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Cerebellar projections to the macaque midbrain tegmentum: Possible near response connections
- Martin O. Bohlen, Paul D. Gamlin, Susan Warren, Paul J. May
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- Journal:
- Visual Neuroscience / Volume 38 / 2021
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 12 May 2021, E007
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Since most gaze shifts are to targets that lie at a different distance from the viewer than the current target, gaze changes commonly require a change in the angle between the eyes. As part of this response, lens curvature must also be adjusted with respect to target distance by the ciliary muscle. It has been suggested that projections by the cerebellar fastigial and posterior interposed nuclei to the supraoculomotor area (SOA), which lies immediately dorsal to the oculomotor nucleus and contains near response neurons, support this behavior. However, the SOA also contains motoneurons that supply multiply innervated muscle fibers (MIFs) and the dendrites of levator palpebrae superioris motoneurons. To better determine the targets of the fastigial nucleus in the SOA, we placed an anterograde tracer into this cerebellar nucleus in Macaca fascicularis monkeys and a retrograde tracer into their contralateral medial rectus, superior rectus, and levator palpebrae muscles. We only observed close associations between anterogradely labeled boutons and the dendrites of medial rectus MIF and levator palpebrae motoneurons. However, relatively few of these associations were present, suggesting these are not the main cerebellar targets. In contrast, labeled boutons in SOA, and in the adjacent central mesencephalic reticular formation (cMRF), densely innervated a subpopulation of neurons. Based on their location, these cells may represent premotor near response neurons that supply medial rectus and preganglionic Edinger–Westphal motoneurons. We also identified lens accommodation-related cerebellar afferent neurons via retrograde trans-synaptic transport of the N2c rabies virus from the ciliary muscle. They were found bilaterally in the fastigial and posterior interposed nuclei, in a distribution which mirrored that of neurons retrogradely labeled from the SOA and cMRF. Our results suggest these cerebellar neurons coordinate elements of the near response during symmetric vergence and disjunctive saccades by targeting cMRF and SOA premotor neurons.
Central neural circuits for the light-mediated reflexive control of choroidal blood flow in the pigeon eye: A laser Doppler study
- Malinda E. C. Fitzgerald, Paul D. R. Gamlin, Yuri Zagvazdin, Anton Reiner
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- Journal:
- Visual Neuroscience / Volume 13 / Issue 4 / July 1996
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 June 2009, pp. 655-669
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Electrical stimulation in pigeons of the input from the medial subdivision of the nucleus of Edinger-Westphal (EWM) to the choroidal neurons of the ipsilateral ciliary ganglion, which themselves have input to the choroidal blood vessels of the ipsilateral eye, increases choroidal blood flow (ChBF). Since the EWM receives input from the contralateral suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), which in turn receives contralateral retinal input, the present study sought to determine if activation of the SCN by microstimulation or by retinal illumination of the contralateral eye would also yield increases in ChBF in that same eye. Using laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF) to measure ChBF, we found that electrical activation of the contralateral SCN by 100-Hz anodal pulse trains yielded increases in ChBF that were stimulus related and proportional to the stimulating current. These increases in ChBF elicited by the SCN stimulation were accompanied by increases in choroidal volume (vasodilation), but not by increases in systemic blood pressure. Furthermore, the increases could be blocked reversibly by lidocaine injection into the EWM. These results suggest that the increases in ChBF in the eye contralateral to the SCN stimulation were specifically mediated by the SCN-EWM pathway. Retinal illumination with a fiber optic light source was also found to increase ChBF in the illuminated eye, and these effects too could be blocked reversibly with lidocaine injection into the EWM or permanently by the EWM lesion. Control studies confirmed that the light-elicited increases were mediated by increases in choroidal volume (i.e. vasodilation), were not accompanied by systemic blood pressure increases, and were not artifactually generated by transocular illumination of the LDF probe. Thus, the SCN-EWM circuit may be involved in regulating ChBF in response to the level of retinal illumination and/or the visual patterns falling on the retina.