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1.
Afferents to the abducens nucleus in the monkey and cat   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The abducens nucleus is a central coordinating element in the generation of conjugate horizontal eye movements. As such, it should receive and combine information relevant to visual fixation, saccadic eye movements, and smooth eye movements evoked by vestibular and visual stimuli. To reveal possible sources of these signals, we retrogradely labeled the afferents to the abducens nucleus by electrophoretically injecting horseradish peroxidase into an abducens nucleus in four monkeys and two cats. The histologic material was processed by the tetramethyl benzidine (TMB) method of Mesulam. In both species the largest source of afferents to the abducens nucleus was bilateral projections from the ventrolateral vestibular nucleus and the rostral pole of the medial vestibular nucleus. Scattered neurons were also labeled in the middle and caudal levels of the medial vestibular nucleus. Large numbers of neurons were labeled in the ventral margin of the nucleus prepositus hypoglossi in the cat and in the common margin of the nucleus prepositus and the medial vestibular nucleus in the monkey, a region we call the marginal zone. Substantial numbers of retrogradely labeled neurons were found in the dorsomedial pontine reticular formation both caudal and rostral to the abducens nuclei. In the monkey, large numbers of labeled neurons were present in the contralateral medial rectus subdivision of the oculomotor complex, while smaller numbers occurred in the ipsilateral medial rectus subdivision and elsewhere in the oculomotor complex. In the cat, large numbers of retrogradely labeled cells were present in a small periaqueductal gray nucleus immediately dorsal to the caudal pole of the oculomotor complex, and a few labeled neurons were also dispersed through the caudal part of the oculomotor complex. Occasional labeled neurons were present in the contralateral superior colliculus in both species. The size and distribution of the labeled neurons within the intermediate gray differed dramatically in the two species. In the cat, the retrogradely labeled neurons were very large and occurred predominantly in the central region of the colliculus, while in the monkey, they were small to intermediate in size and were distributed more uniformly within the middle gray. Among the afferent populations present in the monkey, but not in the cat, was a group of scattered neurons in the ipsilateral rostral interstitial nucleus of the medial longitudinal fasciculus and a denser, bilateral population in the interstitial nucleus of Cajal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Following injections of horseradish peroxidase in the oculomotor and the trochlear nuclei in the hen, the occurrence of labeled cells was plotted in the vestibular nuclei. The majority of labeled cells was localized in the superior, the medial, and the tangential nucleus. Within the superior nucleus the cells were found mainly caudally, extending medially and ventrally in central areas. In the medial nucleus labeled cells were localized exclusively in its rostral half, mainly in ventrolateral regions. Most, if not all, cells in the nucleus tangentialis project rostrally. In addition, rostrally projecting vestibular cells were found in the cell group A and the rostrolateral part of the descending nucleus. The projection to the oculomotor nuclear complex is from the superior nucleus and the cell group A bilateral but chiefly ipsilateral, from the medial nucleus bilateral, from the tangential nucleus and the rostral pole of the descending nucleus chiefly contralateral. Massive labeling was found in the abducens nucleus, somewhat less in the reticular formation, mainly in the lateral regions of the medial part at the level of the abducens and facial nuclei. Labeled cells were, in addition, found in the deep layers of the optic tectum, and scattered cells in the nucleus raphe. The findings are discussed in the light of what is known of the organization of the vestibular nuclei in the hen and the rostral projection of the vestibular nuclei in mammals.  相似文献   

