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1.
Utilizing cyto-, myelo-, and chemoarchitecture as well as connectional criteria, the present study reveals the interstitial system of the spinal trigeminal tract (InSy-SVT) in the rat to be composed of five morphologically and functionally distinct components that are distributed within spatially restricted regions of the lateral medulla. The first component is represented by scattered interstitial cells and neuropil, which extend laterally into SVT from the superficial laminae of the medullary dorsal horn (MDH). The second component, the dorsal paramarginal nucleus (PaMd), consists of a small group of marginal (lamina I)-like neurons and neuropil situated within the dorsolateral part of SVT at the rostral pole of MDH. The third component represents a trigeminal extension of the parvocellular reticular formation (V-Rpc) into the ventromedial aspect of SVT at levels extending from rostral MDH to the caudal part of trigeminal nucleus interpolaris (Vi). The fourth component, the paratrigeminal nucleus (PaV), consists of a large accumulation of neurons and neuropil situated within the dorsal part of SVT throughout the caudal half of Vi. The fifth component is the insular trigeminal-cuneatus lateralis nucleus (iV-Cul), which is a discontinuous collection of neurons and neuropil interspersed among fibers of SVT as well as wedged between it and the spinocerebellar tract. Thalamic projection neurons are located in PaMd and V-Rpc, whereas cerebellar projecting neurons are confined to iV-Cul.  相似文献   

2.
Utilizing cyto-, myelo-, and chemoarchitecture as well as connectional criteria, the present study reveals the interstitial system of the spinal trigeminal tract (InSy-SVT) in the rat to be composed of five morphologically and functionally distinct components that are distributed within spatially restricted regions of the lateral medulla. The first component is represented by scattered interstitial cells and neuropil, which extend laterally into SVT from the superficial laminae of the medullary dorsal horn (MDH). The second component, the dorsal paramarginal nucleus (PaMd), consists of a small group of marginal (lamina I)-like neurons and neuropil situated within the dorsolateral part of SVT at the rostral pole of MDH. The third component represents a trigeminal extension of the parvocellular reticular formation (V-Rpc) into the ventromedial aspect of SVT at levels extending from rostral MDH to the caudal part of trigeminal nucleus interpolaris (Vi). The fourth component, the paratrigeminal nucleus (PaV), consists of a large accumulation of neurons and neuropil situated within the dorsal part of SVT throughout the caudal half of Vi. The fifth component is the insular trigeminal-cuneatus lateralis nucleus (iV-Cul), which is a discontinuous collection of neurons and neuropil interspersed among fibers of SVT as well as wedged between it and the spinocerebellar tract. Thalamic projection neurons are located in PaMd and V-Rpc, whereas cerebellar projecting neurons are confined to iV-Cul.  相似文献   

3.
Projections from the trigeminal complex to paramedian lobule (PML) were studied in the tree shrew (Tupaia glis) by means of retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP). Neurons which project to both dorsal and ventral folia of PML are located primarily in those areas of the trigeminal nuclear complex interpreted as nucleus interpolaris (Vi) and caudal areas of the nucleus oralis (Vo). The majority of HRP-labeled neurons lie in ventral and ventrolateral regions of Vi/Vo. No HRP-reactive cells are present in the principal (Vp), mesencephalic, or motor nuclei nor in nucleus caudalis or rostral portions of oralis. The majority of trigeminocerebellar (TC) cells are found in ipsilateral Vi; however, sparse numbers of labeled somata are present in this subnucleus on the contralateral side. Within Vi/Vo, small fusiform and medium-and large-sized multipolar neurons contain HRP-reaction product. Large multipolar cells are found primarily in ventrolateral portions of Vi/Vo, while medium and small neurons are scattered throughout the ventral half of the nucleus. Small-sized neurons are also present dorsally within Vi/Vo. Axons of labeled TC cells course laterally through the spinal trigeminal tract, enter medial aspects of the restiform body, and arch dorsally into the cerebellum.  相似文献   

