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1.
The cytoarchitectonics of the telencephalon of the channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus, are described as a basis for experimental analysis of telencephalic afferents and efferents. The olfactory bulb comprises: (1) an outer layer of olfactory nerve fibers, (2) a glomerular layer, (3) an external cell layer, (4) an inner fiber layer, and (5) an internal cell layer. The telencephalic hemispheres comprise the areas ventralis and dorsalis telencephali. The area ventralis consists of: (1) a precommissural, periventricular zone including nucleus 'nother (Vn), the ventral nucleus (Vv), and the dorsal nucleus (Vd); (2) a precommissural, migrated zone of central (Vc) and lateral (VI) nuclei; (3) a supracommissural nucleus (Vs); (4) a caudal commissural zone of postcommissural (Vp) and intermediate (Vi) nuclei; and (5) a preoptic area (PP). The area dorsalis comprises: (1) medial (DM), (2) dorsal (Dd), (3) lateral [DL, containing dorsal (DLd), ventral (DLv), and posterior (DLp) regions], (4) posterior (DP), and (5) central (DC-1, -2, -3) areas. Nucleus taeniae (NT) is transitional between areas dorsalis and ventralis.  相似文献   

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3.
The cytoarchitecture of nuclei in the preoptic area, ventral thalamus, dorsal thalamus, epithalamus, hypothalamus, posterior tuberculum, synencephalon, and pretectum and the accessory optic nuclei was analyzed in a perciform teleost, the sea bass Dicentrarchus labrax, by using serial sections stained with cresyl-violet. In general, the cytoarchitecture of the preoptic area, ventral and dorsal thalamus, epithalamus, and synencephalon resembles the histological pattern of other teleosts. However, the parvocellular preoptic nucleus of sea bass has been subdivided into parvocellular and anteroventral parts for morphological and functional reasons. The hypothalamus of the sea bass seems to differ slightly from that of other teleosts. An elaborated lateral tuberal nucleus, with five subdivisions, and three different nuclei around the lateral recesses were recognized. A medial nucleus of the inferior lobe, which has been reported previously in the perciform Sparus aurata, is also present in the hypothalamus of sea bass but has not been described before in another advanced teleost. The organization of the pretectum and the accessory optic system is essentially similar in sea bass to that described in other perciforms with highly developed vision. The migrated portion of the posterior tuberculum of sea bass appears to differ from this region of the diencephalon in other teleosts. In sea bass, three cell masses that have been described previously only in the perciform Sparus aurata have been assigned to the migrated area of the posterior tuberculum. This study will provide the neuroanatomical basis for future morpho-functional studies to be done in the sea bass brain.  相似文献   

4.
Summary We have investigated the central connections of the classical olfactory system in the weakly electric fish Gnathonemus petersii using HRP and cobalt labelling techniques. The olfactory bulb projects bilaterally via the medial and lateral olfactory tracts to restricted areas of the telencephalon, namely to its rostromedial, lateral and posterior medial parts. The most extensive telencephalic target is the posterior terminal field, which arcs around the lateral forebrain bundle at levels posterior to the anterior commissure. Projections to the contralateral hemisphere cross in the ventral telencephalon rostral to the anterior commissure and via the posterior dorsal part of the anterior commissure; endings are also present within the anterior commissure. Bilateral projections to the preoptic area, to the nucleus posterior tuberis and to an area in the thalamus are apparent. In all cases, contralateral projections are less extensive than those on the side ipsilateral to the injected bulb. A projection via the medial olfactory tract can be followed to the contralateral bulb. Following injections into the olfactory bulb, retrogradely labelled neurons are found in the contralateral bulb and in six telencephalic areas; they are also present in the periventricular diencephalon and in an area lateral to the nucleus posterior tuberis. The present results support the suggestion that a reduction in olfactory input to the telencephalon occurs together with increased telencephalic differentiation in actinopterygian fishes.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The organization of Gn-RH systems in the brain of teleosts has been investigated previously by immunohistochemistry using antibodies against the mammalian decapeptide which differs from the teleostean factor. Here, we report the distribution of immunoreactive Gn-RH in the brain of goldfish using antibodies against synthetic teleost peptide.Immunoreactive structures are found along a column extending from the rostral olfactory bulbs to the pituitary stalk. Cell bodies are observed within the olfactory nerves and bulbs, along the ventromedial telencephalon, the ventrolateral preoptic area and the latero-basal hypothalamus. Large perikarya are detected in the dorsal midbrain tegmentum, immediately caudal to the posterior commissure. A prominent pathway was traced from the cells located in the olfactory nerves through the medial olfactory tract and along all the perikarya described above to the pituitary stalk. In the pituitary, projections are restricted to the proximal pars distalis. A second immunoreactive pathway ascends more dorsally in the telencephalon and arches to the periventricular regions of the diencephalon. Part of this pathway forms a periventricular network in the dorsal and posterior hypothalamus, whereas other projections continue caudally to the medulla oblongata and the spinal cord. Lesions of the ventral preoptic area demonstrate that most of the fibers detected in the pituitary originate from the preoptic region.  相似文献   