3.
Attempts were made to co-define afferents of the oculomotor nuclear complex (OMC) and their putative neurotransmitters in the squirrel monkey. Wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) and wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to enzymatically inactive HRP and coupled to colloidal gold (WGAapoHRP-AU) were used as retrograde tracers in combination with immunocytochemical methods. Primarily unilateral injections were made into portions of the OMC. Stabilized tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) and silver enhanced sections were immunoreacted with antisera for choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), glutamate (GLU), aspartate (ASP), aminobutyric acid (GABA), serotonin (5-HT) and cholecystokinin (CCK). Moderate numbers of ChAT-IR neurons in caudal regions of the medial vestibular nuclei (MVN) projected to the OMC. Tracer labeled ChAT-IR cells in the MVN projected ipsilaterally to the ventral nucleus (medial rectus subdivision) of the OMC and bilaterally with contralateral dominance to other OMC subdivisions. Cholinergic neurons in the dorsal paragigantocellular reticular nucleus (DPG) projected bilaterally to each half of the OMC. Cells of the DPG, considered to contain inhibitory burst neurons impinging upon the contralateral abducens nucleus, were shown to project to virtually all subdivision of the OMC. Abducens motor neurons were ChAT-IR, but abducens internuclear neurons were not. Cells in caudal parts of the nucleus prepositus (NPP) projecting to the ipsilateral ventral nucleus of the OMC were not ChAT-positive; ChAT-IR cells in rostral NPP did not project to the OMC. Unilateral OMC injections labeled cells ipsilaterally in the RiMLF, contralaterally in the pretectal olivary nucleus, the interstitial nucleus of Cajal and the infracerebellar nucleus and bilaterally in the superior vestibular nucleus, none of which were ChAT-IR. A small number of cells in the locus ceruleus projected ipsilaterally to the OMC. Although large numbers of vestibular neurons were GLU-IR and ASP-IR, only a few tracer labeled ASP-IR neurons in the contralateral MVN projected to the OMC. No other GLU- or ASP-positive neurons were immunoreactive for GABA, 5-HT or CCK, but cells of the lateral vestibular nucleus were surrounded by CCK-IR fibers and terminals.  相似文献   

4.
Following microinjections of a colloidal gold complex into the nucleus paragigantocellularis (PGi) of the ventral medulla, and of latex microspheres into the nucleus abducens (Abd) of the same animal, retrogradely labeled neurons were identified in the region of the contralateral supraoculomotor nucleus (SOM) in the ventromedial periaqueductal gray (PAG). Neurons labeled from the Abd were found in the SOM in the ventromedial PAG throughout the midbrain, as well as scattered ventrally in the oculomotor nucleus. Neurons in the SOM area retrogradely labeled from the PGi were most numerous rostral to the dorsal raphe nucleus and extended throughout the level of the oculomotor nucleus. Direct comparison of the two labels revealed that the neurons that project to the Abd were located slightly more ventrally than PGi-projecting neurons. Almost no doubly labeled neurons were identified, although singly labeled neurons formed adjacent but separate populations. These results indicate that neurons in the SOM area projecting to the PGi are distinct from those projecting to the Abd, and that the PGi-projecting neurons are probably not pre-oculomotor neurons. Given their more dorsal location and the nature of their target neurons in the rostral ventrolateral medulla, PGi-projecting neurons may be related to visceromotor, as opposed to oculomotor functions.  相似文献   

5.
The connections of the cerebellar cortex with vestibular premotor neurons of the oculomotor and collimotor systems in the pigeon were delineated in experiments using WGA-HRP as an anterograde and retrograde tracer. Putative premotor neuron pools were identified by injections into the oculomotor (mIII) and trochlear nuclei (mIV) and into the most rostral portion of the cervical neck motor nucleus, nucleus supraspinalis (SSp). The retrograde data indicate that ipsilateral projections upon oculomotor neurons arise from the medial portions of the superior (VeS) and tangential (Ta) nuclei. Contralateral projections originate from the infracerebellar nucleus, the interstitial vestibular region including the main (lateral) portion of the tangential nucleus, and from the descending and medial vestibular nuclei (VeD, VeM). These projections were confirmed in anterograde studies that also defined the connections of these vestibular premotor regions with specific subnuclear divisions of the pigeon's "oculomotor" nuclei (mIII, mIV, mVI). The organization of projections from the vestibular nuclei to the pigeon's extraocular motoneurons is similar to that reported in mammals. Projections upon neck premotor neurons arise primarily from neurons in the interstitial region of the vestibular nuclear complex. After injections in SSp, retrogradely labeled neurons were found, contralaterally, in the lateral part of the tangential and superior vestibular nuclei and in the dorsolateral vestibular nucleus (VDL). Ipsilateral labeling was seen in the medial interstitial region (VeM, VeD, and medial Ta). These projections were confirmed in anterograde experiments. With the exception of VDL, vestibular nuclei projecting to neck motoneurons also project to extraocular motoneurons. Thus the infracerebellar nucleus projects exclusively, and the superior vestibular nucleus predominantly, upon oculomotor (mIII, mIV) nuclei; VDL projects predominantly upon the neck motor nucleus, whereas the interstitial vestibular regions (medial Ta, rostral VeD, intermediate VeM) project upon both collimotor and oculomotor neurons. The pattern of retrograde labeling seen in the cerebellar cortex after injections into vestibular premotor nuclei was used to define the projections of specific cerebellar cortical zones upon vestibular eye and neck premotor neurons. Corticovestibular projections upon these regions arise from the auricle and lateral unfoliated cortex, the posterior lobe components of cortical zones B and E, and from the vestibulocerebellum. Each of these cortical zones projects upon components of the vestibular nuclear complex, which are premotor to either oculomotor nuclei or collimotor nuclei. The hodological findings are related to the functional organization of the oculomotor and collimotor systems in the pigeon and compared with the mammalian data.  相似文献   

