the thalamic reticular nucleus and the lateral geniculate nucleus to compare the response of these neurons to stimulation of their common input pathway. Using whole cell patch clamp recordings in ferret thalamic slices, we compared single excitatory postsynaptic current decay kinetics, presynaptic glutamate release dynamics through paired pulse facilitation and responses to corticothalamic train stimulation. We found that single thalamic reticular nucleus excitatory postsynaptic currents were significantly sharper than lateral geniculate nucleus responses. The mean thalamic reticular nucleus excitatory postsynaptic current decay constant (tau) was 4.9+/-0.5 ms, while the mean lateral geniculate nucleus excitatory postsynaptic current tau value was 11.8+/-0.8 ms. Presynaptic release dynamics as measured by responses to paired stimuli were conserved between the thalamic reticular nucleus and lateral geniculate nucleus. However, facilitating responses to train stimulation were markedly different between nuclei. Lateral geniculate nucleus responses showed proportionately larger facilitation (reaching 842.9 +/- 76.4% of excitatory postsynaptic current 1 amplitude) than thalamic reticular nucleus responses (reaching 223.1 +/- 44.0% of excitatory postsynaptic current 1 amplitude). These data indicate that while the corticothalamic pathway produces excitatory postsynaptic currents in both the thalamic reticular nucleus and lateral geniculate nucleus, other factors uniquely affect the functional integration of the inputs in each nucleus.  相似文献   

7.
Most dorsal thalamic nuclei send axons to specific areas of the neocortex and to specific sectors of the thalamic reticular nucleus; the neocortex then sends reciprocal connections back to the same thalamic nucleus, directly as well indirectly through a relay in the thalamic reticular nucleus. This can be regarded as a 'canonical' circuit of the sensory thalamus. For the pathways that link the thalamus and the hippocampal formation, only a few comparable connections have been described. The reuniens nucleus of the thalamus sends some of its major cortical efferents to the hippocampal formation. The present study shows that cells of the hippocampal formation as well as cells in the reuniens nucleus are retrogradely labelled following injections of horseradish peroxidase or fluoro-gold into the rostral part of the thalamic reticular nucleus in the rat. Within the hippocampal formation, labelled neurons were localized in the subiculum, predominantly on the ipsilateral side, with fewer neurons labelled contralaterally. Labelled neurons were seen in the hippocampal formation and nucleus reuniens only after injections made in the rostral thalamic reticular nucleus (1.6-1.8 mm caudal to bregma). In addition, the present study confirmed the presence of afferent connections to the rostral thalamic reticular nucleus from cortical (cingulate, orbital and infralimbic, retrosplenial and frontal), midline thalamic (paraventricular, anteromedial, centromedial and mediodorsal thalamic nuclei) and brainstem structures (substantia nigra pars reticularis, ventral tegmental area, periaqueductal grey, superior vestibular and pontine reticular nuclei). These results demonstrate a potential for the thalamo-hippocampal circuitry to influence the functional roles of the thalamic reticular nucleus, and show that thalamo-hippocampal connections resemble the circuitry that links the sensory thalamus and neocortex.  相似文献   

8.
Wang J  Huo FQ  Li YQ  Chen T  Han F  Tang JS 《Neuroscience》2005,134(2):515-523
GABAergic projection from thalamic reticular nucleus to thalamic nucleus submedius in the medial thalamus of the rat was studied by using immunohistochemistry for GABA, retrograde labeling with Fluoro-Gold combined with immunohistochemistry for GABA, and anterograde labeling with biotinylated dextranamine. Immunohistochemistry displayed that only GABA immunoreactive terminals were observed in the thalamic nucleus submedius, while GABA immunoreactive neuronal cell bodies were located in the thalamic reticular nucleus and lateral geniculate nucleus. Injection of Fluoro-Gold into the thalamic nucleus submedius resulted in massive retrogradely labeled neuronal cell bodies in the rostroventral portion of the ipsilateral thalamic reticular nucleus and a few in the contralateral thalamic reticular nucleus, and most of these cell bodies showed GABA immunopositive staining. Many biotinylated dextranamine anterogradely labeled fibers and terminals in the thalamic nucleus submedius were observed after injection of biotinylated dextranamine into the thalamic reticular nucleus. The present results provide a morphological evidence for a hypothesis that a disinhibitory effect on output neurons elicited by opioid or 5-hydroxytryptamine inhibiting a GABAergic terminal in the thalamic nucleus submedius may lead to activation of the descending inhibitory system and depression of the nociceptive inputs at the spinal cord level.  相似文献   