6.
Summary In cichlid, poecilid and centrarchid fishes luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH)-immunoreactive neurons are found in a cell group (nucleus olfactoretinalis) located at the transition between the ventral telencephalon and olfactory bulb. Processes of these neurons project to the contralateral retina, traveling along the border between the internal plexiform and internal nuclear layer, and probably terminating on amacrine or bipolar cells. Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) injected into the eye or optic nerve is transported retrogradely in the optic nerve to the contralateral nucleus olfactoretinalis where neuronal perikarya are labeled. Labeled processes leave this nucleus in a rostral direction and terminate in the olfactory bulb. The nucleus olfactoretinalis is present only in fishes, such as cichlids, poecilids and centrarchids, in which the olfactory bulbs border directly the telencephalic hemispheres. In cyprinid, silurid and notopterid fishes, in which the olfactory bulbs lie beneath the olfactory epithelium and are connected to the telencephalon via olfactory stalks, the nucleus olfactoretinalis or a comparable arrangement of LHRH-immunoreactive neurons is lacking. After retrograde transport of HRP in the optic nerve of these fishes no labeling of neurons in the telencephalon occurred. It is proposed that the nucleus olfactoretinalis anatomically and functionally interconnects and integrates parts of the olfactory and optic systems.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The distribution of salmon gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (sGnRH) was studied in the brain and pituitary of two-year-old immature sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) by means of an enzymoimmunoassay (EIA) for sGnRH and immunocytochemistry. The EIA for sGnRH is a competitive assay using a tracer made of sGnRH coupled to acetylcholinesterase from an electric eel. The separation of free and bound tracer is achieved by coating the plates with mouse anti-rabbit IgG monoclonal antibodies. Displacement curves generated by sGnRH and extracts from pituitary and different brain regions showed a good parallelism allowing the assay to be used for sGnRH measurements in this species. Although all parts of the brain contained measurable levels of sGnRH, the highest concentrations were found in the pituitary, the olfactory bulbs and the telencephalon. These data were confirmed by immunocytochemistry. Cell bodies were found in the olfactory bulbs, ventral telencephalon, preoptic region and mediobasal hypothalamus. Immunoreactive fibers could be observed in all parts of the brain including the optic tectum, the cerebellum (corpus and valvula), the vagal lobe, the medulla oblongata and the rostral spinal cord. In most cases, these fibers do not form well defined bundles; however, there was clearly a continuum of immunoreactive fibers, extending from the olfactory bulbs to the pituitary, and along which all the cell bodies described above were located. In the ventral telencephalon and the preoptic region, clear pictures of varicose positive fibers contacting immunoreactive perikarya could be observed. These data indicate that sGnRH is most likely an endogenous peptide in the brain of the sea bass, although the presence of other forms of GnRH cannot be excluded at this point. This study also demonstrates that the general organization of the GnRH systems in the sea bass is highly similar to what has been described in most freshwater teleost species, and provides basis for further studies on the neuroendocrine control of gonadotrophin release in this commercially important species.  相似文献   

8.
Using an antiserum generated in rabbits against synthetic galanin (GA) and the indirect immunofluorescence method, the distribution of GA-like immunoreactive cell bodies and nerve fibers was studied in the rat central nervous system (CNS) and a detailed stereotaxic atlas of GA-like neurons was prepared. GA-like immunoreactivity was widely distributed in the rat CNS. Appreciable numbers of GA-positive cell bodies were observed in the rostral cingulate and medial prefrontal cortex, the nucleus interstitialis striae terminalis, the caudate, medial preoptic, preoptic periventricular, and preoptic suprachiasmatic nuclei, the medial forebrain bundle, the supraoptic, the hypothalamic periventricular, the paraventricular, the arcuate, dorsomedial, perifornical, thalamic periventricular, anterior dorsal and lateral thalamic nuclei, medial and central amygdaloid nuclei, dorsal and ventral premamillary nuclei, at the base of the hypothalamus, in the central gray matter, the hippocampus, the dorsal and caudoventral raphe nuclei, the interpeduncular nucleus, the locus coeruleus, ventral parabrachial, solitarii and commissuralis nuclei, in the A1, C1 and A4 catechaolamine areas, the posterior area postrema and the trigeminal and dorsal root ganglia. Fibers were generally seen where cell bodies were observed. Very dense fiber bundles were noted in the septohypothalamic tract, the preoptic area, in the hypothalamus, the habenula and the thalamic periventricular nucleus, in the ventral hippocampus, parts of the reticular formation, in the locus coeruleus, the dorsal parabrachial area, the nucleus and tract of the spinal trigeminal area and the substantia gelatinosa, the superficial layers of the spinal cord and the posterior lobe of the pituitary. The localization of the GA-like immunoreactivity in the locus coeruleus suggests a partial coexistence with catecholaminergic neurons as well as a possible involvement of the GA-like peptide in a neuroregulatory role.  相似文献   

