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1.
The localisation of the primary visual centres in the chick mesencephalon and diencephalon was determined by autoradiographic anterograde transport and degeneration techniques. Strong visual projections were found in the tectum, lateral anterior thalamic nucleus, lateroventral geniculate nucleus, superficial synencephalic nucleus, external nucleus, ectomammillary nucleus, tectal grey, dorsolateral anterior thalamus, rostrolateral part, and the pretectal optic area. Weaker retinal projections were found in the ventrolateral thalamus, two subregions of the dorsolateral anterior thalamus, lateral part, diffuse pretectal nucleus, dorsolateral anterior thalamus, magnocellular part, and the hypothalamus. An atlas of the retinal projections was constructed from sections.  相似文献   

2.
Visual information reaches the dorsal thalamus by two distinct routes in most reptiles. Retinal efferents terminate directly in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (DLGN). Retinal information is also channeled indirectly through the tectum to nucleus rotundus. Retinal projections to DLGN and tectum are also well esablished in snakes, but the status of the tecto-rotundal link of the indirect visual pathway is uncertain. Thus, tectal efferents were studied with Fink-Heimer methods in banded water snakes (Natrix sipedon). The tectum gives rise to crossed and uncrossed projections to the brainstem reticular formation. Commissural connections are effected with the contralateral tectum via the tectal and osterior commissures. tectum projects densely to the ipsilateral basal optic nucleus. Bilateral ascending projections reach the pretectal area, nucleus lentiformis mesencephali, lateral habenular nuclei, and posterodorsal nuclei. Ascending projections reach the ventral lateral geniculate and suprapeduncular nuclei. there is a diffuse projection to the central part of the caudal thalamus and a dense, bilaternal projection to the DLGN. These results indicate that the relation of the tectum to the dorsal thalamus is different in snakes than in other reptiles. Nucleus rotundus is either absent or poorly differentiated and there is a strong convergence of the direct and indirect visual pathways at DLGN.  相似文献   

3.
Efferent projections of the optic tectum were studied with the anterograde degeneration method in the longnose gar. Ascending projections were found bilaterally to 3 pretectal nuclei — the superficial pretectal nucleus, nucleus pretectalis centralis and nucleus pretectalis profundus — and to a number of targets which lie further rostrally — the central posterior nucleus, dorsal posterior nucleus, accessory optic nucleus, nucleus ventralis lateralis, nucleus of the ventral optic tract, rostral part of the preglomerular complex, suprachiasmatic nucleus, anterior thalamic nucleus, nucleus ventralis medialis, nucleus intermedius, nucleus prethalamicus and rostral entopeduncular nucleus. Projections of the tectum reach the contralateral side via the supraoptic decussation and are less dense contralaterally than ipsilaterally. Descending projections resulting from tectal lesions include: (1) a tectal commissural pathway to the core of the torus longitudinalis bilaterally and the contralateral tectum and torus semicircularis; and (2) a pathway leaving the tectum laterally from which fibers terminate in the ipsilateral torus semicircularis, an area lateral to the nucleus of the medial longitudinal fasciculus, lateral tegmental nucleus, nucleus lateralis valvulae, nucleus isthmi and the reticular formation. A component of this bundle decussates at the level of the lateral tegmental nucleus to project to the contralateral reticular formation.

On the basis of comparisons of these findings with the pattern of retinal projections in gars and other data, it is argued that the nuclei previously called the lateral geniculate and rotundus in fish are not the homologues of the nuclei of those names in land vertebrates but are rather pretectal cell groups. The overall organization of both retinal and tectal projections in gars is strikingly similar to that in land vertebrates; at present, the best candidate for a rotundal homologue is the dorsal posterior nucleus.  相似文献   