4.
Transganglionic transport of horseradish peroxidase conjugated to wheatgerm agglutinin (HRP:WGA) entrapped in hypoallergenic polyacrylamide gel was used to study the patterns of termination of primary afferents that innervate the upper and lower tooth pulps within the trigeminal sensory nuclear complex (TSNC) of the monkey. HRP:WGA injections were also made into the lower incisors and molars, in order to examine the topographic arrangement of pulpal afferent projections. HRP-labeled pulpal afferents innervating lower and upper teeth projected ipsilaterally to the rostral subnucleus dorsalis (Vpd) and caudal subnucleus ventralis (Vpv) of the nucleus principalis (Vp); the rostrodorsomedial (Vo.r) and dorsomedial (Vo.dm) subdivisions of the nucleus oralis (Vo); the dorsomedial subdivision of the nucleus interpolaris (Vi); and laminae I—II and/or V of the nucleus caudalis (Vc) at its rostralmost level. The HRP-labeled terminals from upper and lower pulpal afferents formed a rostrocaudal column from the midlevel of Vp to the rostral tip of Vc. The label in Vp and Vo was considerably dense, but the column of terminals was interrupted at the Vpd-Vpv transition. The label in Vi and Vc was much less dense compared to that in the rostral nuclei, and the column of terminals was interrupted frequently. The representation of the upper and lower teeth in TSNC was organized in a somatotopic fashion that varied from one subdivision to the next, though their terminal zones overlapped within Vpd. The upper and lower teeth were represented in Vpv, Vo.r, Vo.dm, Vi, and Vc in a ventrodorsal, dorsoventral, lateromedial, lateromedial, and lateromedial sequence, respectively. Topographic arrangement was also noticed for the projections of pulpal afferents from the lower incisors and molars: The representations of the lower incisors and molars in Vpv, Vo.r, Vo.dm, Vi, and Vc were organized in a lateromedial, dorsoventral, ventrodorsal, ventrodorsal, and lateromedial sequence, respectively. The present results indicating sparse projections from pulpal afferents in the monkey's Vc are in good correspondence with a clinical report that trigeminal tractotomy just rostral to the obex has no significant effect on dental pain perception in patients. Furthermore, the present study indicates that projection patterns of pulpal afferents—which include the termination sites, the density of terminations between nuclei, and topographic arrangement—differ among animal species.  相似文献   

5.
This study provides basic data on the normal structure of the inferior olivary complex (IOC) of the donkey, Equus asinus, at the light microscopic level. In common with that of other mammals, the donkey IOC consisted of three major nuclei and four minor groups of cells. The former was comprised of the medial and dorsal accessory olives (MAO and DAO, respectively) and the principal olive (PO), and the latter was comprised of the dorsal cap, nucleus beta, ventrolateral outgrowth and dorsomedial cell column. The MAO had the longest rostral to caudal representation and formed the caudal pole of IOC. The DAO was located dorsally to the MAO in the caudal half of the IOC. In the rostral half, the DAO bended ventrally and merged with the dorsal lamella of PO. More rostrally, the DAO lost its connection with the dorsal lamella and then conversely connected with the ventral lamella of PO. The DAO formed the rostral pole of the IOC. The PO extended through the rostral half of the IOC. The dorsal cap was a small group of cells. Overall, the donkey IOC is similar to that of other mammals.  相似文献   

6.
Gamma-aminobutyric acid-immunoreactive neurons in the rat trigeminal nuclei   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The distribution of GABAergic neurons in the rat trigeminal nuclei was studied using a highly specific monoclonal antibody (mAb3A12) to gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). Immunopositive cells were relatively abundant in the marginal and gelatinosa beds of the caudal part of the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus, and in the dorsomedial areas of the oral subnucleus and the principal nucleus. A high density of GABA-immunoreactive somata was also found in the rostral part of the oral subnucleus and in the adjacent parvicellular reticular formation as well as in the supratrigeminal and intertrigeminal regions. Thus, the distribution of the GABAergic cells showed a relatively high density in areas related to the convergence of sensory stimuli, and in zones that contain interneurons inhibiting masticatory motorneurons. The results suggest, therefore, that GABA might play an important role both in discriminative sensory processing and in reflex modulation of the orofacial region.Abbreviations RF reticular formation - FRp parvicellular reticular formation - Vc trigeminal nucleus of the spinal tract, subnucleus caudalis - Vmes mesencephalic nucleus - Vmo trigeminal motor nucleus - Vo trigeminal nucleus of the spinal tract, subnucleus oralis - Vp principal trigeminal nucleus - Vsp spinal trigeminal nucleus - Vsup supratrigeminal nucleus  相似文献   

