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On page 1 showing 1 ~ 20 papers out of 166 papers

Classification by morphology of multipolar neurons of the human principal olivary nucleus.

  • Damjan Stojić‎ et al.
  • Neuroscience research‎
  • 2021‎

The principal olivary nucleus is the largest part of the inferior olivary complex and is involved in the spatial and temporal organization of movement and motor learning. Nearly all neurons in this nucleus is multipolar along with having a highly complex dendritic tree and significant asymmetry in shape. In this study, we updated the current classification scheme, examined morphological differences between the proposed groups, and investigated age-related morphological changes. Histological preparations were digitized by a light microscope and a sample of 259 images of neurons was analyzed by 17 computationally generated parameters of morphology. These were reduced to the four variables of principal component analysis and the sample was classified by k-means method of clustering into three clusters. The differences between clusters were documented and for medium-sized neurons the relationship between four morphological parameters and age were investigated. Finally, for two of the age groups the changes in the morphology were explored. This study includes a detailed and robust classification of the PON neurons and the findings improve upon past qualitative work.


Topography and morphology of the inhibitory projection from superior olivary nucleus to nucleus laminaris in chickens (Gallus gallus).

  • Kathryn M Tabor‎ et al.
  • The Journal of comparative neurology‎
  • 2011‎

The avian nucleus laminaris (NL) is involved in computation of interaural time differences (ITDs) that encode the azimuthal position of a sound source. Neurons in NL are bipolar, with dorsal and ventral dendritic arbors receiving input from separate ears. NL neurons act as coincidence detectors that respond maximally when input from each ear arrives at the two dendritic arbors simultaneously. Computational and physiological studies demonstrated that the sensitivity of NL neurons to coincident inputs is modulated by an inhibitory feedback circuit via the superior olivary nucleus (SON). To understand the mechanism of this modulation, the topography of the projection from SON to NL was mapped, and the morphology of the axon terminals of SON neurons in NL was examined in chickens (Gallus gallus). In vivo injection of AlexaFluor 568 dextran amine into SON demonstrated a coarse topographic projection from SON to NL. Retrogradely labeled neurons in NL were located within the zone of anterogradely labeled terminals, suggesting a reciprocal projection between SON to NL. In vivo extracellular physiological recording further demonstrated that this topography is consistent with tonotopic maps in SON and NL. In addition, three-dimensional reconstruction of single SON axon branches within NL revealed that individual SON neurons innervate a large area of NL and terminate on both dorsal and ventral dendritic arbors of NL neurons. The organization of the projection from SON to NL supports its proposed functions of controlling the overall activity level of NL and enhancing the specificity of frequency mapping and ITD detection.


Light-induced responses of slow oscillatory neurons of the rat olivary pretectal nucleus.

  • Hanna J Szkudlarek‎ et al.
  • PloS one‎
  • 2012‎

The olivary pretectal nucleus (OPN) is a small midbrain structure responsible for pupil constriction in response to eye illumination. Previous electrophysiological studies have shown that OPN neurons code light intensity levels and therefore are called luminance detectors. Recently, we described an additional population of OPN neurons, characterized by a slow rhythmic pattern of action potentials in light-on conditions. Rhythmic patterns generated by these cells last for a period of approximately 2 minutes.


Orexin A excites the rat olivary pretectal nucleus via OX2 receptor in a daily manner.

  • Lukasz Chrobok‎ et al.
  • Brain research‎
  • 2021‎

Pronounced environmental changes between the day and night led to evolution of specialised mechanisms organising their daily physiology, named circadian clocks. Currently, it has become clear that the master clock in the suprachiasmatic nuclei of the hypothalamus is not an exclusive brain site to generate daily rhythms. Indeed, several brain areas, including the subcortical visual system have been recently shown to change their neuronal activity across the daily cycle. Here we focus our investigation on the olivary pretectal nucleus (OPN) - a retinorecipient structure primarily involved in the pupillary light reflex. Using the multi-electrode array technology ex vivo we provide evidence for OPN neurons to elevate their firing during the behaviourally quiescent light phase. Additionally, we report the robust responsivity to orexin A via the identified OX2 receptor in this pretectal centre, with higher responsiveness noted during the night. Interestingly, we likewise report a daily variation in the response to PAC1 receptor activation, with implications for the convergence of orexinergic and visual input on the same OPN neurons. Altogether, our report is first to suggest a daily modulation of the OPN activity via intrinsic and extrinsic mechanisms, organising its temporal physiology.