4.
The expression of OL-protocadherin, a homotypically binding cell adhesion molecule, was mapped in the visual system of the chicken embryo at intermediate to late stages of development (11-19 days of incubation). The expression was compared with that of four classic cadherins, described previously. OL-protocadherin is expressed by the isthmooptic nucleus, its retinopetal projection, and possibly its retinal target neurons, the amacrine cells. Ganglion cells begin to express OL-protocadherin at relatively late stages of development. The layers of the optic tectum, the projection neurons in the stratum griseum centrale, and the tectofugal pathways show differential OL-protocadherin immunoreactivity. Several of the diencephalic target nuclei of the tectothalamic projection, such as the principal pretectal nucleus, subpretectal nucleus, and nucleus rotundus, contain distinct subregions or populations of neurons expressing OL-protocadherin. In these centers, the expression pattern of OL-protocadherin differs from that of the four classic cadherins, though it shows partial overlap with them. Other retinorecipient and/or tectorecipient nuclei (ventral geniculate nucleus, lateral dorsolateral nucleus, superficial synencephalic nucleus, pretectal area, and griseum tectale) also show a differential immunoreactivity for OL-protocadherin and other cadherins. Some of these nuclei and the optic tectum display a similar sequence of cadherin expression from superficial to deep layers, in a pattern that may reflect mutual interconnections. This result indicates a partial conservation of cadherin expression across interconnected embryonic divisions, from the mesencephalon to the ventral thalamus. In conclusion, OL-protocadherin is a marker for specific functional gray matter structures and neural circuits in the chicken visual system. J. Comp. Neurol. 470:240-255, 2004.  相似文献   

5.
The afferent and efferent connections of the tectum opticum in the carp (Cyprinus carpio L.) were studied with the HRP method. Following iontophoretic peroxidase injections in several parts of the tectum anterograde transport of the enzyme revealed tectal projections to the lateral geniculate nucleus, dorsal tegmentum, pretectal nuclei, nucleus rotundus, torus longitudinalis, torus semicircularis, nucleus isthmi, contralateral tectum and to the mesencephalic and bulbar reticular formations.Tectal afferents were demonstrated by retrograde HRP transport in the area dorsalis pars centralis of the telencephalon, torus longitudinalis, torus semicircularis, nucleus isthmi, nucleus profundus mesencephali, several pretectal nuclei, dorsomedial and dorsolateral thalamic nuclei, nucleus of the posterior commissure, mesencephalic and bulbar reticular nuclei and nucleus ruber. Visuo-cerebellar circuitry was investigated by means of peroxidase injections in the various parts of the cerebellum. These experiments revealed indirect retino- and tecto-cerebellar pathways via the pretectal nuclei and the nucleus isthmi.  相似文献   

6.
Brainstem neurons that project to the optic tectum of the eastern garter snake were identified by retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase. The distribution and morphology of tectal afferent axons from the thalamus, pretectum, nucleus isthmi, and midbrain reticular formation were then studied by anterograde transport of horseradish peroxidase. Diencephalic projections to the tectum arise from the ventral lateral geniculate complex ipsilaterally and the ventrolateral nucleus, suprapeduncular nucleus, and nucleus of the ventral supraoptic decussation bilaterally. Three pretectal groups (the lentiform thalamic nucleus, the lentiform mesencephalic-pretectal complex and the geniculate pretectal nucleus) give rise to heavy, bilateral tectal projections. Small neurons in nucleus isthmi and large reticular neurons in nucleus lateralis profundus mesencephali also give rise to bilateral projections. Caudal to the tectum, projections arise bilaterally from the pontine and medullary tegmentum, nuclei of the lateral lemniscus, the posterior colliculus, and the sensory trigeminal nucleus. A small contralateral projection arises from the medial vestibular complex. Tectal afferents from the thalamus, pretectum, nucleus isthmi, and midbrain reticular formation had characteristic morphologies and laminar distributions within the tectum. However, these afferents fall into two groups based on their spatial organization. Afferents from the thalamus and nucleus isthmi arise from small neurons with spatially restricted, highly branched dendritic trees. Their axons terminate in single, highly branched and bouton-rich arbors about 100 micron in diameter. By contrast, afferents from the midbrain reticular formation and the pretectum arise from large neurons with long, radiate, and sparsely branched dendritic trees. Their axons course parallel to the tectal surface and emit numerous collateral branches that are distributed widely through the mediolateral and rostrocaudal extent of either the central or superficial gray layers. Each collateral bears several small, spatially disjunct clusters of boutons.  相似文献   