9.
This study tested the hypothesis that neurons of thalamic nuclei, which are normally devoid of inputs from the reticular thalamic nucleus, do not display spindle oscillations and related rhythmic spike bursts. This proposal derived from our recent studies indicating that the reticular nucleus is the generator of spindling rhythmicity. We used retrograde tracing methods, intracellular recordings in barbiturized cats, and extracellular recordings of single neurons and field potentials in anteroventral (AV), anteromedial (AM), ventroanterior (VA), ventrolateral (VL), and central lateral (CL) thalamic nuclei in cats with rostral brain stem transections (cerveau isolé preparations), before and after administration of barbiturates. The observation that AV and AM nuclei do not receive inputs from the reticular nucleus was confirmed by using injections of horseradish peroxidase conjugated to wheat germ agglutinin confined within the limits of anterior nuclei. Such injections led to massive retrograde labeling in mammillary nuclei and layer VI of the retrosplenial cortex but left free of labeling the neurons of the reticular thalamic nucleus. Intracellular recordings showed that AV-AM neurons discharge tonically in response to a depolarizing current applied at rest, whereas they give rise to a slow spike that underlies a burst of fast action potentials when the membrane is hyperpolarized by 5-12 mV. Despite the fact that they share similar properties with other thalamic neurons, intracellularly recorded AV-AM neurons do not exhibit spindle waves under barbiturate anesthesia, whereas VA-VL, CL, and other thalamocortical neurons that receive afferents from the reticular nucleus commonly display such oscillations. With extracellular recordings performed simultaneously in CL and AV or AM nuclei of the unanesthetized cerveau isolé preparation, focal spindle oscillations and related rhythmic high-frequency spike bursts of single CL cells contrasted with absence of spindles and spike bursts in AV or AM neurons. Spindling could be induced in AV-AM nuclei only after administration of barbiturates at doses exceeding 3 mg/kg, and it appeared approximately 35-40 s after the barbiturate effect was detected in the simultaneously recorded CL nucleus. Moreover, the spike bursts that were elicited in AV-AM neurons after barbiturate administration were not temporally related with focal spindles. Since spindle oscillations did not appear intracellularly in AV-AM neurons, the possibility was envisaged that barbiturate-induced spindles were the passive reflection of field potentials actively generated in neighboring thalamic nuclei.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The projections from the reticular thalamic nucleus and the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus to the lateral posterior-pulvinar thalamic complex were studied in the adult cat using the retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase. Small, stereotaxically guided injections of the enzyme were placed in the various nuclei of this complex, including the pulvinar, lateralis intermedius oralis, lateralis intermedius caudalis, lateralis posterior lateralis, lateralis posterior medialis and lateralis medialis nuclei. The distribution of labeled neurons indicates that these nuclei receive topographically organized projections from the reticular and ventral lateral geniculate nuclei. The pulvinar nucleus receives only very scarce projections from the reticular thalamic nucleus originating in its posterodorsal and posteroventral sectors. The reticular projection to the nucleus lateralis intermedius oralis is even sparser. The nuclei lateralis intermedius caudalis, lateralis posterior lateralis and lateralis posterior medialis receive substantial projections from the suprageniculate sector of the reticular thalamic nucleus. The nucleus lateralis medialis receives an abundant projection from the three sectors (suprageniculate, pregeniculate and infrageniculate) of the reticular thalamic nucleus. Except for the lateralis intermedius caudalis, all nuclei of the lateral posterior-pulvinar complex receive consistent projections from the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus, the nucleus lateralis medialis receiving the densest one. Our findings suggest that visual, auditory, somatosensory, motor and limbic impulses from thalamic nuclei and from primary sensory and association cortical areas modulate the activity of the nucleus lateralis medialis via the reticular thalamic nucleus. The remaining nuclei of the lateral posterior-pulvinar complex are mainly modulated by sectors of the reticular thalamic nucleus that receive afferent connections from visual structures. The intrathalamic projections arising from the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus may be the way through which visuomotor inputs reach the different components of the lateral posterior-pulvinar thalamic complex.  相似文献   