Neuroanatomical characterization of perineuronal net components in the human cochlear nucleus and superior olivary complex.

  • Luise Weinrich‎ et al.
  • Hearing research‎
  • 2018‎

The human auditory brainstem, especially the cochlear nucleus (CN) and the superior olivary complex (SOC) are characterized by a high density of neurons associated with perineuronal nets (PNs). PNs build a specific form of extracellular matrix surrounding the neuronal somata, proximal dendrites and axon initial segments. They restrict synaptic plasticity and control high-frequency synaptic activity, a prominent characteristic of neurons of the auditory brainstem. The distribution of PNs within the auditory brainstem has been investigated in a number of mammalian species. However, much less is known regarding PNs in the human auditory brainstem. The present study aimed at the immunohistochemical identification of PNs in the cochlear nucleus (CN) and superior olivary complex (SOC) in the human brainstem. We focused on the complex nature and molecular variability of PNs in the CN and SOC by using specific antibodies against the main PN components (aggrecan, brevican, neurocan and hyaluronan and proteoglycan link protein 1). Virtually all subnuclei within the ventral CN and SOC were found to be associated with PNs. Direct comparison between gerbil and human yielded similar fine structure of PNs and confirmed the typical tight interdigitation of PNs with synaptic terminals in both species. Noticeably, an elaborate combination of immunohistochemical labelings clearly supports the still debated existence of the medial nucleus of trapezoid body (MNTB) in the human brain. In conclusion, the present study demonstrates that PNs form a prominent extracellular structure on CN and SOC neurons in the human brain, potentially stabilizing synaptic contacts, which is in agreement with many other mammalian species.


Sound localization ability and glycinergic innervation of the superior olivary complex persist after genetic deletion of the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body.

  • Walid Jalabi‎ et al.
  • The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience‎
  • 2013‎

The medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB) in the superior olivary complex (SOC) is an inhibitory hub considered critical for binaural sound localization. We show that genetic ablation of MNTB neurons in mice only subtly affects this ability by prolonging the minimum time required to detect shifts in sound location. Furthermore, glycinergic innervation of the SOC is maintained without an MNTB, consistent with the existence of parallel inhibitory inputs. These findings redefine the role of MNTB in sound localization and suggest that the inhibitory network is more complex than previously thought.


Normal behavioral responses to light and darkness and the pupillary light reflex are dependent upon the olivary pretectal nucleus in the diurnal Nile grass rat.

  • Andrew J Gall‎ et al.
  • Neuroscience‎
  • 2017‎

The olivary pretectal nucleus (OPT) is a midbrain structure that receives reciprocal bilateral retinal projections, is involved in the pupillary light reflex, and connects reciprocally with the intergeniculate leaflet (IGL), a retinorecipient brain region that mediates behavioral responses to light pulses (i.e., masking) in diurnal Nile grass rats. Here, we lesioned the OPT and evaluated behavioral responses in grass rats to various lighting conditions, as well as their anxiety-like responses to light exposure. While control grass rats remained diurnal, grass rats with OPT lesions exhibited a more night-active pattern under 12h:12h light-dark (LD) conditions. However, when placed in constant darkness, OPT-lesioned grass rats became more active during their subjective day, suggesting that an exaggerated masking response to light may be responsible for the effect of OPT lesions on locomotor activity in LD. To test this hypothesis, we presented dark and light pulses to controls and grass rats with OPT lesions; controls increased their activity in response to light, whereas those with OPT lesions significantly increased activity in response to darkness. Further, when placed in a 7-h ultradian LD cycle, animals with OPT lesions were more active during darkness than controls. OPT lesions also abolished the pupillary light reflex, but did not affect anxiety-like behaviors. Finally, in animals with OPT lesions, light did not induce Fos expression in the ventrolateral geniculate nucleus, as it did in controls. Altogether, these results suggest that masking responses to light and darkness are dependent upon nuclei within the subcortical visual shell in grass rats.