7.
Periodontal mechanosensitive (PM) units were recorded from the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus (Vst) of the cat. The Vst is divided into three subnuclei: oralis (Vo), interpolaris (Vi), and caudalis (Vc). The receptive fields of PM units in Vo and Vi were arranged in a dorsoventral sequence in the mandibular to maxillary divisions, and those in Vc were arranged in a mediolateral sequence. The majority of Vo units were single-tooth ones, whereas more than half the Vi units and all the Vc ones were multitooth units. The PM units in each subnucleus were predominantly responsive to canine tooth stimulation. Most of the PM units in Vo and Vi gave sustained responses to pressure applied to the tooth, were directionally selective, and were most actively excited by canine tooth stimulation in the caudomedial or rostrolateral direction. Vc units, however, were transient. The threshold intensity for firings by canine tooth stimulation was less than 0.05 N. These findings indicate that only the response properties of PM units in the rostral part of Vst resemble those of the trigeminal main sensory nucleus neurons and primary afferent nerves.  相似文献   

8.
Heme oxygenase (HO)/carbon monoxide (CO) and nitric oxide synthase (NOS)/nitric oxide (NO) systems are involved in sensory information processing. The present study was undertaken to examine the distribution of HO-2 and NOS in the spinal trigeminal nucleus (STN) of the rat, using histochemistry and immunohistochemistry. Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-diaphorase (NADPH-d) staining was found that NADPH-d activity was more prominent in the nucleus caudalis (Vc) and the dorsomedial subdivision of the nucleus oralis (Vo) than in other spinal trigeminal regions. Immunohistochemistry for HO-2 revealed that HO-2 staining neurons distributed extensively, which intensity was higher in the rostral than caudal part of the STN. The colocalization of NADPH-d and HO-2 was mainly confined in the Vc. The expression and distribution of NADPH-d and HO-2 suggest that NO and CO are likely neurotransmitters and might function in the processing orofacial signal in the STN together.  相似文献   

9.
Neurons in the caudalmost ventrolateral medulla (cmVLM) respond to noxious stimulation. We previously have shown most efferent projections from this locus project to areas implicated either in the processing or modulation of pain. Here we show the cmVLM of the rat receives projections from superficial laminae of the medullary dorsal horn (MDH) and has neurons activated with capsaicin injections into the temporalis muscle. Injections of either biotinylated dextran amine (BDA) into the MDH or fluorogold (FG)/fluorescent microbeads into the cmVLM showed projections from lamina I and II of the MDH to the cmVLM. Morphometric analysis showed the retrogradely-labeled neurons were small (area 88.7 μm(2)±3.4) and mostly fusiform in shape. Injections (20-50 μl) of 0.5% capsaicin into the temporalis muscle and subsequent immunohistochemistry for c-Fos showed nuclei labeled in the dorsomedial trigeminocervical complex (TCC), the cmVLM, the lateral medulla, and the internal lateral subnucleus of the parabrachial complex (PBil). Additional labeling with c-Fos was seen in the subnucleus interpolaris of the spinal trigeminal nucleus, the rostral ventrolateral medulla, the superior salivatory nucleus, the rostral ventromedial medulla, and the A1, A5, A7 and subcoeruleus catecholamine areas. Injections of FG into the PBil produced robust label in the lateral medulla and cmVLM while injections of BDA into the lateral medulla showed projections to the PBil. Immunohistochemical experiments to antibodies against substance P, the substance P receptor (NK1), calcitonin gene regulating peptide, leucine enkephalin, VRL1 (TPRV2) receptors and neuropeptide Y showed that these peptides/receptors densely stained the cmVLM. We suggest the MDH- cmVLM projection is important for pain from head and neck areas. We offer a potential new pathway for regulating deep pain via the neurons of the TCC, the cmVLM, the lateral medulla, and the PBil and propose these areas compose a trigeminoreticular pathway, possibly the trigeminal homologue of the spinoreticulothalamic pathway.  相似文献   

