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141


Evidence for glycine as an inhibitory neurotransmitter of vestibular, reticular, and prepositus hypoglossi neurons that project to the cat abducens nucleus

Spencer, R F; Wenthold, R J; Baker, R
The localization and distribution of brain-stem afferent neurons to the cat abducens nucleus has been examined by high-affinity uptake and retrograde transport of 3H-glycine. Injections of 3H-glycine selectively labeled (by autoradiography) only neurons located predominantly in the ipsilateral medial vestibular and contralateral prepositus hypoglossi nuclei, and in the contralateral dorsomedial reticular formation, the latter corresponding to the location of inhibitory burst neurons. The specificity of uptake and retrograde transport of 3H-glycine was indicated by the absence of labeling of the dorsomedial medullary reticular neurons ipsilateral and in close proximity to the injection site, where local uptake by diffusion could have occurred. The selectivity of uptake and transport was demonstrated by the absence of retrograde labeling following injections of 3H-GABA or 3H-leucine into the abducens nucleus. The immunohistochemical localization of glycine and GABA revealed a differential distribution of the 2 inhibitory neurotransmitter candidates in the extraocular motor nuclei. Glycine-immunoreactive staining of synaptic endings in the abducens nucleus was dense with a widespread soma-dendritic distribution but was sparse in the trochlear and oculomotor nuclei. By contrast, GABA-immunoreactive staining within the oculomotor and trochlear nuclei was associated with synaptic endings that were particularly prominent on the somata of motoneurons. GABA-immunoreactive staining in the abducens nucleus, however, was sparse. These differences between glycine- and GABA-immunoreactive staining in the extraocular motor nuclei were correlated with differences in the immunoreactivity of axons in the descending (glycine) and ascending (GABA) limbs of the medial longitudinal fasciculus. Glycine-immunoreactive neurons, furthermore, were observed in the same locations as neurons that were labeled autoradiographically by retrograde transport of 3H-glycine from the abducens nucleus. Electrophysiological recordings from abducens motoneurons and internuclear neurons revealed a marked reduction in the slow positivity of the orthodromic extracellular potential elicited by ipsilateral vestibular nerve stimulation following systemic administration of strychnine, an antagonist of glycine. Intracellular recordings demonstrated that the vestibular-evoked disynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials in abducens neurons were effectively blocked by strychnine but were unaffected by picrotoxin, an antagonist of GABA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
PMID: 2570136
ISSN: 0270-6474
CID: 163670

EYE-MOVEMENT REPERTOIRE OF THE CABAZON SCULPIN, SCORPAENICHTHYS-MARMORATUS [Meeting Abstract]

Weiser, M; Bass, A; Mcelligott, JG; Baker, R
ISI:A1988R225500042
ISSN: 0006-3185
CID: 31428

Synaptic organization of the tectal-facial pathways in the cat. I. Synaptic potentials following collicular stimulation

Vidal PP; May PJ; Baker R
1. The synaptic pathways underlying tectal influence over pinna movements were studied using an acute electrophysiological approach. Under pentobarbital anesthesia, postsynaptic potentials were recorded intracellularly in antidromically identified, cat facial motoneurons following electrical stimulation of the superior colliculus. How collicular topography is reflected in these synaptic potentials was examined using multiple stimulation sites. The pathways responsible for tectally evoked synaptic potentials were studied by making acute brain stem lesions and by intra-axonal horseradish peroxidase (HRP) staining. 2. Monosynaptic excitatory potentials (EPSPs) with latencies ranging from 0.7 to 1.1 ms and amplitudes that were always less than 1 mV were recorded in motoneurons following stimulation of the contralateral superior colliculus. Larger disynaptic EPSPs ranging in latency from 1.2 to 2.0 ms were recorded both in isolation and in association with monosynaptic EPSPs. In addition, disynaptic inhibitory synaptic potentials (IPSPs) with latencies ranging from 1.5 to 2.5 ms were observed, often in combination with monosynaptic EPSPs. Both disynaptic EPSPs and IPSPs were graded, augmented by multiple stimuli and found in all categories of motoneurons. 3. Stimulation of the ipsilateral superior colliculus produced nearly the same spectrum of potentials and latencies as did contralateral tectal stimulation. Occlusion between ipsi- and contralaterally evoked IPSPs suggests there might be a common element in the inhibitory disynaptic pathways. 4. More discrete populations of facial motoneurons were investigated. Specifically, motoneurons innervating the platysma and orbicularis oculi muscles, the intrinsic ear muscles, and muscles that move the vibrissae all displayed tectally elicited mono- and di-synaptic potentials. Collicular input was not restricted to motoneurons involved in orienting the pinnae. 5. The presence, polarity, and amplitude of the synaptic potentials evoked in individual facial motoneurons exhibited variations that were related to the site of stimulation in either the ipsi- or contralateral colliculus. These variations are compatible with the idea that the collicular input to facial motoneurons is topographically organized. 6. Acute lesions at the level of the superior olive indicated that the pathway producing the contralateral monosynaptic EPSPs runs, near the midline, ipsilateral to the target facial nucleus, whereas the contralateral disynaptic and the ipsilateral mono- and disynaptic pathways lie further lateral.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
PMID: 3171650
ISSN: 0022-3077
CID: 11010