Deficiency of neural recognition molecule NB-2 affects the development of glutamatergic auditory pathways from the ventral cochlear nucleus to the superior olivary complex in mouse.

  • Manabu Toyoshima‎ et al.
  • Developmental biology‎
  • 2009‎

Neural recognition molecule NB-2/contactin 5 is expressed transiently during the first postnatal week in glutamatergic neurons of the central auditory system. Here, we investigated the effect of NB-2 deficiency on the auditory brainstem in mouse. While almost all principal neurons are wrapped with the calyces of Held in the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB) in wild type, 8% of principal neurons in NB-2 knockout (KO) mice lack the calyces of Held at postnatal day (P) 6. At P10 and P15, apoptotic principal neurons were detected in NB-2 KO mice, but not in wild type. Apoptotic cells were also increased in the ventral cochlear nucleus (VCN) of NB-2 KO mice, which contains bushy neurons projecting to the MNTB and the lateral superior olive (LSO). At the age of 1 month, the number of principal neurons in the MNTB and of glutamatergic synapses in the LSO was reduced in NB-2 KO mice. Finally, interpeak latencies for auditory brainstem response waves II-III and III-IV were significantly increased in NB-2 KO mice. Together, these findings suggest that NB-2 deficiency causes a deficit in synapse formation and then induces apoptosis in MNTB and VCN neurons, affecting auditory brainstem function.


Inferior olivary inactivation abolishes conditioned eyeblinks: extinction or cerebellar malfunction?

  • S Zbarska‎ et al.
  • Behavioural brain research‎
  • 2007‎

The inferior olive (IO) is a required component of neural circuits controlling the classical conditioning of eyeblink responses. Previous reports indicated that lesioning or inactivating the IO abolishes conditioned eyeblinks (CRs), but there was disagreement regarding the timing of the CR performance deficit. As a result, it was not clear whether IO inactivation produces unlearning of CRs or a non-specific dysfunction of cerebellar circuits. Since most of these studies used methods that could block unrelated axons passing through the IO region, additional experiments are required to further elucidate IO function, using inactivating agents that act selectively on cell bodies. In the present study, the IO was inactivated using the glutamate receptor antagonist DGG and the GABA-A receptor agonist muscimol in rabbits performing well-learned CRs. Effects of inactivating the IO on CR expression and on neuronal activity in the anterior cerebellar interposed nucleus (IN) were examined. We found that either blocking excitatory glutamate inputs or activating inhibitory GABA inputs to the IO abolished CRs. This effect occurred with variable delay following drug injections. Additional experiments, in which post-injection testing was delayed to allow for drug diffusion, revealed invariably immediate suppression of CRs. This demonstrated that suppressing IO activity using DGG or muscimol does not induce unlearning of CRs. Single-unit recording during DGG injections revealed that CR suppression was paralleled by a dramatic suppression of IN neuronal activity. We concluded that inactivating the rostral parts of the IO complex abolishes CRs by producing a tonic malfunction of cerebellar eyeblink conditioning circuits.


Metabolic Maturation of Auditory Neurones in the Superior Olivary Complex.

  • Barbara Trattner‎ et al.
  • PloS one‎
  • 2013‎

Neuronal activity is energetically costly, but despite its importance, energy production and consumption have been studied in only a few neurone types. Neuroenergetics is of special importance in auditory brainstem nuclei, where neurones exhibit various biophysical adaptations for extraordinary temporal precision and show particularly high firing rates. We have studied the development of energy metabolism in three principal nuclei of the superior olivary complex (SOC) involved in precise binaural processing in the Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus). We used immunohistochemistry to quantify metabolic markers for energy consumption (Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase) and production (mitochondria, cytochrome c oxidase activity and glucose transporter 3 (GLUT3)). In addition, we calculated neuronal ATP consumption for different postnatal ages (P0-90) based upon published electrophysiological and morphological data. Our calculations relate neuronal processes to the regeneration of Na(+) gradients perturbed by neuronal firing, and thus to ATP consumption by Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase. The developmental changes of calculated energy consumption closely resemble those of metabolic markers. Both increase before and after hearing onset occurring at P12-13 and reach a plateau thereafter. The increase in Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase and mitochondria precedes the rise in GLUT3 levels and is already substantial before hearing onset, whilst GLUT3 levels are scarcely detectable at this age. Based on these findings we assume that auditory inputs crucially contribute to metabolic maturation. In one nucleus, the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB), the initial rise in marker levels and calculated ATP consumption occurs distinctly earlier than in the other nuclei investigated, and is almost completed by hearing onset. Our study shows that the mathematical model used is applicable to brainstem neurones. Energy consumption varies markedly between SOC nuclei with their different neuronal properties. Especially for the medial superior olive (MSO), we propose that temporally precise input integration is energetically more costly than the high firing frequencies typical for all SOC nuclei.