6.
Balaban CD 《Brain research》2004,996(1):126-137
Previous anatomical studies in rabbits and rats have shown that the superior vestibular nucleus (SVN), medial vestibular nucleus (MVN) and inferior vestibular nucleus (IVN) project to the parabrachial nucleus (PBN) and K?lliker-Fuse (KF) nucleus. Adult male albino rabbits and Long-Evans rats received iontophoretic injections of biotinylated dextran amine, Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin, Fluoro-Gold or tetramethylrhodamine dextran amine into either the vestibular nuclei or the PBN and KF nuclei. The results were similar in both rats and rabbits. Injections of retrograde tracers into the vestibular nuclei produced retrogradely labeled neurons bilaterally in caudal third of the medial, external medial, and external lateral PBN in both species, with more variable labeling in KF. Rats also had consistent bilateral (predominantly contralateral) labeling in the ventrolateral PBN. The most prominent labeling was produced from injections that included the SVN, with fewer labeled neurons observed from injections in the caudal MVN and the IVN. Anterograde transport of BDA from injections into the PBN and KF nuclei of rabbits revealed prominent projections to the SVN, dorsal aspect of the rostral MVN, caudal MVN, pars beta of the LVN and IVN. These connections appear to contain a component that is reciprocal to the vestibulo-parabrachial pathway and a non-reciprocal component to regions connected with the vestibulocerebellum and vestibulo-motor reflex pathways. These connections support the concept that a synthesis of autonomic, vestibular and limbic information is an integral property of pathways related to balance control in both the brain stem and forebrain. It is suggested that these projections may contribute broadly to both performance tradeoffs in vestibular-related pathways during variations in the behavioral context and affective state and the close association between anxiety and balance function.  相似文献   

7.
The efferent and afferent pathways of the chick tangential nucleus were studied by using horseradish peroxidase (HRP: Sigma type VI) to label nerve cell bodies and fibers. Depositions of HRP into the tangential nucleus, as well as into the second cervical level of the spinal cord, show that the axons of tangential neurons on leaving the nucleus form an anteriorly coursing tract that passes through the ventrolateral vestibular nucleus without branching and then to the contralateral medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF). Within the MLF, the tangential axons course posteriorly, forming collaterals that innervate the abducens nucleus, and then proceed to the cervical spinal cord. This pathway was demonstrated for the axons of the two main neurons, the principal and elongate cells, in 1-day, 1-week, and 7-week-old animals. In addition, we propose the existence of an unidentified, ipsilateral pathway to the spinal cord for the tangential axons, since HRP injections into one side of the spinal cord resulted in the bilateral labeling of tangential neurons. No labeled cells were found in the tangential nucleus following HRP depositions into the uvula, flocculus, pontine reticular formation, nucleus piriformis, nucleus jumeaux, vestibulocerebellar nucleus, retrotangential nucleus, or the dorsomedial part of the medial vestibular nucleus. The tangential nucleus receives afferents from the colossal vestibular fibers (spoon endings), small collaterals of fine vestibular ampullary fibers, flocculus, and high cervical levels of the spinal cord. From our small sample, it appears that the spinal cord fibers form most of the afferent terminals in the tangential nucleus in 1-day, 1-week, and 7-week-old animals.  相似文献   