7.
Retinofugal pathways in the painted turtle were examined with autoradiographic and HRP methods. The majority of the retinal fibers decussate at the optic chiasm and course caudally to terminate in 12 regions of the diencephalon and mesencephalon. The pars dorsalis of the lateral geniculate nucleus is the densest target in the thalamus. Two nuclei dorsal to pars dorsalis—the dorsal optic and dorsal central nuclei—receive optic input. Three nuclei ventral to pars dorsalis are retinal targets—the ventral geniculate nucleus, nucleus ventrolateralis pars dorsalis, and nucleus ventrolateralis pars ventralis. Contralateral fibers course through the pretectum where they terminate in nucleus geniculatis pretectalis, nucleus lentiformis mesencephali, nucleus posterodorsalis, and the external pretectal nucleus. Retinal fibers also terminate within the superficial zone of the optic tectum. HRP material demonstrates three optic fiber layers—laminae 9, 12, and 14. Optic fibers leave the main optic tract as a distinct accessory tegmental optic pathway and terminate in the basal optic nucleus. Ipsilateral retinal terminals occur in a pars dorsalis and a pars ventralis of the lateral geniculate nucleus, the dorsal optic nucleus, nucleus posterodorsalis, the basal optic nucleus, and in laminae 9 and 12 of the optic tectum. Rostrally, the ipsilateral tectal fibers occupy two zones along the medial and lateral tectal roof; these zones converge caudally and are continuous along the caudal wall of the tectum.  相似文献   

8.
Crotaline snakes have detectors for infrared radiation and this information is projected to the optic tectum in a spatiotopic manner. The tectal projections were examined in Crotalus viridis with the use of silver methods for degenerating fibers and the autoradiographic and horseradish peroxidase tracing methods. Large lesions included all of the tectal layers but not the underlying structures. Projections to the thalamus include a sparse input to the ipsilateral ventral and dorsal lateral geniculate nuclei, the ventromedial nucleus, and nucleus lentiformis thalami. Nucleus rotundus was not detected. The projections to the pretectal nuclei are primarily ipsilateral to the nucleus lentiformis mesencehali and pretectal nucleus. At the level of the mesencephalon, tectal efferents are bilateral to nucleus profundus mesencephali and the tegmentum. There is minimal input to the contralateral deep tectal layers. There are ispilateral terminations in a nucleus identified as the posterolateral tegmental nucleus. Descending fibers include the two major tracts—the ventral tectobulbar tract that terminates in the ipsilateral lateral reticular formation and the predorsal bundle that distributes throughout the contralateral medial reticular formation. Two small descending tracts were noted—the intermediate and dorsal tectobulbar tracts. All of these descending tracts appear to terminate by the time they reach the caudal medulla. After superficial lesions terminals could be found in the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus, the nucleus profundus mesencephali, and the posterolateral tegmental nucleus; the two major descending tracts contained degenerated fibers as well. The areas receiving tectal input in Crotalus were compared to those of other reptiles and discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The connections of the pretectal complex in the cat have been examined by anatomical methods which utilize the anterograde axonal transport of tritiated proteins or the retrograde axonal transport of the enzyme horseradish peroxidase. Following injections of tritiated amino acids into the eye, label can be seen in the contralateral and ipsilateral nucleus of the optic tract and olivary nucleus where it appears as two or three finger-like strips. Following large injections of tritiated amino acids into the pretectal complex transported label accumulates ipsilaterally in a region dorsolateral to the red nucleus, the central and pericentral divisions of the tegmental reticular nucleus, the intermediate layers of the superior colliculus, the nucleus of Darkschewitch, the thalamic reticular nucleus, zona incerta and fields of Forel, the central lateral nucleus, the pulvinar nucleus and the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus. Contralaterally label accumulates in the nucleus of the posterior commissure, the interstitial nucleus of Cajal, the anterior, posterior and medial pretectal nuclei, and the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus From smaller injections, more or less well confined to single nuclei, the following patterns of connections are demonstrated. The nucleus of the optic tract projects to the ipsilateral ventral lateral geniculate nucleus and pulvinar nucleus and to the contralateral nucleus of the posterior commissure. The anterior pretectal nucleus projects to the ipsilateral central lateral nucleus, the reticular nucleus, zona incerta, fields of Forel, the region dorsolateral to the red nucleus and to the contralateral anterior pretectal nucleus. The posterior pretectal nucleus seems to project only to the ipsilateral reticular nucleus and zona incerta. The central tegmental fields deep to the pretectum project to the tegmental reticular nucleus of the brainstem. When the injection involves the nucleus of the posterior commissure label is seen in the ipsilateral nucleus of Darkschewitch, and in the contralateral nucleus of the posterior commissure and interstitial nucleus of Cajal but no nucleus of the pretectum could be positively identified as projecting to any of the motor nuclei of cranial nerves III, IV, and VI. Following large injections of horseradish peroxidase into the pretectal complex, labeled cells are seen in the superficial layers of the ipsilateral superior colliculus, in the ipsilateral ventral lateral geniculate nucleus, reticular nucleus and zona incerta and in the contralateral anterior, medial and posterior pretectal nuclei, nucleus of the optic tract and ventral lateral geniculate nucleus.  相似文献   