Multiple Sources of Cholinergic Input to the Superior Olivary Complex.

  • Nichole L Beebe‎ et al.
  • Frontiers in neural circuits‎
  • 2021‎

The superior olivary complex (SOC) is a major computation center in the brainstem auditory system. Despite previous reports of high expression levels of cholinergic receptors in the SOC, few studies have addressed the functional role of acetylcholine in the region. The source of the cholinergic innervation is unknown for all but one of the nuclei of the SOC, limiting our understanding of cholinergic modulation. The medial nucleus of the trapezoid body, a key inhibitory link in monaural and binaural circuits, receives cholinergic input from other SOC nuclei and also from the pontomesencephalic tegmentum. Here, we investigate whether these same regions are sources of cholinergic input to other SOC nuclei. We also investigate whether individual cholinergic cells can send collateral projections bilaterally (i.e., into both SOCs), as has been shown at other levels of the subcortical auditory system. We injected retrograde tract tracers into the SOC in gerbils, then identified retrogradely-labeled cells that were also immunolabeled for choline acetyltransferase, a marker for cholinergic cells. We found that both the SOC and the pontomesencephalic tegmentum (PMT) send cholinergic projections into the SOC, and these projections appear to innervate all major SOC nuclei. We also observed a small cholinergic projection into the SOC from the lateral paragigantocellular nucleus of the reticular formation. These various sources likely serve different functions; e.g., the PMT has been associated with things such as arousal and sensory gating whereas the SOC may provide feedback more closely tuned to specific auditory stimuli. Further, individual cholinergic neurons in each of these regions can send branching projections into both SOCs. Such projections present an opportunity for cholinergic modulation to be coordinated across the auditory brainstem.


Developmental profile of microglia distribution in nuclei of the superior olivary complex.

  • Alina C Zacher‎ et al.
  • The Journal of comparative neurology‎
  • 2023‎

In the brain, microglia are involved in immune responses and synaptic maturation. During early development, these cells invade the brain, proliferate, and morphologically mature to achieve coverage of the surrounding tissue with their fine processes. Their developmental proliferation overlaps with the postnatal development of neuronal circuits. Within the superior olivary complex (SOC), an auditory brainstem structure, microglia, and their early postnatal development have been documented. A quantification over the full developmental profile of the arrangement and morphological changes in single microglia cells is missing. Here, we used immunofluorescence labeling to quantify their distribution, morphological changes, and coverage during early and late postnatal development in the SOC of Mongolian gerbils. Microglia distributed rather homogenously within each nucleus with a bias to the nucleus borders at postnatal day (P) 5 and more centrally in the nucleus in mature stages. We found a nucleus-specific transient increase in microglia cell number and density reaching its peak at P17 with a subsequent decline to P55 values. Length and branching of microglia protrusions increased especially after P12. The stronger ramification together with the increase in cell density allows coverage of the surrounding tissue from P5 to mature stages, despite the large developmental increase in nucleus size. The transient increase in density during synaptic refinement in SOC nuclei suggests that microglia are important during the pruning period, compensating for developmental increase in tissue volume, and that in mature stages their main function appears tissue surveillance.


Origin and plasticity of the subdivisions of the inferior olivary complex.