8.
The distribution of cells in the rostral medial mesencephalon and caudal diencephalon which project to the vestibular complex was mapped in the cat by using retrograde axonal transport of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP). Subsequent experiments using anterograde transport of WGA-HRP clarified the position of the terminations of the mesodiencephalic-derived afferents in the vestibular complex. After large injections which involved the entire vestibular complex, retrogradely labeled cells were seen in both the ipsilateral and contralateral interstitial nucleus of Cajal (INC) and were more numerous in its rostral pole. Labeled cells also occurred in the perifascicular region, both immediately adjacent to the fasciculus retroflexus and rostroventral to it. Fusiform midline cells of the Edinger-Westphal nucleus were also labeled, as well as a number of cells in the adjacent somatic portion of the oculomotor complex (OMC). Another group of labeled cells was observed within the contralateral medial terminal nucleus of the accessory optic tract (MTN) and in the posterior hypothalamic nucleus. Injections limited to subregions of the vestibular complex resulted in similar but slightly varying distributions and numbers of retrogradely labeled cells. After injections covering the caudal half of the medial vestibular nucleus (MVN) and descending vestibular nucleus (DVN), labeled cells in the INC and tegmentum dorsal to it were especially prominent, but none was seen in the MTN or OMC. Injections placed in the rostral MVN, lateral vestibular nucleus, y group, and superior vestibular nucleus resulted in a distribution of labeled cells similar to that seen following global vestibular injections, but these cells were fewer in number. After an injection confined to the y group, a small number of retrogradely labeled cells were seen in the rostral pole of the INC and immediately ventral to the fasciculus retroflexus. Projections from the rostral medial mesencephalon and caudal diencephalon to the MVN, DVN, and y group were confirmed by using anterograde transport of WGA-HRP. Direct projections from the INC-perifascicular regions and somatic neurons of the OMC to the caudal vestibular complex could play a role in eye-head coordination. Those projections from the rostral INC and MTN to the rostral vestibular complex may play a role in vertical eye movements and responses to visual stimuli which move in the vertical plane.  相似文献   

