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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 3 March 1999, pp. 1199-1211
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Physiology, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8575, Japan
Chimoto, Sohei,
Yoshiki Iwamoto, and
Kaoru Yoshida.
Projections and firing properties of down eye-movement neurons in the
interstitial nucleus of Cajal in the cat. To clarify the role
of the interstitial nucleus of Cajal (INC) in the control of vertical
eye movements, projections of burst-tonic and tonic neurons in and
around the INC were studied. This paper describes neurons with downward
ON directions. We examined, by antidromic activation,
whether these down INC (d-INC) neurons contribute to two pathways: a
commissural pathway to the contralateral (c-) INC and a descending
pathway to the ipsilateral vestibular nucleus (i-VN). Stimulation of
the two pathways showed that as many as 74% of neurons were activated
antidromically from one of the pathways. Of 113 d-INC neurons tested,
44 were activated from the commissural pathway and 40 from the
descending pathway. No neurons were activated from both pathways. We
concluded that commissural and descending pathways from the INC
originate from two separate groups of neurons. Tracking of antidromic
microstimulation in the two nuclei revealed multiple low-threshold
sites and varied latencies; this was interpreted as a sign of existence
of axonal arborization. Neurons with commissural projections tended to
be located more dorsally than those with descending projections.
Neurons with descending projections had significantly greater
eye-position sensitivity and smaller saccadic sensitivity than neurons
with commissural projections. The two groups of INC neurons increased
their firing rate in nose-up head rotations and responded best to the
rotation in the plane of contralateral posterior/ipsilateral anterior
canal pair. Neurons with commissural projections showed a larger phase
lag of response to sinusoidal rotation (54.6 ± 7.6°) than
neurons with descending projections (45.0 ± 5.5°). Most neurons
with descending projections received disynaptic excitation from the
contralateral vestibular nerve. Neurons with commissural projections
rarely received such disynaptic input. We suggest that
downward-position-vestibular (DPV) neurons in the VN and VN-projecting
d-INC neurons form a loop, together with possible commissural loops
linking the bilateral VNs and the bilateral INCs. By comparing the
quantitative measures of d-INC neurons with those of DPV neurons, we
further suggest that integration of head velocity signals proceeds from
DPV neurons to d-INC neurons with descending projections and then to
d-INC neurons with commissural projections, whereas saccadic velocity signals are processed in the reverse order.
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