  • Matías Hidalgo-Sánchez‎ et al.
  • Developmental biology‎
  • 2012‎

The precerebellar nuclei (PCN) originate from the rhombic lip, a germinal neuroepithelium adjacent to the roof plate of the fourth ventricle. We first report here that, in chicken, the Brn3a-expressing postmitotic medullary cells that produce the inferior olive (ION, the source of cerebellar climbing fibres) originate from a dorso-ventral domain roughly coinciding with the hindbrain vestibular column. Whereas Foxd3 expression labels the whole mature ION but is only detected in a subpopulation of ION neuroblasts initiating their migration, we report that Brn3a allows the visualization of the whole population of ION neurons from the very beginning of their migration. We show that Brn3a-positive neurons migrate tangentially ventralwards through a characteristic dorso-ventral double submarginal stream. Cath1 expressing progenitors lying just dorsal to the ION origin correlated dorso-ventral topography with the prospective cochlear column (caudal to it) and generate precerebellar nuclei emitting mossy-fiber cerebellar afferents. We used the chick-quail chimaera technique with homotopic grafts at HH10 to determine the precise fate map of ION precursors across the caudal cryptorhombomeric subdivisions of the medullary hindbrain (r8-r11). We demonstrate that each crypto-rhombomere contributes to two lamellae of the ION, while each ION sub-nucleus originates from at least two contiguous crypto-rhombomeres. We then questioned how rhombomere identity is related to the plasticity of cell type specification in the dorsal hindbrain. The potential plasticity of ectopically HH10 grafted ION progenitors to change their original fate in alternative rostrocaudal environments was examined. Heterotopic grafts from the presumptive ION territory to the pontine region (r4-r5) caused a change of fate, since the migrated derivatives adopted a pontine phenotype. The reverse experiment caused pontine progenitors to produce derivatives appropriately integrated into the ION complex. Grafts of ION progenitor domains to myelomeres (my) 2-3 also showed complete fate regulation, reproducing spinal cord-like structures, whereas the reverse experiment revealed the inability of my2-3 to generate ION cell types. This was not the case with more caudal, relatively less specified myelomeres (my5-6). Interestingly, when heterotopically grafted cells are integrated dorsally, they do not change their phenotype. Our results support the hypothesis that positional information present in the hindbrain and spinal cord at early neural tube stages controls the specific fates of ventrally migrating PCN precursors.


Olivary hypertrophy improved by steroid treatment: Two case reports with unique presentations.

  • Masahiro Ohara‎ et al.
  • Journal of neuroimmunology‎
  • 2019‎

Olivary hypertrophy (OH) is the secondary degeneration of the inferior olivary nucleus (ION). It is observed one month after the onset of a primary lesion within the dento-rubro-olivary pathway and is usually associated with oculopalatal tremors. Here, we report two unique cases with rare autoimmune diseases leading to OH development with progressive cerebellar ataxia, both of which improved with steroid treatment. The first patient was a 59-year-old man with slowly progressive dysarthria and ataxic gait without palatal tremor. Anti-N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antibody was positive in the CSF, supporting a diagnosis of anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis. The second patient was a 56-year-old man who developed dysarthria, ataxia, gait disturbance, and palatal tremor. He was diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic inflammation with pontine perivascular enhancement responsive to steroids (CLIPPERS), based on presence of a punctate contrast-enhancing lesion in the middle cerebellar peduncle, pons, and cerebellum on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Brain MRI in both patients demonstrated high signal intensity regions in the bilateral IONs. Semi-quantitative volume analysis of MRI revealed significant reduction in ION volume after steroid treatment and accordingly cerebellar ataxia was improved in both cases. Clinical and radiological features of the two cases were unique, indicating potential novel etiologies in the pathophysiology of OH associated with cerebellar ataxia.


Modulation of Murine Olivary Connexin 36 Gap Junctions by PKA and CaMKII.