9.
Internuclear neurons in the ocular motor system of frogs.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Medial and lateral rectus motoneurons of frogs were localized after retrograde labeling with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) injected in the medial rectus muscle or applied on the cut end of the abducens nerve. Coordinates of these cell columns were used as target areas for the injection of small amounts of HRP (20-60 nl) and [3H]leucine (25-40 nl) and as search areas for retrogradely and anterogradely labeled internuclear neurons (INT) in in vivo and in vitro experiments. HRP injection in the medial rectus subdivision of the oculomotor nucleus (n = 6) resulted in retrograde labeling of cell bodies in the contralateral principal abducens nucleus. On the average about 16 cells per animal were found. Somatic diameters were about 13.5 +/- 2.8 microns (n = 32). The number and the size of these abducens internuclear neurons (AbINT) are smaller than those of lateral rectus motoneurons (n = 75; diameter: 19 +/- 3.2 microns). A crossed projection of AbINT to medial rectus motoneurons in the contralateral oculomotor nucleus is further supported by autoradiographic results. Following injection of [3H]leucine into the abducens nucleus, a high density of silver grains was visible within the contralateral oculomotor nucleus, mainly in the caudal part of the oculomotor nucleus, where medial rectus motoneurons are located. Injection of [3H]leucine in vivo (n = 4) and in vitro (n = 3) resulted in a similar high density of silver grains within the contralateral oculomotor nucleus, but the background level of silver grains was significantly higher after in vitro (264 +/- 38/2,500 microns2) than after in vivo injections (195 +/- 17/2,500 microns2). HRP injection in the principal abducens nucleus (n = 9) resulted in retrograde labeling of cell bodies in the medial rectus subdivisions of the bilateral oculomotor nuclei. Ipsilateral projections predominated, with about 10 (+/- 8) labeled cells over contralateral projections (about 3 +/- 2). Average diameters of these oculomotor internuclear neurons (OcINT) were again smaller (10.8 +/- 2 microns; n = 18) than those of medial rectus motoneurons (14.4 +/- 3 microns; n = 52). In addition, retrogradely labeled cells were consistently encountered in the bilateral vestibular nuclei, the cerebellar nuclei, the dorsal brainstem caudal to the abducens nuclei, and ipsilaterally in the pretectum. Most of the vestibular neurons were located in the rostral part of the vestibular nuclear complex. These neurons might constitute part of the three-neuronal arc of the vestibulo-ocular reflex in the frog. Labeled cells in the pretectum were restricted to the ipsilateral posterior thalamic nucleus (P).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Previous anatomical and physiological studies have revealed a substantial projection from the periaqueductal gray (PAG) to the nucleus paragigantocellularis (PGi). In addition, physiological studies have indicated that the PAG is composed of functionally distinct subregions. However, projections from PAG subregions to PGi have not been comprehensively examined. In the present study, we sought to examine possible topographic specificity for projections from subregions of the PAG to PGi. Pressure or iontophoretic injections of wheat germ agglutinin-conjugated horseradish peroxidase, or of Fluoro-Gold, placed into the PGi of the rat retrogradely labeled a substantial number of neurons in the PAG from the level of the Edinger-Westphal nucleus to the caudal midbrain. Retrogradely labeled neurons were preferentially aggregated in distinct subregions of the PAG. Rostrally, at the level of the oculomotor nucleus, labeled neurons were i) compactly aggregated in the ventromedial portion of the PAG corresponding closely to the supraoculomotor nucleus of the central gray, ii) in the lateral and ventrolateral PAG, and iii) in medial dorsal PAG. More caudally, retrogradely labeled neurons became less numerous in the dorsomedial PAG but were more widely scattered throughout the lateral and ventrolateral parts of the PAG. Only few retrogradely labeled neurons were found in the ventromedial part of the PAG at caudal levels. Injections of retrograde tracers restricted to subregions of the PGi suggested topography for afferents from the PAG. Injections into the lateral portion of the PGi yielded the greatest number of labeled neurons within the rostral ventromedial PAG. Medially placed injections yielded numerous retrogradely labeled neurons in the lateral and ventrolateral PAG. Injections placed in the rostral pole of the PGi (medial to the facial nucleus) produced the greatest number of retrogradely labeled neurons in the dorsal PAG. To examine the pathways taken by fibers projecting from PAG neurons to the medulla, and to further specify the topography for the terminations of these afferents in the PGi, the anterograde tracer Phaseolus vulgaris-leucoagglutinin was iontophoretically deposited into subregions of the PAG that contained retrogradely labeled neurons in the above experiments. These results revealed distinct fiber pathways to the rostral medulla that arise from the dorsal, lateral/ventrolateral, and ventromedial parts of the PAG. These injections also showed that there are differential but overlapping innervation patterns within the PGi. Consistent with the retrograde tracing results, injections into the rostral ventromedial PAG near the supraoculomotor nucleus yielded anterograde labeling immediately ventral to the nucleus ambiguus in the ventrolateral medulla, within the retrofacial portion of the PGi.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Afferent connections of the oculomotor nucleus in the chick   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Horseradish peroxidase was injected into the oculomotor nucleus of the chick in order to locate and characterize the neurons projecting to this nucleus. In the rostral mesencephalon, 120-180 neurons were labelled in the medial area of the ipsilateral nucleus campi Foreli; 190-220 in the interstitial nucleus of Cajal (most of them contralateral); and smaller numbers bilaterally in the medial mesencephalic reticular formation, the nucleus of the basal optic root complex, and the central grey matter. More caudally, numerous neurons were labelled in the contralateral abducens nucleus and the vestibular complex and a few in the nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis. Labelled neurons appeared ipsilaterally in the caudal region of the nucleus vestibularis superior and in the rostral tip of the nucleus descendens just lateral to the tractus lamino-olivaris. In the contralateral vestibular complex, a group of labelled cells observed in the dorsolateral area may be homologous to the mammalian cell group Y. At the level of the contralateral abducens nucleus, the most numerous group of cells (625-700) projecting to the oculomotor nucleus formed a lateromedial fringe that affected the nucleus tangentialis, the rostral tip of the nucleus descendens, and the ventrolateral region of the nucleus medialis. Only a few labelled neurons were seen in the contralateral nucleus vestibularis superior, the ipsilateral cell group A, and the ipsilateral nucleus vestibularis medialis.  相似文献   