10.
We have studied the connections of the tectum of the rattlesnake by tectal application of horseradish peroxidase. The tectum receives bilateral input from nucleus lentiformis mesencephali, posterolateral tegmental nuclei, anterior tegmental nuclei and periventricular nuclei; ipsilateral input from nucleus geniculatus pretectalis, and lateral geniculate nucleus pars dorsalis; and contralateral input from dorso-lateral posterior tegmental nucleus and the previously undescribed nucleus reticularis caloris (RC). RC is located on the ventro-lateral surface of the medulla and consists of large cells 25--45 micrometer in diameter. Efferent projections from the tectum can be traced to the ipsilateral nucleus lentiformis mesencephali, the ipsilateral lateral geniculate region, anterior tegmental region and a wide bilateral area of the neuropil of the ventral tegmentum and ventral medualla. We have not found any direct tectal projections from the sensory trigeminal nuclei including the nucleus of the lateral descending trigeminal tract (LTTD). We suggest that in the rattlesnake, RC is the intermediate link connecting LTTD to the tectum.  相似文献   

11.
Tectal connections were studied in two urodele species following horseradish peroxidase injections into the tectum opticum. In both species retrogradely labelled cells were observed: ipsilaterally in the corpus striatum, lateral amygdala, ventral and dorsal thalamus and nucleus of DARKSCHEWITSCH--bilaterally in the pretectal nucleus, dorsal tegmentum and nucleus reticularis medius--contralaterally in the tectum opticum and area octavo lateralis. Besides these nuclei the nucleus isthmi was bilaterally labelled. Rostral efferent projections of the tectum opticum terminated in the ipsilateral pretectal area and the ipsilateral dorsal and ventral thalamus ipsilaterally coursing to the contralateral tectum via the commissura postoptica. Caudal efferents formed the bilaterally organized tecto-bulbar tracts innervating the rhombencephalon. Comparison of the results of a series of tectal horseradish peroxidase injections differing in depth, tangential extension and location, indicated that tectal afferents from the telencephalon, the contralateral tectum opticum and the medulla were sparse and widely branching. Projections of the telencephalon and all diencephalic nuclei terminated deep in the rostral tectum opticum. Projections of the medulla terminated preferentially deep in the caudal tectum opticum. The tecto-isthmic projection was highly topographic forming a layered terminal field lateral to the nucleus isthmi. The isthmo-tectal projection innervated the whole tectum opticum on the ipsilateral side and was highly topographic. On the contralateral side the caudal part of the tectum opticum was not innervated. The isthmo-tectal fibers terminated superficially in the tectum opticum on both sides of the brain. The nucleus isthmi identified here is proposed to be homologe to that of other vertebrates.  相似文献   

12.
The present anterograde autoradiographic study reveals several targets of the striate cortex (area 17) of the tree shrew which were not previously observed in studies which used anterograde degeneration methods; our data also confirm several previous findings. The results are discussed in the context of these projections modulating ascending visual information (claustrum, lateral intermediate nucleus, pulvinar, dorsal lateral geniculate, cells of the external medullary lamina, reticular nucleus of the thalamus, superficial collicular layers, and the anterior and posterior pretectal nuclei) or visuomotor information (putamen, caudate, ventral lateral geniculate, pontine gray, and the anterior and posterior pretectal nuclei).  相似文献   

13.
Visual projections in lamprey were investigated using two methods,--one by revealing transport of horseradish peroxidase, and the other by silver impregnation of degenerating axons and terminals after enucleation of the eye. Both methods produced similar results. The chiasm showed incomplete crossing of retinal fibres, the major part of which, as an optic tract, proceed along the contralateral thalamus up to the entry into the optic tectum, while the smaller part takes the same course on the ipsilateral side. Besides, from the posterior part of the optic chiasm an axial optic tract branches off, which proceeds through the central part of the contralateral thalamus up to the pretectal nucleus, individual fibres of which enter the central grey layer of the optic tectum. On the contralateral side, the visual projections are localized in the lateral geniculate body, pretectal nucleus, in the three upper layers of the optic tectum, in the ventrolateral area of the optic tectum and as solitary diffuse projections in the mesencephalic tegmentum. Innervation of thalamic and pretectal nuclei are realized by two tracts--the tractus opticus proper, and tractus opticus axialis. On the ipsilateral side visual projections, excepting the optic tract, are scarce and in the thalamus appear as small areas of the lateral geniculate body and pretectum adjacent to the optic tract. Solitary visual projections were found in two upper layers of the rostral optic tectum and in larger numbers in the 3rd and 4th layers of the caudal part and in ventrolateral area of the optic tectum. Projections in mesencephalic tegmentum were single. Diffuse visual projections in the lateral part of hypothalamus could be revealed only by the silver impregnation method. Using the peroxidase method two types of cells were observed in mesencephalic tegmentum where, possibly, the centrifugal fibres proceeding to retina, originate. A comparison is made of central visual projections in lampreys and other representatives of nonmammalian vertebrates.  相似文献   