10.
Electrophysiological studies (Sessle, 1987, 1991) suggest that trigeminal deafferenting injuries can cause an "unmasking" of existing but normally suppressed convergent inputs to the spinal trigeminal nucleus, including many that arise from the cervical spinal cord. However, the spatial arrangement of this projection has not been examined, particularly with reference to nociceptive components that might become involved in pathological changes leading to chronic pain. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to apply selective interruptions of the trigeminal and/or cervical primary afferent inputs to the spinal trigeminal subnucleus caudalis (Vc) in the cat, followed by (1) demonstration and quantification of axonal degeneration in the spinal trigeminal tract to determine the extent of trigeminal-cervical primary afferent overlap; and (2) an analysis of lesion-induced alterations in the distribution of calcitonin gene-related peptide immunoreactivity (CGRP-IR) in laminae I and II of Vc, since recent evidence strongly suggests that CGRP is involved in pathophysiological elevations of central nervous system neuronal excitability. Degenerating fibers were found throughout the spinal tract following a trigeminal rhizotomy or tractotomy, with the largest numbers adjacent to the rostral two-thirds of Vc, but with a significant number extending caudally to at least the level of C2. CGRP-IR was reduced or eliminated from the rostral one-third and periobex region of Vc, except for a dorsomedial zone that was minimally affected. Retention of CGRP-IR was greater at more caudal levels. Following a combined trigmeninal and cervical tractotomy, fiber degeneration was massive throughout the spinal tract, yet a population of small myelinated fibers persisted at 60 days after surgery. Concomitantly, CGRP-IR was profoundly reduced throughout Vc, except for a small dorsomedial zone of retention, which became more extensive caudally. A cervical tractotomy resulted in moderate numbers of degenerating fibers adjacent to the caudal one-third of Vc, and this number declined rostrally; however, degenerating fibers could be seen at the level of the obex. CGRP-IR was reduced in the dorsomedial and ventrolateral zones of Vc, particularly in its caudal one-third. Electron-microscopic analysis revealed a population of CGRP-IR boutons, most of which were of the simple axodendritic type with asymmetrical contacts. A few examples of axoaxonic contacts were observed. Loss of labeled boutons observed with the electron microscope was consistent with light-microscopic quantitative results. Those boutons that were retained were variable in size and displayed simple axodendritic contacts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The origin of different branches of the facial nerve in the rabbit was determined by using retrograde transport of HRP. Either the proximal stump of specific nerves was exposed to HRP after transection, or an injection of the tracer was made into particular muscles innervated by a branch of the facial nerve. A clear somatotopic pattern was observed. Those branches which innervate the rostral facial musculature arise from cells located in the lateral and intermediate portions of the nuclear complex. Orbital musculature is supplied by neurons in the dorsal portion of the complex, with the more rostral orbital muscles receiving input from more laterally located cells while the caudal orbital region receives innervation from more medial regions of the dorsal facial nucleus. The rostral portion of the ear also receives innervation from cells located in the dorsomedial part of the nucleus, but the caudal aspect of the ear is supplied exclusively by cells located in medial regions. The cervical platysma, the platysma of the lower jaw, and the deep muscles (i.e., digastric and stylohyoid) receive input from cells topographically arranged in the middle and ventral portions of the nuclear complex. It is proposed that the topographic relationship between the facial nucleus and branches of the facial nerve reflects the embryological derivation of the facial muscles. Those muscles that develop from the embryonic sphincter colli profundus layer are innervated by lateral and dorsomedial portions of the nuclear complex. The muscles derived from the embryonic platysma layer, including the deep musculature, receive their input from mid to ventral regions of the nuclear complex.  相似文献   

12.
Ulex europaeus agglutinin I (UEA-I) is a plant lectin with an affinity for L-fucosyl residues in the chains of lactoseries oligosaccharides associated with medium and smaller-diameter dorsal root ganglion neurons and their axonal processes. These enter Lissauer's tract and terminate within the superficial laminae of the spinal cord overlapping projections known to have a nociceptive function. This implies that the surface coatings of neuronal membranes may have a relationship with functional modalities. The present investigation further examined this concept by studying a neuronal projection with a nociceptive function to determine whether fucosyl-lactoseries residues were incorporated in its primary afferent terminals. Transganglionic transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) following injection into tooth pulp chambers was employed to demonstrate dental pulp terminals in the trigeminal spinal complex, while peroxidase and fluorescent tags were used concomitantly to stain for UEA-I. Double immunolabeling for substance P (SP) and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) using peroxidase and colloidal gold allowed a comparison of the distribution of a known excitatory nociceptive transmitter with that of UEA-I binding in specific subnuclei. Synaptic interrelationships between UEA-I positive dental pulp primary afferent inputs and specific inhibitory terminals were also examined.