  • Paolo Bazzigaluppi‎ et al.
  • Frontiers in cellular neuroscience‎
  • 2017‎

The inferior olive (IO) is a nucleus located in the brainstem and it is part of the olivo-cerebellar loop. This circuit plays a fundamental role in generation and acquisition of coherent motor patterns and it relies on synchronous activation of groups of Purkinje cells (PC) in the cerebellar cortex. IO neurons integrate their intrinsic oscillatory activity with excitatory inputs coming from the somatosensory system and inhibitory feedback coming from the cerebellar nuclei. Alongside these chemical synaptic inputs, IO neurons are coupled to one another via connexin 36 (Cx36) containing gap junctions (GJs) that create a functional syncytium between neurons. Communication between olivary neurons is regulated by these GJs and their correct functioning contributes to coherent oscillations in the IO and proper motor learning. Here, we explore the cellular pathways that can regulate the coupling between olivary neurons. We combined in vitro electrophysiology and immunohistochemistry (IHC) on mouse acute brain slices to unravel the pathways that regulate olivary coupling. We found that enhancing the activity of the protein kinase A (PKA) pathway and blocking the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) pathway can both down-regulate the size of the coupled network. However, these two kinases follow different mechanisms of action. Our results suggest that activation of the PKA pathway reduces the opening probability of the Cx36 GJs, whereas inhibition of the CaMKII pathway reduces the number of Cx36 GJs. The low densities of Cx36 proteins and electrical synapses in βCaMKII knock-out mice point towards an essential role for this protein kinase in regulating the density of GJs in the IO. Thus, the level of olivary coupling is a dynamic process and regulated by a variety of enzymes modulating GJs expression, docking and activity.


Uncoupling axon guidance and neuronal migration in Robo3-deficient inferior olivary neurons.

  • Juan Antonio Moreno-Bravo‎ et al.
  • The Journal of comparative neurology‎
  • 2022‎

Inferior olivary (IO) neurons are born in the dorsal hindbrain and migrate tangentially toward the ventral midline. During their dorsoventral migration, IO neurons extend long leading processes that cross the midline, transform into axons, and project into the contralateral cerebellum. In absence of the axon guidance receptor Robo3, IO axons fail to cross the midline and project to the ipsilateral cerebellum. Remarkably, the IO cell bodies still reach the midline where they form a nucleus of abnormal cytoarchitecture. The mechanisms underlying the migration of Robo3-deficient IO neurons are unknown. Here, we used three-dimensional imaging and transgenic mice to label subsets of IO neurons and study their migratory behavior in Robo3 knockout. We show that IO migration is delayed in absence of Robo3. Strikingly, Robo3-deficient IO neurons progress toward the midline in a direction opposite to their axons. This occurs through a change of polarity and the generation of a second leading process at the rear of the cell. These results suggest that Robo3 receptor controls the establishment of neuronal polarity and the coupling of axonogenesis and cell body migration in IO neurons.


Properties of the nucleo-olivary pathway: an in vivo whole-cell patch clamp study.

  • Paolo Bazzigaluppi‎ et al.
  • PloS one‎
  • 2012‎

The inferior olivary nucleus (IO) forms the gateway to the cerebellar cortex and receives feedback information from the cerebellar nuclei (CN), thereby occupying a central position in the olivo-cerebellar loop. Here, we investigated the feedback input from the CN to the IO in vivo in mice using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. This approach allows us to study how the CN-feedback input is integrated with the activity of olivary neurons, while the olivo-cerebellar system and its connections are intact. Our results show how IO neurons respond to CN stimulation sequentially with: i) a short depolarization (EPSP), ii) a hyperpolarization (IPSP) and iii) a rebound depolarization. The latter two phenomena can also be evoked without the EPSPs. The IPSP is sensitive to a GABA(A) receptor blocker. The IPSP suppresses suprathreshold and subthreshold activity and is generated mainly by activation of the GABA(A) receptors. The rebound depolarization re-initiates and temporarily phase locks the subthreshold oscillations. Lack of electrotonical coupling does not affect the IPSP of individual olivary neurons, nor the sensitivity of its GABA(A) receptors to blockers. The GABAergic feedback input from the CN does not only temporarily block the transmission of signals through the IO, it also isolates neurons from the network by shunting the junction current and re-initiates the temporal pattern after a fixed time point. These data suggest that the IO not only functions as a cerebellar controlled gating device, but also operates as a pattern generator for controlling motor timing and/or learning.


The superior olivary complex of the hamster has multiple periods of cholinergic neuron development.

