Rapidly adapting pulmonary receptor afferents: I. Arborization in the nucleus of the tractus solitarius |
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Authors: | M Kalia D Richter |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pharmacology, Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107. |
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Abstract: | The organization of axon collaterals, preterminal processes, and presumptive synaptic boutons of single physiologically identified rapidly adapting receptor (RAR) pulmonary afferent fibers was examined following the intraaxonal application of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP). The RAR axons were injected 200-300 microns lateral to the nucleus of the tractus solitarius (nTS) at a number of different rostrocaudal levels in seven individual experiments. The trajectories of the stained axons were reconstructed from individual 50-microns-thick serial sections. The rostrocaudal extent, as well as the distribution of the trajectory of each RAR afferent, was reconstructed from every section by using a camera lucida attachment. In this first of two papers, we describe the pattern of organization of bouton terminals of RAR afferents related to cytoarchitectonically distinct subnuclei of the nTS. In the companion paper, morphological details of the fine structure of these synaptic boutons and axonal branches are described in different subnuclei in order to illustrate morphological differences in these functionally distinct regions. A number of significant findings have resulted from this light microscopic study. The central process of a single RAR afferent fiber arborized in the medulla oblongata over a considerable distance in the rostrocaudal plane (2.5 mm rostral to 1.4 mm caudal to the obex). A single RAR afferent fiber terminated in numerous bouton terminals (range 500-1,050), and these terminals arose from over 400 segments of branches of the parent injected axon. A small number of en passant bouton terminals were found. There appeared to be a remarkable degree of consistency in the subnuclei of the nTS where these terminals arborized. The dorsal and dorsolateral subnuclei of the nTS received 144-647 bouton terminals. The second-largest concentration of bouton terminals of RAR afferents was found in the intermediate (nI) subnucleus of the nTS. No labeled bouton terminal was found in the ventral and ventrolateral subnuclei of the nTS. This finding is in sharp contrast to the terminations of SAR afferents which terminated predominantly in the ventral and ventrolateral nuclei of the nTS, the interstitial nucleus of the nTS, and the nI. The parent RAR axon could be traced as far rostrally as 2.5 mm, even though the region of terminal arborization could not be followed beyond 0.8 mm. The destination of this rostrally projecting RAR afferent could not be determined in this study.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS) |
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Keywords: | medulla oblongata respiratory control brainstem visceral afferents cat |
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