SP immunoreactivity occurred in laminae I and outer lamina II (IIo) of subnucleus caudalis (Vc) and in the ventrolateral and lateral marginal region of the caudal half of subnucleus interpolaris (Vi), including the periobex area in which Vi is slightly overlapped on its lateral aspect by cellular elements of Vc. The adjacent interstitial nucleus (IN) also showed an intense immunoreactivity for this peptide antibody. UEA-I binding displayed a similar distribution pattern in both Vc and Vi, but extended into lamina II; and the superficial part of Lamina III in Vc. Dental pulp terminals were found to have a comparable distribution; however, many extended into the dorsal portion of the caudal half of Vi and the ventromedial quadrant of rostral Vi.

Electron-microscopic analysis showed that transganglionically labeled dental pulp terminals contained ovoid, complex membrane-bound vacuoles laden with transported HRP. The preterminal axon and synaptic membranes of those dental pulp terminals located in zones of Vc and Vi displaying an affinity for UEA-I were usually characterized by a patchy, electron-dense coating of the peroxidase tag. SP was demonstrated ultrastructurally with Protein-A colloidal gold (3-nm particles), whereas GABA immunoreactivity was revealed by the avidin—biotin—peroxidase method. This combined approach labeled a variety of simple axodendritic to large complex scalloped dental terminals which contained SP and were shown to have a UEA-I affinity. In addition, many of the larger terminals formed contacts with GABA-ergic dendrites and received inputs from GABA-ergic synapses. These complexes were most concentrated in lamina IIo of Vc and the ventrolateral zone of Vi. Many terminals in laminae IIi; and III with a UEA-I-positive surface coating failed to bind with the antiserum for SP, indicating that other transmitters may colocalize with UEA-I and suggesting that absolute correlations between specific oligosaccharide plasmalemmal coatings and functional modalities should be approached with caution. Further studies employing antisera to different transmitters are currently underway to better define the relationship between transmitter localization and anatomical substrates within this circuitry. These studies should eventually provide additional clues about relationships between functional properties and oligosaccharide coatings of primary afferent projections.  相似文献   

13.
The retrograde fluorescent labeling technique reveals that trigeminal projections to the ventroposteromedial nucleus of the thalamus (VPM) of the rat originate from the main sensory nucleus (MSN) of the trigeminal and subnuclei interpolaris (V1) and caudalis (Vc) of the spinal trigeminal nucleus. These projections are predominantly contralateral; however, the presence of a few ipsilateral labeled cells in MSN suggests an uncrossed trigeminothalamic pathway. Trigeminocerebellar fibers projecting to the paramedian lobule (PML) of the cerebellar cortex are located in Vi and caudal subnucleus oralis (Vo). This is principally an ipsilateral pathway, but several bisbenzimide-labeled cells are present in contralateral Vi. The most notable finding occurred after paired injections of Evans Blue into VPM and bisbenzimide into PML, demonstrating neurons in Vi with divergent projections to both structures. The presence of this type of projection was not found in mice (Steindler: J. Comp. Neurol. 237:155-175, 1985) and has not been reported in other species.  相似文献   

14.
This study describes the projection of cervical spinal afferent nerve fibers to the medulla in the brush-tailed possum, a marsupial mammal. After single dorsal roots (between C2 and T1) were cut in a series of animals, the Fink-Heimer method was used to demonstrate the projection fields of fibers entering the CNS via specific dorsal roots. In the high cervical spinal cord, afferent fibers from each dorsal root form a discrete layer in the dorsal funiculus. The flattened laminae from upper cervical levels are lateral and those from lower cervical levels are medial within the dorsal columns. All afferent fibers at this level are separated from gray matter by the corticospinal fibers in the dorsal funiculus. All cervical roots project throughout most of the length of the well-developed main cuneate nucleus in a loosely segmentotopic fashion. Fibers from rostral roots enter more lateral parts of the nucleus, and fibers from lower levels pass to more medial areas; but terminal projection fields are typically large and overlap extensively. At more rostral medullary levels, fibers from all cervical dorsal roots also reach the external cuneate nucleus. The spatial arrangement here is more complex and more extensively overlapped than in the cuneate nucleus. Rostral cervical root fibers reach ventral and ventrolateral areas of the external cuneate nucleus and continue to its rostral pole; more caudal root fibers project to more dorsal and medial regions within the nucleus. These results demonstrate that projection patterns of spinal afferents in this marsupial are similar to those seen in the few placental species for which detailed data concerning this system are available.  相似文献   

