The zona incerta has been implicated in the control of the initiation of saccadic eye movements in the primate. Complex interactions within the zona incerta must take place to integrate its varied inputs and to produce a coherent efferent signal in order for this function to occur. However, whether the anatomical substrates exist within the zona incerta to allow this integration to take place has not been established. The zona incerta in monkeys (Macaca mulatta) was examined in frontally, horizontally, and sagittally sectioned preparations stained for Nissl, myelinated fibers, or cytochrome oxidase, or impregnated by the Golgi technique. This nucleus can be separated into dorsal and ventral laminae on the basis of staining and morphological differences between these two subdivisions. Neurons are more densely packed, more darkly stained, and larger in the ventral lamina. In addition, the neuropil of the ventral lamina is much more intensely stained after cytochrome oxidase histochemistry. Two neuronal types, principal cells and interneurons, were identified on the basis of neuronal cell body, dendritic, and axonal features in Golgi-impregnated preparations. Principal cells have fusiform or polygonal somata (long axis from 18 to 40 microns) and dendrites that extend for up to 750 microns within the lamina in which the cell bodies are located. Putative local interneurons have small (12-16 microns), round or oval cell bodies with wavy dendrites (up to 400 microns). Numerous multilobed appendages and axon-like processes originate from these dendrites and make apparent contacts with other interneurons or with dendrites of principal cells. Dendrites of most neurons in both laminae are oriented preferentially along the principal axis, dorsolateral-to-ventromedial, of the nucleus. Therefore, within the limits of light microscopy, the zona incerta appears to possess the morphological heterogeneity to form complex intrinsic interactions. These interactions are hypothesized to form the integrative substrate for the large array of incertal inputs that are utilized to produce an efferent signal involved in the initiation of saccadic eye movements.
The morphological features of retinal terminals in cat brain were examined at sites where projections of W-type ganglion cells predominate. These included the parvicellular C laminae of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus, the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus, stratum griseum superficiale of the superior colliculus, and the suprachiasmatic nucleus. Positive identification of retinal terminals was achieved following anterograde transport of intravitreally injected native or wheat germ agglutinin-conjugated horseradish peroxidase. In contrast to the classic features of retinal terminals as defined from sites where X- and Y-type ganglion cells predominate, i.e. round synaptic vesicles, large profiles, and pale mitochondria, substantial numbers of terminals in W-cell rich areas were found to contain dark mitochondria. Synaptic vesicles, although consistently round, were typically smaller in terminals with dark mitochondria than in those with pale mitochondria. These findings indicate a diversity among terminals of W-cells and suggest that such terminals cannot be distinguished on the basis of limited morphological criteria.
We have studied the morphology of silver-impregnated neurons (rapid Golgi technique) in the rostral interstitial nucleus of the medial longitudinal fasciculus (riMLF), a center involved in the control of vertical and torsional saccadic eye movements. This morphological study of riMLF neurons in the rhesus monkey was undertaken to further our understanding of the functional circuitry of the oculomotor system. Our study employed Nissl, Golgi, and computer-assisted methods. The cytoarchitectonic boundaries of the riMLF and its relationships to neighboring structures were determined in both Nissl and Golgi preparations. Five (I-V) distinct morphological types of riMLF neurons were distinguished in the Golgi impregnations on the basis of soma size, dendritic size, numbers of primary dendrites, number of dendritic branch points, as well as form, number, and distribution of dendritic appendages. Type I neurons impregnated most frequently and had the most extensive and highly branched dendritic tree. Type II neurons displayed thick dendrites with complex dendritic appendages, but the dendritic tree was much more compact than that of type I cells. Type III and type V cells had fusiform somas and relatively unbranched dendritic trees but differed greatly in size as well as dendritic morphology. The type IV cell was the smallest neuron and had many characteristics of the local interneurons found in other thalamic, subthalamic, hypothalamic and midbrain centers. The type V was the largest neuron, least frequently impregnated, and found only at rostral riMLF levels. Digitized reconstructions of each type of neuron were rotated by the computer, which revealed that the dendritic trees of types I, III, and V occupy a disk-like compartment in the riMLF neuropil. In contrast, the tree of types II and IV occupy a roughly spherical compartment. We suggest that three of the cell types are well suited for specific purposes: type II cells for receiving topographically organized inputs that contain spatial information, type I cells for short-lead burst neuron output to the motor neurons or other premotor centers, and type IV cells for inhibitory inputs to type I cells.
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