Behavior of neurons in the abducens nucleus of the alert cat--III. Axotomized motoneurons

Delgado-Garcia, J M; Del Pozo, F; Spencer, R F; Baker, R
The effects of peripheral and central VIth nerve axotomy on abducens nucleus synaptic potentials of vestibular origin and the ultrastructure of intracellularly labeled abducens motoneurons were examined in the anesthetized cat. Subsequent experiments explored the activity of identified abducens motoneurons during spontaneous and vestibular induced eye movements in alert cats prepared for chronic recordings of eye movements, single units and field potentials. Following axotomy the typical disynaptic inhibition of abducens motoneurons induced by electrical stimulation of the ipsilateral vestibular nerve either disappeared or was reduced for 5-30 days. Disynaptic activation produced by contralateral VIIIth nerve stimulation was apparently not affected. These changes were accompanied at the ultrastructural level by a decrease of axosomatic pleiomorphic synaptic endings. No changes were observed in either the number or distribution of synaptic endings on proximal and distal dendrites. Although not expected by results obtained in acute experiments, axotomized motoneurons showed a decreased excitability in the behavioral paradigm. Amplitude of the abducens antidromic field potential was significantly reduced 4-6 days following axotomy and frequent failures were observed in the antidromic somadendritic invasion of single motoneurons. Somatic invasion was obtained by the simultaneous presentation of appropriate visual and/or vestibular synaptic activity. Chronic recordings of field potentials showed their amplitude to recover in 30-40 days. The spontaneous and vestibular induced activity of identified axotomized motoneurons during this period of time differed in several aspects from controls. Motoneurons could not maintain tonic activity during eye fixations and they showed short, low frequency, bursts of activity that followed, rather than preceded, on-directed saccades. In some cases axotomized motoneurons fired during horizontal off-directed and vertical saccades. Position and velocity gains of axotomized motoneurons were lower than control values. The effects of central axotomy were always larger and of longer duration than those following peripheral axotomy. Structural and functional properties influenced by axotomy seemed to recover in 2-3 months, but with independent time courses. The present results differ in many aspects from those described after axotomy in spinal and hypoglossal motoneurons. In addition, they point out that behavior or axotomized neurons in chronic preparations are not predictable on the basis of those described in acute experiments.
PMID: 3368045
ISSN: 0306-4522
CID: 163673

Morphology and distribution of serotoninergic and oculomotor internuclear neurons in the cat midbrain

May PJ; Baker H; Vidal PP; Spencer RF; Baker R
Serotoninergic fibers have been reported in both the abducens and facial nuclei of the cat. Furthermore, serotoninergic dorsal raphe and oculomotor internuclear neurons occupy similar locations in the periaqueductal gray overlying the oculomotor and trochlear motor nuclei. To resolve the issue of whether these two populations of neurons overlap, serotoninergic fibers were assayed in the abducens and facial nucleus; then the morphologies and distributions of identified serotoninergic neurons and oculomotor internuclear neurons were determined. Both the abducens and facial nuclei contained varicosities labelled with antibody to serotonin, but a much higher density of immunoreactive fibers was present in the latter, especially in its medial aspect. Distinct synaptic profiles labelled with antibodies to serotonin were observed in both nuclei. In both cases, terminal profiles contained numerous small, predominantly spheroidal, synaptic vesicles as well as a few, large, dense-core vesicles. These profiles made synaptic contacts onto dendritic and, in the facial nucleus, somatic profiles that occasionally displayed asymmetric, postsynaptic, membrane densifications. Following injection of horseradish peroxidase into either the abducens or facial nuclei, double-label immunohistochemical techniques demonstrated that the serotoninergic and oculomotor internuclear neurons form two distinct cell populations. The immunoreactive serotoninergic cells were distributed within the dorsal raphe nucleus, predominantly caudal to the retrogradely labelled oculomotor internuclear neurons. The latter were located in the oculomotor nucleus along its dorsal border and in the adjacent supraoculomotor area. Intracellular injection of horseradish peroxidase revealed that oculomotor internuclear neurons have multipolar somata with up to ten long, tapering dendrites that bifurcate approximately five times. Their dendritic fields were generally contained within the nucleus and adjacent supraoculomotor area. In contrast, putative serotoninergic neurons were often spindle-shaped and exhibited far fewer primary dendrites. Many of these long, narrow, sparsely branched dendrites crossed the midline and extended to the surface of the cerebral aqueduct. In the vicinity of the aqueduct they branched repeatedly to form a dendritic thicket. The axons of the intracellularly stained serotoninergic neurons emerged either from the somata or the end of a process with dendritic morphology, and in some cases they produced axon collaterals within the periaqueductal gray. Thus the oculomotor internuclear and serotoninergic populations differ in both distribution and morphology.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
PMID: 3325532
ISSN: 0021-9967
CID: 11295