9.
The distribution of immunoreactivity for histamine was studied in the brain of the urodele Triturus carnifex using the indirect immunofluorescence method. Histamine-immunoreactive cell bodies were localized in the caudal hypothalamus within the dorsolateral walls of the infundibular recesses. These immunoreactive cell bodies were pear-shaped, bipolar and frequently of the cerebrospinal-fluid-contacting type. Histaminergic nerve fibers were detected in almost all parts of the brain. Dense innervation was seen in the telencephalic medial pallium and ventral striatum, the neuropil of the preoptic area, the septum, the paraventricular organ, the posterior commissure, the caudal hypothalamus, the ventral and lateral mesencephalic tegmentum. Medium density innervation was observed in the lateral mesencephalic tegmentum and optic tectum. Poor innervation was present in the telencephalic dorsal pallium and in the central gray of the medulla oblongata. Few fibers occurred in the olfactory bulbs and in the telencephalic lateral pallium. Double immunofluorescence staining, using an antibody against tyrosine hydroxylase, showed that histamine-immunostained somata and those containing tyrosine-hydroxylase-like immunoreactivity were co-distributed in the tuberal hypothalamus. No co-occurrence of histamine-like and tyrosine hydroxylase-like immunostaining was seen in the same neuron. The pattern of histamine-immunoreactive neurons in the newt was similar to that described in other vertebrates. Our observations, carried out on the apparently simplified brain of the newt confirm that the basic histaminergic system is well conserved throughout vertebrates.  相似文献   