11.
Xi C  Zeng S  Zhang X  Zuo M 《Journal of anatomy》2008,212(5):578-589
To characterize the neurogenic development of the visual areas of the turtle (Pelodiscus sinensis) during embryogenesis, a single dose of [(3)H]-thymidine (10 microCi) was injected into egg yolks from stages S11-12 to S21. At hatching, localization of [(3)H]-thymidine incorporation was examined, and led to three main observations. (1) Neurogenesis occurred in the stratum griseum centrale of the tectum opticum from S11-12 to S16 with a peak at S12. No obvious gradients of neurogenesis were observed. (2) Neurogenesis in the nucleus rotundus (Rot) and in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (GLd) occurred from S11-12 to S15. Gradients of neurogenesis were detected along ventral-dorsal and lateral-medial axes in the Rot, but only the latter neurogenic gradient occurred in the GLd. (3) In the visual region of the dorsal ventricular ridge, neurogenesis lasted from S11-12 to S16. Similarly, neurogenesis occurred from S11-12 to S16-17 in the dorsal cortex, with a peak at S12 for both telencephalic visual regions. Neurogenesis followed a ventrolateral to dorsomedial gradient in the visual region of the dorsal ventricular ridge, and a superficial to deep gradient in the caudal dorsal cortex. A significant number of neurons in the rostral dorsal cortex followed a deep (earlier arising) to superficial (later arising) pattern of neurogenesis, similar to that in the avian Wulst or in the mammalian isocortex. Finally, we compared the timing and development of neurogenesis in the turtle with birds and mammals to understand the evolutionary implications of these processes.  相似文献   

12.
Direct projections of the hypothalamic nuclei to the thalamic mediodorsal nucleus (MD) were studied using retrograde and anterograde transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)-HRP. HRP and WGA-HRP were injected into the MD, thalamic paraventricular, lateral habenular and hypothalamic nuclei. The results indicate that the MD, particularly its medial part, receives a moderate amount of hypothalamic afferents, and that most of these afferents originate in the medial part of the lateral hypothalamic nucleus at anterior levels, while a limited number are derived from the dorsal, dorsomedial, ventromedial and anterior hypothalamic and lateral preoptic nuclei.  相似文献   

13.
We have examined the cyto- and chemoarchitecture of the dorsal thalamus of the short beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus), using Nissl and myelin staining, immunoreactivity for parvalbumin, calbindin, calretinin and non-phosphorylated neurofilament protein (SMI-32 antibody), and histochemistry for acetylcholinesterase and NADPH diaphorase. Immunohistochemical methods revealed many nuclear boundaries, which were difficult to discern with Nissl staining. Parvalbumin immunoreactive somata were concentrated in the ventral posterior, reticular, posterior, lateral and medial geniculate nuclei, while parvalbumin immunoreactivity of the neuropil was present throughout all but the midline nuclei. Large numbers of calbindin immunoreactive somata were also found within the midline thalamic nuclei, and thalamic sensory relay nuclei. Immunoreactivity for calretinin was found in many small somata within the lateral geniculate “a” nucleus, with other labelled somata found in the lateral geniculate “b” nucleus, ventral posterior medial and ventral posterior lateral nuclei. Immunoreactivity with the SMI-32 antibody was largely confined to somata and neuropil within the thalamocortical relay nuclei (ventral posterior medial and lateral nuclei, lateral and medial geniculate nuclei and the posterior thalamic nucleus). In broad terms there were many similarities between the thalamus of this monotreme and that of eutheria (e.g. disposition of somatosensory thalamus, complementarity of parvalbumin and calbindin immunoreactive structures), but there were some unique features of the thalamus of the echidna. These include the relatively small size of the thalamic reticular nucleus and the preponderance of calbindin immunoreactive neurons over parvalbumin immunoreactive neurons in the ventral posterior nucleus.  相似文献   

14.
We have examined the cyto- and chemoarchitecture of the dorsal thalamus of the short beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus), using Nissl and myelin staining, immunoreactivity for parvalbumin, calbindin, calretinin and non-phosphorylated neurofilament protein (SMI-32 antibody), and histochemistry for acetylcholinesterase and NADPH diaphorase. Immunohistochemical methods revealed many nuclear boundaries, which were difficult to discern with Nissl staining. Parvalbumin immunoreactive somata were concentrated in the ventral posterior, reticular, posterior, lateral and medial geniculate nuclei, while parvalbumin immunoreactivity of the neuropil was present throughout all but the midline nuclei. Large numbers of calbindin immunoreactive somata were also found within the midline thalamic nuclei, and thalamic sensory relay nuclei. Immunoreactivity for calretinin was found in many small somata within the lateral geniculate “a” nucleus, with other labelled somata found in the lateral geniculate “b” nucleus, ventral posterior medial and ventral posterior lateral nuclei. Immunoreactivity with the SMI-32 antibody was largely confined to somata and neuropil within the thalamocortical relay nuclei (ventral posterior medial and lateral nuclei, lateral and medial geniculate nuclei and the posterior thalamic nucleus). In broad terms there were many similarities between the thalamus of this monotreme and that of eutheria (e.g. disposition of somatosensory thalamus, complementarity of parvalbumin and calbindin immunoreactive structures), but there were some unique features of the thalamus of the echidna. These include the relatively small size of the thalamic reticular nucleus and the preponderance of calbindin immunoreactive neurons over parvalbumin immunoreactive neurons in the ventral posterior nucleus.  相似文献   