Motoneuronal innervation and mechanical properties of extraocular muscles in the catfish, (Ictalurus punctatus)

Lennerstrand, G; Baker, R
Mechanical characteristics and electrical activity were studied in the extraocular muscles of the catfish, Ictalurus punctatus. The contractile properties were determined by stimulation of the individual muscle nerve branches to lateral and medial rectii and the superior and inferior oblique muscles. The speed of contraction was higher than in most other fish muscle, with a twitch contraction time of about 12 ms and a tetanus fusion frequency of 150-170 Hz in all four eye muscles. The fatigue resistance was also high. These properties were the same in fully innervated and partially innervated muscle, largely irrespective of what part of the muscle that was activated. Although different fibre types are known to exist in fish extraocular muscle, it was not possible to obtain functional separation of the mechanical force profile even in the lateral rectus with two distinct motoneuronal innervations. We suggest that polyneuronal innervation of the muscle fibres produces the mechanical responses. Since EMG activity during spontaneous eye movements was similar in the global and the orbital parts of the muscle, all types of fibres in fish extraocular muscle are probably recruited for all types of eye movements.
PMID: 3425346
ISSN: 0001-6772
CID: 163674

Extra- and intracellular HRP analysis of the organization of extraocular motoneurons and internuclear neurons in the guinea pig and rabbit

Evinger C; Graf WM; Baker R
The distribution of extraocular motoneurons and abducens and oculomotor internuclear neurons was determined in guinea pigs by injecting horseradish peroxidase (HRP) into individual extraocular muscles, the abducens nucleus, the oculomotor nucleus, and the cerebellum. Motoneurons in the oculomotor nucleus innervated the ipsilateral inferior rectus, inferior oblique, medial rectus, and the contralateral superior rectus and levator palpebrae muscles. Most motoneurons of the trochlear nucleus projected to the contralateral superior oblique muscle although a small number innervated the ipsilateral superior oblique. The abducens and accessory abducens nuclei innervated the ipsilateral rectus and retractor bulbi muscles, respectively. The somata of abducens internuclear neurons formed a cap around the lateral and ventral aspects of the abducens nucleus. The axons of these internuclear neurons terminated in the medial rectus subdivision of the contralateral oculomotor nucleus. At least two classes of guinea pig oculomotor internuclear interneurons exist. One group, located primarily ventral to the oculomotor nucleus, innervated the abducens nucleus and surrounding regions. The second group, lying mainly in the dorsal midline area of the oculomotor nucleus, projected to the cerebellum. Intracellular staining with HRP demonstrated similar soma-dendritic organization for oculomotor and trochlear motoneurons of both guinea pigs and rabbits. Dendrites of oculomotor motoneurons radiated symmetrically from the soma to cover approximately one-third of the entire nucleus, and each motoneuron sent at least one dendrite into the central gray overlying the oculomotor nucleus. In both species, a small percentage of oculomotor motoneurons possessed axon collaterals that terminated both within and outside of the nucleus. The dendrites of trochlear motoneurons extended into the medial longitudinal fasciculus and the reticular formation lateral to the nucleus. Our data on the topography of motoneurons and internuclear neurons in the guinea pig and soma-dendritic organization of motoneurons in the guinea pig and rabbit show that these species share common organizational and morphological features. In addition, comparison of these data with those from other mammals reveals that dendritic complexity (number of dendrites per motoneuron) of extraocular motoneurons exhibits a systematic increase with animal size
PMID: 2443544
ISSN: 0021-9967
CID: 60899