  • Juman Raji-Kubba‎ et al.
  • Journal of chemical neuroanatomy‎
  • 2002‎

Cholinergic neurons of the superior olivary complex share a common embryological and phylogenetic origin with brainstem motor neurons and serve as the major descending efferent pathway either to the cochlea as part of the olivocochlear system or to the cochlear nucleus. In this study, we investigated the developmental expression patterns of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and its co-localization with calcitonin gene-related peptide within the superior olivary complex and neighboring brainstem motor nuclei. At embryonic day 12, neurons in the ventral nucleus of the trapezoid body were first to express ChAT. The temporal expression pattern of both ChAT mRNA and immunoreactivity in this periolivary region mimicked motor neurons in the facial and trigeminal motor nuclei. Just before birth, shell neurons surrounding the lateral superior olive expressed ChAT. Neither ChAT-positive periolivary neurons nor shell neurons co-expressed calcitonin gene-related peptide during development or in the adult. Immediately following birth, intrinsic neurons within the lateral superior olive expressed ChAT but not calcitonin gene-related peptide. However, a transient increase in the number of ChAT-positive neurons in the lateral superior olive coincided with the onset of the calcitonin gene-related peptide co-expression within these neurons. We conclude that ChAT expression appears first in periolivary regions containing medial olivocochlear neurons, precedes the expression of calcitonin gene-related peptide in the superior olivary complex, and is co-expressed with calcitonin gene-related peptide within the lateral superior olive containing lateral olivocochlear neurons. These data suggest that the lateral olivocochlear system co-expresses ChAT and calcitonin gene-related peptide, whereas the medial olivocochlear system does not.


Spino-olivary projections in the rat are anatomically separate from postsynaptic dorsal column projections.

  • Charlotte R Flavell‎ et al.
  • The Journal of comparative neurology‎
  • 2014‎

The gracile nucleus (GN) and lateral part of rostral dorsal accessory olive (rDAO) are important relays for indirect, postsynaptic dorsal column, and direct ascending pathways, respectively, that terminate as climbing fibers in the "hindlimb-receiving" parts of the C1 and C3 zones in the cerebellar cortex. While the spinal cells of origin of that project to GN and rDAO are from largely separate territories in the spinal cord, previous studies have indicated that there could be an area of overlap between these two populations in the medial dorsal horn. Given the access of these two ascending tracts to sensory (thalamic) versus sensorimotor (precerebellar) pathways, the present study therefore addresses the important question of whether or not individual neurons have the potential to contribute axons to both ascending pathways. A double-fluorescent tracer strategy was used in rats (red Retrobeads and Fluoro-Ruby or green Retrobeads and Fluoro-Emerald) to map the spatial distribution of cells of origin of the two projections in the lumbar spinal cord. The two pathways were found to receive input from almost entirely separate territories within the lumbar cord (levels L3-L5). GN predominantly receives input from lamina IV, while rDAO receives its input from three cell populations: medial laminae V-VI, lateral lamina V, and medial laminae VII-VIII. Cells that had axons that branched to supply both GN and rDAO represented only about 1% of either single-labeled cell population. Overall, the findings therefore suggest functional independence of the two ascending pathways.


Superior olivary complex organization and cytoarchitecture may be correlated with function and catarrhine primate phylogeny.

  • Heidegard Hilbig‎ et al.
  • Brain structure & function‎
  • 2009‎

In the mammalian auditory system, the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body and the lateral superior olive (MNTB-LSO system) contribute to binaural intensity processing and lateralization. Localization precision varies with the sound frequencies. As recency of common ancestry with human beings increases, primates have improved low-frequency sensitivity and reduced sensitivity to higher frequencies. The medial part of the MNTB is devoted to higher frequency processing. Thus, its high-frequency-dependent function is nearly lost in humans and its role in binaural processing as part of the contralateral pathway to the LSO remains questionable. Here, Nissl-stained sections of the superior olivary complex of man (Homo sapiens), bonobo (Pan paniscus), chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes), gorilla (Gorilla gorilla), orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus), gibbon (Hylobates lar), and macaque (Macaca fascicularis) were compared to reveal differences and coincidences. From chimpanzees to humans, the size of the LSO decreased, and the MNTB as a compact nucleus nearly disappears. From chimpanzees to humans, the LSO/MNTB ratio increases dramatically too, whereas the LSO/MSO ratio remains 1.1; a finding that probably corresponds to the phylogenetic proximity between the species.


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