14.
The afferents to the red nucleus from visual and nonvisual forebrain centers have been investigated in the lizard Podarcis hispanica by using both retrograde and anterograde transport of tracers. Because the red nucleus constitutes a key structure in the limb premotor system, these sensory afferents probably are involved in visuomotor and other forms of sensorimotor integration. After tracer injections aimed at the red nucleus, retrograde labeling was found in the reticular thalamus, the subthalamus, the nucleus of the posterior commissure, as well as in two retinorecipient nuclei, namely, the ventral lateral and pretectal geniculate nuclei, where labeled cells are especially abundant. These geniculorubral projections have been confirmed by means of anterograde tracing with dextranamine injections. On the other hand, small injections of tracers in the retina demonstrated that its projections to the ventral lateral and pretectal geniculate nuclei are organized in a point-to-point fashion. Moreover, small tracer injections into the optic tectum of Podarcis indicated that the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus also receives a precisely organized tectal afferent. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that geniculorubral projections might constitute the neuroanatomical substrate for the generation of quick locomotor responses to appropriate visual stimuli. Additional ventral thalamic, subthalamic, and pretectal afferents to the red nucleus are likely to subserve other kinds of sensorimotor integration. These results help to clarify the organization of the reptilian motor system, including the telencephalic control of motor responses, and to unravel some of the major trends in the evolution of the limb premotor network of tetrapodian vertebrates.  相似文献   

15.
Small electrolytic lesions were made in the superior colliculus of cats. The terminal areas of degenerated fibers from the lesions of the medial and lateral part of the superior colliculus were compared in the pretectum and in the pulvinar complex of the thalamus by utilizing the Nauta and Fink-Heimer technique. The medial part of the superior colliculus projects to the rostral and medial portion of the posterior pretectal nucleus, the nucleus of optic tract, and the dorsal half of the pulvinar complex. The lateral part of the superior colliculus projects to the suboptic and posterior pretectal nuclei and the nucleus of optic tract in the lateral pretectum, and to the ventral half of the pulvinar complex. These tectal projections to the pretectum and the pulvinar complex were compared with the terminal areas of the descending fibers from cortical areas 17 and 18. The results indicated that there is a retinotopic organization in the ascending projections from the superior colliculus in the cat.  相似文献   

16.
The differential projections of the three main cellular strata of the superior colliculus have been examined in the cat by the autoradiographic method. The stratum griseum superficiale projects caudally to the parabigeminal nucleus and rostrally to several known visual centers: the nucleus of the optic tract and the olivary pretectal nucleus in the pretectum; the deepest C laminae of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus; the large-celled part of the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus; the posteromedial, large-celled part of the lateral posterior nucleus of the thalamus. Several of these projections are topographically organized. The stratum griseum profundum gives rise to most of the descending projections of the superior colliculus. Ipsilateral projections pass to both the dorsolateral and lateral divisions of the pontine nuclei, the cuneiform nucleus, and the raphe nuclei, and to extensive parts of the brainstem reticular formation: the tegmental reticular nucleus, and the paralemniscal, lateral, magnocellular, and gigantocellular tegmental fields. Contralateral projections descending in the predorsal bundle pass to the medial parts of the tegmental reticular nucleus and of some of the tegmental fields, the dorsal part of the medial accessory nucleus of the inferior olivary complex, and to the ventral horn of the cervical spinal cord. Ascending projections of the stratum griseum profundum terminate in several nuclei of the pretectum, the magnocellular nucleus of the medial geniculate complex and several intralaminar nuclei of the thalamus, and in the fields of Forel and zona incerta in the subthalamus. The strata grisea profundum and intermediale each have projections to homotopic areas of the contralateral superior colliculus, to the pretectum, and to the central lateral and suprageniculate nuclei of the thalamus. However, the stratum griseum intermediale has few or no descending projections.  相似文献   