Anatomy and physiology of intracellularly labelled omnipause neurons in the cat and squirrel monkey

Strassman, A; Evinger, C; McCrea, R A; Baker, R G; Highstein, S M
Saccadic omnipause neurons (OPNs) were intracellularly labelled with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) in alert cats and squirrel monkeys. The somas of OPNs were located on or near the midline in the caudal pons and their axons projected to regions of the pontomedullary reticular formation that contain the excitatory and inhibitory burst neurons.
PMID: 3622701
ISSN: 0014-4819
CID: 163677

Behavior of neurons in the abducens nucleus of the alert cat--I. Motoneurons

Delgado-Garcia, J M; del Pozo, F; Baker, R
The activity of 53 antidromically identified abducens motoneurons was analyzed in alert cats during spontaneous and vestibular induced eye movements. Conduction velocities ranged from 13 to 70 m/s and all motoneurons increased their discharge rates with successive eye positions in the abducting direction. Motoneurons were recruited from -19 degrees to +7 degrees. Within the oculomotor range frequency saturation was never observed for any cell. The slope of rate-position (k) relationships ranged from 2 to 17.7 spikes/s/deg (n = 40, mean 8.7 +/- 2.5). Regression analysis showed that the rate-position plots could be fit by straight lines but in most cases exponential curves produced slightly better statistical fits. Steeper slopes suggest that successively larger increases in k are required for the lateral rectus muscle to maintain more eccentric fixations in the on direction. Interspike intervals for a constant eye position exhibited low variability (less than 3.5%) for fixations shorter than 1 s. Over longer periods, variability increased in proportion to the duration of the fixation in exponential-like fashion up to 14%. Abducens motoneurons showed considerable variability in frequency during repeated fixations of the same eye position. Discharge rates were found to depend upon both the direction of the previous eye movement and, more importantly, the animal's level of alertness. The rate-position regression lines for fixation periods after saccades in the on direction significantly differed in slopes (100%) and thresholds (20%) from those in the off direction. The observed static hysteresis in abducens motoneuron behavior was in opposite direction to that previously described for the mechanical properties of the lateral rectus. This suggests both neural and mechanical factors are significantly involved in determining final eye position. The animal's level of alertness was evaluated in this study by counting the number of saccadic movements/s occurring in "alert" (1 +/- 0.2 saccades/s), and "drowsy" (0.5 +/- 0.2 saccades/s) circumstances. Comparison of the rate-position regression lines between the two conditions showed a significant decrease in slopes (100%) and elevation of thresholds (70%). Discharge rate of abducens motoneurons increased abruptly 8.9 +/- 2.8 ms prior to saccades in the horizontal on direction, and decreased 14.8 +/- 4.05 m before saccades in the off direction. During purely vertical saccades the firing frequency of abducens motoneurons did not change. Burst frequency did not saturate during saccades, but increased with saccadic velocity in a linear fashion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
PMID: 3487043
ISSN: 0306-4522
CID: 163675

Histochemical localization of acetylcholinesterase in relation to motor neurons and internuclear neurons of the cat abducens nucleus

Spencer, R F; Baker, R
Three distinct patterns of AChE localization have been observed in relation to cat abducens motor neurons and internuclear neurons labelled by retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase. First, AChE was localized predominantly within cisternae of granular endoplasmic reticulum and agranular reticulum of motor neuron somata, dendrites and axons, but was absent from internuclear neurons. AChE was also associated with saccules of the Golgi apparatus in the motor neurons, but was was absent from all other cytoplasmic organelles. Second, AChE was observed on the soma-dendritic and axonal surface membrane of the motor neurons, particularly at sites of apposition of synaptic endings of all morphological types, but was usually absent from the surface membranes of internuclear neurons. Third, AChE was associated both extracellularly and intracellularly with certain synaptic endings that contained spheroidal synaptic vesicles and that contacted both motor neurons and internuclear neurons. A similar pattern of staining of synaptic endings was observed at the neuromuscular junctions in the lateral rectus muscle. Axotomy of the VIth nerve resulted in loss of intracellular AChE associated with the Golgi apparatus and extracellular AChE on the somatic surface membrane of the motor neurons. The patterned localization of AChE contrasted with the localization of butyrylcholinesterase, which was associated predominantly with astrocytes. The findings suggest different roles of AChE as a function of the different patterns of localization.
PMID: 3723144
ISSN: 0300-4864
CID: 163678