15.
Summary During early development, the perireticular thalamic nucleus is very large (i.e. has many cells) and has a strong projection to the dorsal thalamus and to the cerebral neocortex. By adulthood, the nucleus has much reduced in size and only a few cells remain. It is not clear whether these perireticular cells that remain into adulthood maintain their connections with the dorsal thalamus and with the neocortex. This study examines this issue by injecting neuronal tracers into various nuclei of the dorsal thalamus (dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus, medial geniculate complex, ventroposteromedial nucleus, lateral posterior nucleus, posterior thalamic nucleus) and into different areas of the neocortex (somatosensory, visual, auditory). After injections of tracer into the individual nuclei of the rat and ferret dorsal thalamus, retrogradely-labelled perireticular cells are seen. In general, after each injection, the retrogradely-labelled perireticular cells lie immediately adjacent to a group of retrogradely-labelled reticular cells. For instance, after injections into the medial geniculate complex, perireticular cells adjacent to the auditory reticular sector are retrogradely-labelled, whilst after an injection into the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus, retrogradely-labelled perireticular cells adjacent to the visual reticular sector are seen. By contrast, injections of tracer into various areas of the rat and ferret neocortex result in no retrogradely-labelled cells in the perireticular nucleus. Thus, unlike during perinatal development when perireticular cells project to both neocortex and dorsal thalamus, perireticular cells in the adult seem to project to the dorsal thalamus only: the perireticular projection to the neocortex appears to be entirely transient.  相似文献   

16.
Ascending output from the basal ganglia to the primate motor thalamus is carried by GABAergic nigro- and pallido-thalamic pathways, which interact with intrinsic thalamic GABAergic systems represented in primates by local circuit neurons and axons of the reticular thalamic nucleus. Disease-triggered pathological processes in the basal ganglia can compromise any of these pathways either directly or indirectly, yet the effects of basal ganglia lesioning on its thalamic afferent-receiving territories has not been studied in primates. Two GABA(A) receptor ligands, [(3)H]muscimol and [(3)H]flunitrazepam, were used to study the distribution and binding properties of the receptor in intact monkeys, those with kainic acid lesions in the globus pallidus, and those with ibotenic acid lesions in the reticular nucleus using quantitative autoradiographic technique on cryostat sections of fresh frozen brain tissue. In control monkeys the binding affinities for [(3)H]muscimol averaged 50 nM in the thalamic nuclei and 86 nM in the basal ganglia while the binding densities varied (maximum density of binding sites [Bmax] range of 99.4-1000.1 fmol/mg of tissue). Binding affinities and Bmax values for [(3)H]flunitrazepam averaged 2.02 nM and 81-113 fmol/mg of tissue, respectively. Addition of 100-microM GABA increased average affinity to 1.35 nM whereas Bmax values increased anywhere from 1-50% in different nuclei. Zolpidem (100 nM) decreased binding by 68-80%. Bmax values for both ligands were decreased at the two survival times in both medial and lateral globus pallidus implying involvement of both nuclei in the lesion. Statistically significant, 40% decrease (P=0.055) of Bmax for [(3)H]muscimol was observed in the ventral anterior nucleus pars densicellularis (VAdc, the main pallidal projection territory in the thalamus) 1 week after globus pallidus lesioning and a 36% decrease (P=0.017) 4 months post-lesioning. In contrast, [(3)H]flunitrazepam Bmax values in the VAdc of the same animals were increased by 23% (P=0.021) at 1 week and 28% (P=0.005) 4 months postlesion, respectively. One week after the reticular nucleus lesioning, the binding densities of [(3)H]muscimol and [(3)H]flunitrazepam were decreased in the thalamic nuclei receiving projections from the lesioned reticular nucleus sector by approximately 50% (P<0.05) and 10-33% (P<0.05), respectively. The results suggest that different GABA(A) receptor subtypes are associated with different GABAergic systems in the thalamus which react differently to deafferentation.  相似文献   