17.
J M Wild 《Brain research》1989,479(1):130-137
The possibility of a projection from the pretectal nucleus, lentiformis mesencephali (LM), to the principal optic nuclei (OPT) of the dorsolateral thalamus was investigated using cholera toxin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (CT-HRP). Injections of CT-HRP into LM produced massive anterograde labeling of the pars lateralis of the nucleus dorsolateralis anterior thalami (DLL), and sparse labeling of the pars magnocellularis (DLAmc). Injections of CT-HRP into OPT in turn produced massive retrograde labeling of both parvocellular and magnocellular divisions of LM. These results relate to possible neural mechanisms underlying optokinetic nystagmus. OPT injections also retrogradely labeled small neurons throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the tectum which were confined to superficial laminae.  相似文献   

18.
By anatomical techniques it has been shown that folia VIc-IXc of the pigeon cerebellum receive inputs from the following groups of neurons: the medial and lateral pontine nuclei, the superficial synencephalic nucleus, the medial spiriform nucleus, the inferior olive, and the deep cerebellar nuclei. From all but the last of these, the projection is mainly crossed, though the uncrossed component from the lateral pontine nucleus is not insubstantial. The input from the superficial synencephalic nucleus provides a direct pathway from the retina to the cerebellum (folia VIc, VII, VIII and IXc). Less direct visual pathways reach the cerebellum via the following routes: (i) the superficial synencephalic nucleus projects ipsilaterally to the lateral pontine nucleus and sparsely to the inferior olive; (ii) the tectum projects ipsilaterally to the lateral and medial pontine nuclei, though the latter connection is sparse. In electrophysiological experiments, the importance of the tecto-pontine component of the projection has been demonstrated by cooling the tectum while recording visual responses from the cerebellum. The visual receptive fields of pontine cells have been analysed. They vary in extent from 10° to the whole monocular field. They respond best to moving targets, preferring speeds of 20 to 60°/second, and are usually direction-selective.  相似文献   

19.
The autoradiographic tracing method has been used to analyze the distribution of ascending tectofugal pathways in the rhesus monkey. Our findings show that axons which arise from deep collicular neurons terminate within several dorsal thalamic nuclei which in turn project upon the frontal eye fields (area 8) and the inferior parietal lobule (area 7). Both of these cortical areas are functionally quite similar to the deep colliculus, and we suggest that ascending channels from the deep tectum must account, at least in part, for these functional similarities. The present autoradiographs reveal projections to several nuclear zones previously not identified as deep collicular targets in the monkey. Such targets include the visceral cell columns of the oculomotor complex, the rostral interstitial nucleus of the medial longitudinal fasciculus, and the magnocellular division of the ventral anterior nucleus. Deep tectal input also has been shown to terminate quite extensively within the paralamellar region of the mediodorsal nucleus and in the parafascicular nucleus; very little input to the central lateral and centromedian nuclei was observed. Radioisotope injections restricted to the superficial layers reveal dense projections to the parabigeminal nucleus, the pretectum, the inferior and lateral pulvinar nuclei, and to the ventral and dorsal lateral geniculate nuclei. Transported protein within the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus occupied the “S” layers and the interlaminar zones.  相似文献   

20.
Studies of retinal projections to the thalamus and midbrain of the turtle were based on a personal modification of the Nauta-Laidlaw technique (modified Nauta method) after unilateral enucleation. Decussation of optic fibers in the chiasma is incomplete. In the thalamus, optic fibers are found to terminate in three nuclei – with greater density in the corpus geniculatum laterale (lateral geniculate body) (LGB) and more sparsely in the nucleus suprapeduncular and nucleus ovalis. Retinal projections to the LGB assume a focal pattern, being somewhat more compact in the lateral neuropil region. Optic fibers are also shown to end in a group of pretectal nuclei: n. pretectalis dorsalis, n. lentiformis mesencephalis, n. comissurae posterior. In addition, terminations of optic fibers have been revealed in the three upper layers of the tectum. Peculiarities of preterminal and terminal degeneration of retinal fibers have been distinguished in the different tectal layers. In the second stratum, terminations of large fibers are mostly seen with a characteristic appearance of lumpy pericellular (preterminal) degeneration. In the third stratum, both large and finer fibers degenerate, showing fine debris of preterminal degeneration. Different patterns of terminal degeneration have been revealed in tectum and thalamus. The maximal size of optic fibers in the tectum proves to be larger than in thalamus. Available evidence is discussed with particular reference to comparison of the phylogenetically more recent retinothalamic system and more ancient retinotectal system.  相似文献   

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