12.
Afferent and efferent connections of the fastigial oculomotor region (FOR) were studied in macaque monkeys by using axonal transport of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP). When injected HRP is confined to the FOR, retrogradely labeled cells appear in lobules VIc and VII of the ipsilateral vermis and in group b of the contralateral medial accessory olive (MAO). In reference to the maps of topographical organization, the extent of the effective site in the fastigial nucleus (FN) could be assessed from the distributions of labeled Purkinje cells (P cells) in the vermis and labeled olivary neurons in the MAO. In contrast to the unilateral nature of the P-cell and climbing-fiber projections, those from the other brainstem regions to the FOR were bilateral. Following the injection of HRP into the FOR, the largest number of retrogradely labeled cells appeared in the pontine nuclei. Although the number of labeled cells was greater on the contralateral side in both the peduncular and dorsomedial pontine nuclei (DMPN), the number of each side was virtually identical in the dorsolateral pontine nucleus (DLPN). In the nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis (NRTP), labeled cells were located only in its medial and dorsolateral portions bilaterally. In the vestibular complex, labeled cells appeared in the superior (SVN), medial (MVN), and inferior vestibular nuclei (IVN) bilaterally. The lateral vestibular nucleus (LVN), including y group and the ventrolateral vestibular nucleus, were free of labeled cells. Labeled cells appeared also in the perihypoglossal nucleus (PHN) bilaterally. In the pontine raphe (PR) and paramedian pontine reticular formation (PPRF), labeled cells appeared bilaterally in the caudal third of the area between the oculomotor and abducens nuclei. Labeled cells appeared also in the mesencephalic and medullary reticular formation. Tracing of anterogradely labeled axons demonstrated that most fibers from the FOR decussated within the cerebellum and entered the brainstem via the contralateral uncinate fasciculus. Some crossed fibers ascended with the contralateral brachium conjunctivum and terminated in the midbrain tegmentum. A small contingent of fibers advanced further to the thalamus. In the mesodiencephalic junction, labeled terminals were found contralaterally in the rostral interstitial nucleus of medial longitudinal fasciculus (riMLF) and a medial portion of FOrel's H Field. They appeared also in the central mesencephalic reticular formation (cMRF), the periaqueductal gray (PAG), the posterior commissure nucleus, and the superior colliculus. The oculomotor and trochlear nuclei, the red nucleus, and the interstitial nucleus of Cajal were free of labeled terminals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The goal of this work was to compare the distribution and morphology of neurons projecting to the oculomotor nucleus in goldfish with those previously described in other vertebrate groups. Afferent neurons were revealed by retrograde labeling with horseradish peroxidase. The tracer was electrophoretically injected into the oculomotor nucleus. The location of the injection site was determined by the antidromic field potential elicited in the oculomotor nucleus by electrical stimulation of the oculomotor nerve. Labeled axons whose trajectories could be reconstructed were restricted to the medial longitudinal fasciculus. In order of quantitative importance, the afferent areas to the oculomotor nucleus were: (1) the ipsilateral anterior nucleus and the contralateral tangential and descending nuclei of the octaval column. Furthermore, a few labeled cells were found dorsomedially to the caudal pole of the unlabeled anterior octaval nucleus; (2) the contralateral abducens nucleus. The labeled internuclear neurons were arranged in two groups within and 500 microns behind the caudal subdivision of the abducens nucleus; (3) a few labeled cells were observed in the rhombencephalic reticular formation near the abducens nucleus, most of which were contralateral to the injection site. Specifically, stained cells were found in the caudal pole of the superior reticular nucleus, throughout the medial reticular nucleus and in the rostral area of the inferior reticular nucleus; (4) eurydendroid cells of the cerebellum, located close to the contralateral eminentia granularis pars lateralis, were also labeled; and (5) a small and primarily ipsilateral group of labeled cells was located at the mesencephalic nucleus of the medial longitudinal fasciculus. The similarity in the structures projecting to the oculomotor nucleus in goldfish to those in other vertebrates suggests that the neural network involved in the oculomotor system is quite conservative throughout phylogeny. Nevertheless, in goldfish these projections appeared with some specific peculiarities, such as the cerebellar and mesencephalic afferents to the oculomotor nucleus.  相似文献   

14.
Comparisons were made of projections from the vestibular nuclei (VN) and abducens internuclear neurons (AIN) to cell group A of the medial rectus subdivision (MRS) of the oculomotor nuclear complex. Cell group A, the major component of the MRS, receives projections only from the ipsilateral VN and the contralateral AIN. Neither ipsilateral vestibular projections to cell group A, arising from the medial vestibular nucleus, nor projections from MVN to the opposite abducens nucleus, match the massive projection of AIN to the MRS.  相似文献   