17.
The thalamus of the spiny rat Proechimys guyannensis (casiragua), a common rodent of the Amazon basin, was investigated with immunohistochemistry, using as markers GABA and glutamic acid decarboxylase, and calcium binding proteins. As in all mammals, GABAergic neurons containing also parvalbumin filled the reticular nucleus, and GABAergic cells were seen in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus. At variance with the laboratory rat, GABAergic and parvalbumin-containing neurons were also seen in the laterodorsal and anterodorsal nuclei, in which the two markers were co-distributed. Calbindin-immunopositive cells were widely distributed in dorsal thalamic domains, except for the intralaminar nuclei, and prevailed in the laterodorsal nucleus. The distribution of calretinin-immunopositive neurons was more restricted, and they were especially concentrated in the laterodorsal and midline nuclei.At variance with the laboratory rat, in which systemic pilocarpine administration induces status epilepticus and results in chronic limbic epilepsy, pilocarpine elicited in casiragua an acute seizure that was not followed by spontaneous seizures up to 1 month, when changes were evaluated in the thalamus using also image analysis. Parvalbumin immunostaining in reticular nucleus neurons and in the dorsal thalamus neuropil, and the number of parvalbumin-positive and GABAergic cells in the laterodorsal and anterodorsal nuclei, exhibited an increase with respect to controls. Calbindin immunostaining was also enhanced, whereas calretinin immunostaining was mostly reduced, but was preserved in midline neurons. The findings show, after an acute seizure induced in an animal model of anti-convulsant mechanisms, regional long-term neurochemical alterations that could reflect functional changes in inhibitory and excitatory thalamic neurons.  相似文献   

18.
The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) projections to the midline and intralaminar thalamic nuclei were examined in the rat. Stereotaxic injections of the retrograde tracer cholera toxin-β subunit (CTb) were made in 12 different thalamic sites. These included individual midline thalamic nuclei (anterior, middle, and posterior portions of the paraventricular thalamic nucleus (PVT), intermediodorsal, paratenial, rhomboid, or reuniens nuclei) and intralaminar thalamic nuclei (lateral parafascicular, central lateral, or central medial nuclei) as well as the mediodorsal and anteroventral thalamic nuclei. After 10–14 days survival, the brains from these animals were processed histochemically and the distribution of retrogradely-labeled neurons was mapped throughout the rostralcaudal extent of the SCN. Within this collective group of midline and intralaminar thalamic nuclei, the only region innervated by the SCN was the PVT. Approximately 80% of this projection arose from the dorsomedial SCN, and the remaining projection originated from the ventrolateral SCN which targeted mainly the anterior division of the PVT. Virtually no SCN neurons were labeled after CTb injections centered in any of the other midline thalamic nuclei, which includes the intermediodorsal, mediodorsal, paratenial, rhomboid, or reuniens thalamic nuclei. Similarly, no evidence for a SCN projection to the intralaminar thalamic nuclei was found. The discussion focuses on the role of SCN→PVT pathway in modulating cerebral cortical functions.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Potentially convergent inputs to cerebellar-receiving and basal ganglia-receiving areas of the thalamus were identified using horseradish peroxidase (HRP) retrograde tracing techniques. HRP was deposited iontophoretically into the ventroanterior (VA), ventromedial (VM), and ventrolateral (VL) thalamic nuclei in the cat. The relative numbers of labeled neurons in the basal ganglia and the cerebellar nuclei were used to assess the extent to which the injection was in cerebellar-receiving or basal ganglia-receiving portions of thalamus. The rostral pole of VA showed reciprocal connections with prefrontal portions of the cerebral cortex. Only the basal ganglia and the hypothalamus provided non-thalamic input to modulate these cortico-thalamo-cortical loops. In VM, there were reciprocal connections with prefrontal, premotor, and insular areas of the cerebral cortex. The basal ganglia (especially the substantia nigra), and to a lesser extent, the posterior and ventral portions of the deep cerebellar nuclei, provided input to VM and may modulate these corticothalamo-cortical loops. The premotor cortical areas connected to VM include those associated with eye movements, and afferents from the superior colliculus, a region of documented importance in oculomotor control, also were labeled by injections into VM. The dorsolateral portion of the VA-VL complex primarily showed reciprocal connections with the medial premotor (area 6) cortex. Basal ganglia and cerebellar afferents both may modulate this cortico-thalamo-cortical loop, although they do not necessarily converge on the same thalamic neurons. The cerebellar input to dorsolateral VA-VL was from posterior and ventral portions of the cerebellar nuclei, and the major potential brainstem afferents to this region of thalamus were from the pretectum. Mid- and caudo-lateral portions of VL had reciprocal connections with primary motor cortex (area 4). The dorsal and anterior portions of the cerebellar nuclei had a dominant input to this corticothalamo-cortical loop. Potentially converging brainstem afferents to this portion of VL were from the pretectum, especially pretectal areas to which somatosensory afferents project.List of Abbreviations AC central amygdaloid nucleus - AL lateral amygdaloid nucleus - AM anteromedial thalamic nucleus - AV anteroventral thalamic nucleus - BC brachium conjunctivum - BIC brachium of the inferior colliculus - Cd caudate nucleus - CL centrolateral thalamic nucleus - CM centre median nucleus - CP cerebral peduncle - CUN cuneate nucleus - DBC decussation of the brachium conjunctivum - DR dorsal raphe nuclei - EC external cuneate nucleus - ENTO entopeduncular nucleus - FN fastigial nucleus - FX fornix - GP globus pallidus - GR gracile nucleus - IC internal capsule - ICP inferior cerebellar peduncle - IP interpeduncular nucleus - IVN inferior vestibular nucleus - LD lateral dorsal thalamic nucleus - LGN lateral geniculate nucleus - LH lateral hypothalamus - LP lateral posterior thalamic complex - LRN lateral reticular nucleus - LVN lateral vestibular nucleus - MB mammillary body - MD mediodorsal thalamic nucleus - MG medial geniculate nucleus - ML medial lemniscus - MLF medial lengitudinal fasciculus - MT mammillothalamic tract - MVN medial vestibular nucleus - NDBB nucleus of the diagonal band of Broca - NIA anterior nucleus interpositus - NIP posterior nucleus interpositus - OD optic decussation - OT optic tract - PAC paracentral thalamic nucleus - PPN pedunculopontine region - PRO gyrus proreus - PRT pretectal region - PT pyramidal tract - PTA anterior pretectal region - PTM medial pretectal region - PTO olivary pretectal nucleus - PTP poterior pretectal region - Pul pulvinar nucleus - Put putamen - RF reticular formation - RN red nucleus - Rt reticular complex of the thalamus - S solitary tract - SCi superior colliculus, intermediate gray - SN substantia nigra - ST subthalamic nucleus - VA ventroanterior thalamic nucleus - VB ventrobasal complex - VL ventrolateral thalamic nucleus - VM ventromedial thalamic nucleus - III oculomotor nucleus - IIIn oculomotor nerve - 5S spinal trigeminal nucleus - 5T spinal trigeminal tract - VII facial nucleus  相似文献   