10.
In mice, mitral cells are the major efferent neurons of the main olfactory bulb and elongate axons into a very narrow part of the telencephalon to form a fiber bundle referred to as the lateral olfactory tract (LOT). To clarify the mechanisms responsible for guidance of mitral cell axons along this particular pathway, we co-cultured mouse embryo main olfactory bulbs with the telencephalons, and analyzed the pathways taken by mitral cell axons. Ingrowth of mitral cell axons into the telencephalon was observed in those co-cultures in which the olfactory bulbs had been exactly combined to their normal pathway (the LOT position) of the telencephalon. The axons grew preferentially along the LOT position, and formed a LOT-like fiber bundle. When the olfactory bulbs were grafted at positions apart from their normal pathway, however, no mitral cell axons grew into the telencephalon. Neocortical fragments combined with the telencephalon projected fibers into the telencephalon in random directions. These results suggest that the LOT position of the telencephalon offers a guiding pathway for mitral cell axons and that guiding cues for mitral cell axons are extremely localized. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
The olfactory mucosa of the zebrafish consists of 3 morphological types of olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs): ciliated, microvillous, and crypt cells. Previous studies in the zebrafish have revealed differential projections of ciliated and microvillous ORNs, which project to different glomerular fields. However, the bulbar targets of zebrafish crypt cells were not identified. Here, we analyze the relationship between crypt cells of the olfactory epithelium and dorsal glomerular fields of the zebrafish olfactory bulbs, as wells as the connections between these bulbar regions and forebrain regions. For this purpose, a lipophilic carbocyanine tracer (DiI) was used in fixed tissue. Application of DiI to the dorsomedial glomerular field mainly labeled crypt cells in the zebrafish olfactory epithelium. By contrast, application of DiI to the dorsolateral glomerular fields mainly labeled bipolar ORNs and only occasionally crypt cells. Bulbar efferent cells (mitral cells) contacting these dorsal glomerular fields project to different telencephalic areas, with the posterior zone of the dorsal telencephalic area (Dp) as the common target. However, dorsomedial and dorsolateral glomerular fields projected differentially to the ventral telencephalon, the former projecting to the ventrolateral supracommissural region. Retrograde labeling from the ventrolateral supracommissural region revealed mitral cells associated with 2 large glomeruli in the bulbar dorsomedial region, which putatively receives inputs from the crypt cells, indicating the existence of a crypt cell olfactory subsystem with separate projections, in the zebrafish. The comparative significance of the secondary olfactory pathways of zebrafish that convey information from crypt cells is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The striatum of the lizard Tupinambis nigropunctatus lies in the lateral wall of the telencephalon and consists of two major subdivisions: the dorsal striatum and the ventral striatum. Electrolytic lesions were placed in all parts of the striatal complex and in adjacent areas and the subsequent anterograde degeneration was studied using the Nauta-Gygax and Fink-Heimer techniques. Lesions in the dorsal striatum cause terminal degeneration in the ventral striatum both ipsi- and contralaterally. In addition, projections have been found to the lateral amygdaloid nucleus and to parts of the dorsal striatum not affected by the lesion. Following lesions in the ventral striatum fiber degeneration could always be observed in the ventral peduncle of the lateral forebrain bundle. Corresponding terminal degeneration was found in the anterior and posterior entopeduncular nuclei, the tegmentum mesencephali, the substantia nigra, the prerubral area, the mesencephalic central grey and the lateral cerebellar nucleus. When the large celled part of the ventral striatum was involved in the lesion additional degeneration could be traced to the nucleus rotundus via the dorsal peduncle of the lateral forebrain bundle.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The central connections of the goldfish olfactory bulb were studied with the use of horseradish peroxidase methods. The olfactory bulb projects bilaterally to ventral and dorsolateral areas of the telencephalon; further targets include the nucleus praeopticus periventricularis and a caudal olfactory nucleus near the nucleus posterior tuberis in the diencephalon, bilaterally. The contralateral bulb and the anterior commissure also receive an input from the olfactory bulb. Contralateral projections cross in rostral and caudal portions of the anterior commissure and in the habenular commissure. Retrogradely labeled neurons are found in the contralateral bulb and in three nuclei in the telencephalon bilaterally; the neurons projecting to the olfactory bulb are far more numerous on the ipsilateral side than in the contralateral hemisphere. Afferents to the olfactory bulb are found to run almost entirely through the lateral part of the medial olfactory tract, while the bulb efferents are mediated by the medial part of the medial olfactory tract and the lateral olfactory tract. Selective tracing of olfactory sub-tracts reveals different pathways and targets of the three major tract components. Reciprocal connections between olfactory bulb and posterior terminal field suggest a laminated structure in the dorsolateral telencephalon.  相似文献   

14.
The current study reports for the first time the distribution of tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactive (TH-ir) neurons in the forebrain of the guppy Poecilia reticulata . Numerous small TH-ir neurons were observed in the olfactory bulbs, located mainly in the periphery of the bulbs. The TH-ir telencephalic neurons are localized in the ventral telencephalic area where they are grouped in three distinct nuclei (Vv,Vd and Vp) composed of a small number of cells forming a continuous strip. The largest number of forebrain TH-ir neurons was observed in the diencephalon where both small and larger neurons are present. Diencephalic TH-ir neurons are subdivided in large nuclei located in the preoptic region (nSC, nPOp and nPOm), the thalamus (nDM), the pretectal region (nPPv and nAP), the hypothalamus (nPP and nRP) and the posterior tuberculum (nPT). Many diencephalic nuclei are distributed in periventricular regions and no TH-ir cells were observed in the paraventricular organ. A comparative analysis indicates that the present observations are consistent with the general pattern of TH-ir neurons distribution reported for the forebrain of other teleosts, but with some interspecies variability present, mainly in the diencephalon. This paper also provides valuable neuroanatomical information for P. reticulata , a teleost frequently used in toxicological tests, for future studies investigating the effects of environmental pollutants on the catecholaminergic system.  相似文献   

15.
The efferent projections of the olfactory bulb in Microcebus murinus were identified after transection of the olfactory peduncle and after the revelation of the degenerating fibers by different silver staining methods. Total and partial sections have allowed demonstrating the importance of the two olfactory tracts in the olfactory projection areas. Degenerated fibers and endings were evidence not only in the different telencephalic regions, as classically known, but also in various hypothalamic nuclei (lateral hypothalamus, the suprachiasmatic, posterior supraoptic and mammillary nuclei and in the median eminence) and in several mesencephalic and metencephalic nuclei (ventral tegmental area, interpeduncular and raphe nuclei, and locus coeruleus). In all these structures the degenerate fibers were seen on both sides. The olfactory projections appeared not to be limited to the telencephalic areas. Moreover, the olfactory bulbs seem to be directly connected especially with the vegetative and integrative areas localized in the hypothalamus and the brainstem and particularly with the major aminergic nuclei that play an essential role in the neurovegetative, neuroendocrine and behavioral regulations.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The terminals of centrifugal fibers to the olfactory bulbs of goldfish were studied by electron microscopy after transection of the medial, lateral or entire olfactory tract. The centrifugal fibers originate in the telencephalic hemisphere, pass through both the medial and the lateral olfactory tract, and form synaptic contacts with dendrites in the granule cell layer.  相似文献   