15.
The expression of the immediate early gene, c-fos, was used to determine the distribution of brainstem neurons activated by stimulation of the distal hypoglossal nerve (XIIn) trunk. The traditional view of the XIIn is one of purely motor function; however, stimulation of XIIn excites neurons in the trigeminal spinal nucleus. The rationale for this study was to use c-fos expression as a marker for postsynaptic activity to define the pattern of brainstem neurons excited by XIIn stimulation. It was further hypothesized that if the afferent fibers that course within XIIn supply deep lingual tissues, then c-fos expression after direct stimulation of XIIn should display a pattern similar to that seen after chemical irritant stimulation of the deep tongue muscle. In barbiturate-anesthetized male rats electrical stimulation of XIIn produced a significant increase in Fospositive neurons in the dorsal paratrigeminal nucleus (dPa5) and laminae I-II of caudal subnucleus caudalis (Vc) and upper cervical dorsal horn. Mustard oil injection into the deep tongue muscle also produced an increase in c-fos expression in dPa5; however, the highest density of expression occurred in laminae I-II at the dorsomedial aspect of rostral Vc. Both electrical stimulation of XIIn and mustard oil stimulation of the deep tongue increased c-fos expression in the caudal ventrolateral medulla, an autonomic relay nucleus. These results suggest that one site of innervation for afferent fibers that travel within the distal trunk of XIIn is to supply the deep tongue muscle and to terminate in the dPa5. A second group of postsynaptic neurons activated only by XIIn stimulation was located in lamina I-II in caudal portions of Vc and upper cervical dorsal horn, a laminar distribution consistent with a role for XIIn afferents in sensory or autonomic aspects of lingual function.  相似文献   