15.
Rhombencephalic subnuclei and projection pathways related to vestibular function were mapped in larval ranid frogs. The retention of overt postembryonic rhombomeres (r) allowed direct visualization of the locations of neurons retrogradely labeled with fluorescent dextran amines from the midbrain oculomotor complex, cerebellum, vestibular nuclei, and spinal cord. Oculomotor projecting vestibular neurons were mainly located in bilateral r1/2, ipsilateral r3, and contralateral r5-8, and spinal projecting vestibular neurons mainly in ipsilateral r4 and contralateral r5. Vestibular commissural neurons were located in r1-3 and r5-7 and were largely excluded from r4. Cerebellar projecting neurons included contralateral inferior olivary neurons in r8 and vestibular neurons in bilateral r6/7 and contralateral r1/2. Mapping these results onto adult anuran vestibular organization indicates that the superior vestibular nucleus derives from larval r1/2, the lateral vestibular nucleus from r3/4, and the major portions of the medial and descending vestibular nuclei from r5-8. The lateral vestibulospinal tract projects from an origin in r4, whereas a possible ascending tract of Deiters arises in r3. Rhombomere 5 contains a nuclear group that appears homologous to the tangential nucleus of fish, reptiles, and birds and thus likely serves gravistatic and linear vestibulomotor reflexes. Comparisons between frogs and other vertebrates suggest that vestibular neurons performing similar computational roles during head movements originate from the same segmental locations in different species.  相似文献   

16.
In order to study the connection patterns between the sensory trigeminal and the vestibular nuclei (VN), injections of anterogradely and/or retrogradely transported neuronal tracers were made in the rat. Trigeminal injections resulted in anterogradely labelled fibres, with an ipsilateral preponderance, within the VN: in the ventrolateral part of the inferior nucleus (IVN), in the lateral part of the medial nucleus (MVN), in the lateral nucleus (LVN) with a higher density in its ventral half, and in the superior nucleus (SVN), more in the periphery than in the central part. Moderate trigeminal projections were observed in the small vestibular groups f, x and y/l and in the nucleus prepositus hypoglossi. Additional retrogradely labelled neurones were seen in the IVN, MVN, and LVN, in the same regions as those receiving trigeminal afferents. Morphological analysis of vestibular neurones demonstrated that vestibulo-trigeminal neurones are relatively small and belong to a different population than those receiving projections from the trigeminal nuclei. The trigeminovestibular and vestibulo-trigeminal relationships were confirmed by tracer injections in the VN. The results show that, in the VN, there is sensory information from facial receptors in addition to those reported from the neck and body. These facial afferents complement those from the neck and lower spinal levels in supplying important somatosensory information from the face and eye muscles. The oculomotor connections of the respective zones of the VN receiving trigeminal afferents suggest that sensory inputs from the face, including extraocular proprioception, may, through this pathway, influence the vestibular control of eye and head movements.  相似文献   

17.
Calcium-binding proteins have been shown to be excellent markers of specific neuronal populations. We aimed to characterize the expression of calcium-binding proteins in identified populations of the cat extraocular motor nuclei by means of immunohistochemistry against parvalbumin, calretinin, and calbindin D-28k. Abducens, medial rectus, and trochlear motoneurons were retrogradely labeled with horseradish peroxidase from their corresponding muscles. Oculomotor and abducens internuclear neurons were retrogradely labeled after horseradish peroxidase injection into either the abducens or the oculomotor nucleus, respectively. Parvalbumin staining produced the highest density of immunoreactive terminals in all extraocular motor nuclei and was distributed uniformly. Around 15–20% of the motoneurons were moderately stained with antibody against parvalbumin, but their axons were heavily stained, indicating an intracellular segregation of parvalbumin. Colchicine administration increased the number of parvalbumin-immunoreactive motoneurons to approximately 85%. Except for a few calbindin-immunoreactive trochlear motoneurons (1%), parvalbumin was the only marker of extraocular motoneurons. Oculomotor internuclear neurons identified from the abducens nucleus constituted a nonuniform population, because low percentages of the three types of immunostaining were observed, calbindin being the most abundant (28.5%). Other interneurons located within the boundaries of the oculomotor nucleus were mainly calbindin-immunoreactive. The medial longitudinal fascicle contained numerous parvalbumin- and calretinin-immunoreactive but few calbindin-immunoreactive axons. The majority of abducens internuclear neurons projecting to the oculomotor nucleus (80.7%) contained calretinin. Moreover, the distribution of calretinin-immunoreactive terminals in the oculomotor nucleus overlapped that of the medial rectus motoneurons and matched the anterogradely labeled terminal field of the abducens internuclear neurons. Parvalbumin immunostained 42% of the abducens internuclear neurons. Colocalization of parvalbumin and calretinin was demonstrated in adjacent semithin sections, although single-labeled neurons were also observed. Therefore, calretinin is proven to be a good marker of abducens internuclear neurons. From all of these data, it is concluded that parvalbumin, calretinin, and calbindin D-28k selectively delineate certain neuronal populations in the oculomotor system and constitute valuable tools for further analysis of oculomotor function under normal and experimental conditions. J. Comp. Neurol. 390:377–391, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Previously we have shown that four regions of the cerebellum, the uvula-nodulus, flocculus, ventral paraflocculus, and anterior lobe 1, receive extensive, but not exclusive, cholinergic mossy fiber projections. In the present experiment we have studied the origin of three of these projections in the rat and rabbit (uvula-nodulus, flocculus, ventral paraflocculus), using choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) immunohistochemistry in combination with a double label, retrogradely transported horseradish peroxidase (HRP). We have demonstrated that in both the rat and rabbit the caudal medial vestibular nucleus (MVN) and to a lesser extent the nucleus prepositus hypoglossus (NPH) contain ChAT-positive neurons. Neurons of the caudal MVN are double-labeled following HRP injections into the uvula-nodulus. HRP injections into the uvula-nodulus also labeled less than 5% of the neurons in the cholinergic vestibular efferent complex. Fewer ChAT-positive neurons in the MVN and some ChAT-positive neurons in the NPH are double-labeled following HRP injections into the flocculus. Almost no ChAT-positive neurons in the MVN and some ChAT-positive neurons in the NPH are double-labeled following HRP injections into the ventral paraflocculus. Injections of Phaseolus leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) into the caudal MVN of both the rat and rabbit demonstrated projection patterns to the uvula-nodulus and flocculus that were qualitatively similar to those observed using ChAT immunohistochemistry. We conclude that the cholinergic mossy fiber pathway to the cerebellum in general and the uvula-nodulus in particular is likely to mediate secondary vestibular information related to postural adjustments.  相似文献   