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Following horseradish peroxidase iontophoretic application into the main olfactory bulb (MOB) retrograde neuronal labeling was examined in the telencephalon in the frog. Labeled neurons, the sources of the MOB afferents are found in the mitral cell layer of the contralateral MOB, pallial and some subpallial areas. Very heavy labeling is observed in the pars ventralis of the lateral pallium, and to a lesser extent in the medial pallium, pars dorsalis of the lateral pallium and in the dorsal pallium. In subpallium labeled neurons are found in the eminentia postolfactoria, the rostral part of the medial septal nucleus, and in the nucleus of the ventro-medial telencephalic wall, which is probably homologous to the nucleus of the diagonal band (Broca) of mammals. No labelled neurons were found in the caudal portion of the MOB granular layer, usually referred to as the anterior olfactory nucleus. The arrangement of the MOB centrifugal innervation in amphibians is discussed in comparison with that in mammals.  相似文献   

19.
Thalamocortical axons (TCAs), which originate in dorsal thalamus, project ventrally in diencephalon and then dorsolaterally in ventral telencephalon to their target, the neocortex. To elucidate potentially key decision points in TCA pathfinding and hence the possible localization of guidance cues, we used DiI-tracing to describe the initial trajectory of TCAs in mice. DiI-labeled TCAs extend ventrally on the lateral surface of ventral thalamus. Rather than continuing this trajectory onto the lateral surface of the hypothalamus, TCAs make a sharp lateral turn into ventral telencephalon. This behavior suggests that the hypothalamus is repulsive and the ventral telencephalon attractive for TCAs. In support of this hypothesis, we find that axon outgrowth from explants of dorsal thalamus is biased away from hypothalamus and toward ventral telencephalon when cocultured at a distance in collagen gels. The in vivo DiI analysis also reveals a broad cluster of retrogradely labeled neurons in the medial part of ventral telencephalon positioned within or adjacent to the thalamocortical pathway prior to or at the time TCAs are extending through it. The axons of these neurons extend into or through dorsal thalamus and appear to be coincident with the oppositely extending TCAs. These findings suggest that multiple cues guide TCAs along their pathway from dorsal thalamus to neocortex: TCAs may fasciculate on the axons of ventral telencephalic neurons as they extend through ventral thalamus and the medial part of ventral telencephalon, and chemorepellent and chemoattractant activities expressed by hypothalamus and ventral telencephalon, respectively, may cooperate to promote the turning of TCAs away from hypothalamus and into ventral telencephalon.  相似文献   

20.
A full-length cDNA encoding a GnRH receptor (GnRH-R) has been obtained from the pituitary of the European sea bass, Dicentrarchus labrax. The complete cDNA is 1814 base pairs (bp) in length and encodes a protein of 416 amino acids. The 5' UTR and 3' UTR are 239 bp and 324 bp in size, respectively. The expression sites of this GnRH-R were studied in the brain and pituitary of sea bass by means of in situ hybridization. A quantitative analysis of the expression of the GnRH-R gene along the reproductive cycle was also performed. The GnRH-R brain expression was especially relevant in the ventral telencephalon and rostral preoptic area. Some GnRH-R messenger-expressing cells were also evident in the dorsal telencephalon, caudal preoptic area, ventral thalamus, and periventricular hypothalamus. A conspicuous and specific GnRH-R expression was detected in the pineal gland. The highest expression of the GnRH-R gene was observed in the proximal pars distalis of the pituitary. This expression was evident in all LH cells and some FSH cells but not in somatotrophs. In the pituitary, the quantitative analysis revealed a higher expression of GnRH-R gene during late vitellogenesis in comparison with maturation, spawning, and postspawning/resting periods. However, in the brain, the highest GnRH-R expression was evident at spawning or postspawning/ resting periods. These results suggest that the expression of this GnRH-R is regulated in a different manner in the brain and the pituitary of sea bass.  相似文献   

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