20.
Summary The projections of cholinergic and noncholinergic neurons of the rostral brainstem reticular formation to the visual thalamic nuclei (dorsal lateral geniculate — LG, lateral posterior — LP, and perigeniculate — PG) were studied in cat by using the retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase conjugated with wheat germ agglutinin (WGA-HRP) combined with choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) immunohistochemistry. After thalamic injections, less than 10% of all retrogradely labeled neurons in the upper brainstem reticular core were located at most rostral (perirubral) levels where there are virtually no cholinergic elements. Approximately 75–80% of all HRP-positive neurons in the reticular formation were found between stereotaxic planes anterior 1 and posterior 2, in the peribrachial (PB) area of the pedunculopontine nucleus and in the laterodorsal tegmental (LDT) nucleus. The brainstem afferents to LG and PG thalamic nuclei essentially derive from PB neurons, with a small contribution from LDT cells, whereas the LP thalamic nucleus receives massive inputs from both PB and LDT brainstem nuclei. Of all HRP-positive elements visualized in the PB nucleus after an LG or a PG injection, 87% and 73%, respectively, were also ChAT-positive. Of all HRP-positive elements in the PB and LDT nuclei after an LP injection, 82% and 92%, respectively, were also ChAT-positive. The numbers of labeled neurons in the contralateral brainstem reticular nuclei reach 30% to 50% of the numbers found in the ipsilateral reticular formation. These findings reveal the existence of a prominent cholinergic projection from the brainstem reticular formation to the visual thalamic nuclei. Such a chemospecific projection is probably involved in phasic and tonic events of activated behavioral states.After this paper was accepted for publication,we read a study by DeLima and Singer (J Comp Neurol 259:92-121, 1987) on cholinergic and monoaminergic afferents to the LG nucleus. The results reported in that study fit in well with our data.  相似文献   

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