16.
Ulex europaeus agglutinin I (UEA-I) is a plant lectin with an affinity for L-fucosyl residues in the chains of lactoseries oligosaccharides associated with medium- and smaller-diameter dorsal root ganglion neurons and their axonal processes. These enter Lissauer's tract and terminate within the superficial laminae of the spinal cord overlapping projections known to have a nociceptive function. This implies that the surface coatings of neuronal membranes may have a relationship with functional modalities. The present investigation further examined this concept by studying a neuronal projection with a nociceptive function to determine whether fucosyl-lactoseries residues were incorporated in its primary afferent terminals. Transganglionic transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) following injection into tooth pulp chambers was employed to demonstrate dental pulp terminals in the trigeminal spinal complex, while peroxidase and fluorescent tags were used concomitantly to stain for UEA-I. Double immunolabeling for substance P (SP) and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) using peroxidase and colloidal gold allowed a comparison of the distribution of a known excitatory nociceptive transmitter with that of UEA-I binding in specific subnuclei. Synaptic interrelationships between UEA-I positive dental pulp primary afferent inputs and specific inhibitory terminals were also examined. SP immunoreactivity occurred in laminae I and outer lamina II (IIo) of subnucleus caudalis (Vc) and in the ventrolateral and lateral marginal region of the caudal half of subnucleus interpolaris (Vi), including the periobex area in which Vi is slightly overlapped on its lateral aspect by cellular elements of Vc. The adjacent interstitial nucleus (IN) also showed an intense immunoreactivity for this peptide antibody. UEA-I binding displayed a similar distribution pattern in both Vc and Vi, but extended into lamina IIi and the superficial part of Lamina III in Vc. Dental pulp terminals were found to have a comparable distribution; however, many extended into the dorsal portion of the caudal half of Vi and the ventromedial quadrant of rostral Vi. Electron-microscopic analysis showed that transganglionically labeled dental pulp terminals contained ovoid, complex membrane-bound vacuoles laden with transported HRP. The preterminal axon and synaptic membranes of those dental pulp terminals located in zones of Vc and Vi displaying an affinity for UEA-I were usually characterized by a patchy, electron-dense coating of the peroxidase tag. SP was demonstrated ultrastructurally with Protein-A colloidal gold (3-nm particles), whereas GABA immunoreactivity was revealed by the avidin-biotin-peroxidase method.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The organization of the projection from the pretectal region to the inferior olive in the cat was studied with autoradiographic and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) methods. After injections of HRP into the olive in six cats, cells were labeled ipsilaterally in the anterior pretectal nucleus (NPA), the posterior pretectal nucleus (NPP), the nucleus of the optic tract (NOT), and the dorsal terminal nucleus of the accessory optic tract (DTN). In three experiments, tritiated amino acids were injected into those parts of the pretectal region which contained labeled cells in the HRP experiments, and the projections to the olive were plotted. Both NPA and NPP projected to the rostral half of the dorsal accessory olive, the rostromedial margin of the ventral lamella, and the lateral part of the ventrolateral outgrowth. NOT projected to the caudal half of the dorsal cap, while DTN projected to both the dorsal cap and nucleus beta. The projections are entirely ipsilateral.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Young adult albino rats of Wistar strain were used for the present study. 0.5 to 15 microliters of 20-50% of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) were injected into each individual muscle of mastication to label neurons in the trigeminal motor nucleus (TMON) for light microscopic study. The results reveal that: (1) Many HRP-labeled, multipolar neurons are observed in the motor nucleus in each jaw-closing muscle (JCM) with less in each the jaw-opening muscle (JOM). (2) The motor neurons innervating each masticatory muscle in the motor nucleus show a somatotopic arrangement: (a) those innervating the temporalis muscle are located in the medial and dorsomedial parts; (b) those innervating the masseter muscle are located in the intermediate and lateral; (c) those innervating the medial and lateral pterygoid muscles are located in the lateral, ventrolateral and ventromedial parts, respectively; and (d) those innervating the mylohyoid and the anterior belly of the digastric muscles are located in the most ventromedial part of the caudal one-third of the nucleus. Axons of most masticatory motor neurons run ventrolaterally in between the motor and the chief sensory nuclei of the trigeminal nerve. However, those of the mylohyoid and anterior belly of the digastric muscles ascend dorsally to the dorsal aspect of the caudal nucleus and then turn ventrolaterally to join the motor root of the trigeminal nerve. Furthermore, the dendrites of the motor neuron of JCM converge dorsocaudally to the supratrigeminal region. The diameters of neurons of each JCM display a bimodal distribution. However, an unimodal distribution is present in the motor neurons from each JCM. It is suggested that the motor nucleus innervating the JCM is comprised of comprised of alpha- and gamma-motor neurons. It, thus, may provide a neural basis for the regulation of the muscle tone and biting force.  相似文献   

20.
In the leech Helobdella, the ectoderm exhibits a high degree of morphological homonomy between body segments, but pattern elements in lateral ectoderm arise via distinct cell lineages in the segments of the rostral and midbody regions. In each of the four rostral segments, a complete set of ventrolateral (O fate) and dorsolateral (P fate) ectodermal pattern elements arises from a single founder cell, op. In the 28 midbody and caudal segments, however, there are two initially indeterminate o/p founder cells; the more dorsal of these is induced to adopt the P fate by BMP5-8 emanating from the dorsalmost ectoderm, while the more ventral cell assumes the O fate. Previous work has suggested that the dorsoventral patterning of O and P fates differs in the rostral region, but the role of BMP signaling in those segments has not been investigated. We show here that suppression of dorsal BMP5-8 signaling (which effects a P-to-O fate change in the midbody) has no effect on the patterning of O and P fates in the rostral region. Furthermore, ectopic expression of BMP5-8 in the ventral ectoderm (which induces an O-to-P fate change in the midbody) has no effect in the rostral region. Finally, expression of a dominant-negative BMP receptor (which induces a P-to-O fate change in the midbody) fails to affect O/P patterning in the rostral region. Thus, the rostral segments appear to use some mechanism other than BMP signaling to pattern O and P cell fates along the dorsoventral axis. From a mechanistic standpoint, the OP lineage of the rostral segments and the O-P equivalence group of the midbody and caudal segments constitute distinct developmental modules that rely to differing degrees on positional cues from surrounding ectoderm in order to specify homonomous cell fates.  相似文献   

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