19.
To determine whether oculomotor internuclear neurons (INOs) establish unilateral or bilateral connections with the abducens nucleus (nVI), horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and either DAPI or Nuclear Yellow (NY) were injected into nVI and the oculomotor complex (nIII) examined for retrogradely labeled cells. Such injections resulted in retrograde labeling of a large number of INOs within and just dorsal to nIII in the ventral periaqueductal gray; approximately 10% of HRP-positive cells were also labeled with a fluorescent marker. Within the conditions of the experiment, this frequency of double-labeling was largely independent of the amount of HRP or fluorescent label injected or the degree of spread of label at the injections sites. It was also independent of which fluorochrome was used as a second label. Individual double-labeled cells were scattered within and immediately dorsal to nIII within the distribution of single-labeled INOs. These findings provide strong evidence for a subset of nIII INOs that have bilateral projections to nVI; the low frequency of double-labeling, however, suggests that the population of INOs projecting to both nVI may be small.  相似文献   

20.
The distribution of the cells of origin of the cervical vagus and cardiopulmonary nerves has been studied in neonatal piglets (Sus scrofa) ranging in age from 1 to 60 days. Cardiopulmonary nerves were identified physiologically and anatomically prior to injection of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) into the nerves. Following injection of HRP into the cervical vagus nerve retrogradely labeled neurons were present in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus nerve (DMV), the nucleus of the solitary tract, the nucleus ambiguus (NA), ventrolateral to the NA and in an intermediate zone between the DMV and the NA. Two unique clusters of neurons were also retrogradely labeled after injections into the vagus nerve. One group was located lateral to the most caudal levels of the DMV and extended as far caudally as the C1 spinal segment. The second distinctive group was located ventrolateral to the nucleus ambiguus in a cell column identified as the ventrolateral nucleus ambiguus (VLNA). After injections of HRP into cardiopulmonary nerves, the majority of neurons were found in the VLNA and the distinct clusters of neurons in this cell column were particularly heavily labeled. Small numbers of cells were labeled in the DMV and NA and none were labeled in the solitary nucleus after cardiopulmonary nerve injections. There were no apparent age-related differences in the degree or distribution of retrograde labeling.The distribution of neurons in the medulla oblongata projecting into cardiopulmonary nerves in the piglet is similar to that described in other species, i.e., the nucleus ambiguus, particularly its ventrolateral cell column, is the primary site of cardiomotor neurons. In addition, in the piglet there is a morphologically distinct cluster of cells related to the heart, and possibly the lungs, which does not appear to be present in other species.  相似文献   

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