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J Neurophysiol 84: 2552-2563, 2000;
0022-3077/00 $5.00
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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 5 November 2000, pp. 2552-2563
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society

Effects of Nucleus Prepositus Hypoglossi Lesions on Visual Climbing Fiber Activity in the Rabbit Flocculus

M. P. Arts,1,2 C. I. De Zeeuw,2 J. Lips,1,2 E. Rosbak,2 and J. I. Simpson1

 1Department of Physiology and Neuroscience, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York 10016; and  2Department of Anatomy, Erasmus University Rotterdam, 3000 DR Rotterdam, The Netherlands

Arts, M. P., C. I. De Zeeuw, J. Lips, E. Rosbak, and J. I. Simpson. Effects of Nucleus Prepositus Hypoglossi Lesions on Visual Climbing Fiber Activity in the Rabbit Flocculus. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 2552-2563, 2000. The caudal dorsal cap (dc) of the inferior olive is involved in the control of horizontal compensatory eye movements. It provides those climbing fibers to the vestibulocerebellum that modulate optimally to optokinetic stimulation about the vertical axis. This modulation is mediated at least in part via an excitatory input to the caudal dc from the pretectal nucleus of the optic tract and the dorsal terminal nucleus of the accessory optic system. In addition, the caudal dc receives a substantial GABAergic input from the nucleus prepositus hypoglossi (NPH). To investigate the possible contribution of this bilateral inhibitory projection to the visual responsiveness of caudal dc neurons, we recorded the climbing fiber activity (i.e., complex spikes) of vertical axis Purkinje cells in the flocculus of anesthetized rabbits before and after ablative lesions of the NPH. When the NPH ipsilateral to the recorded flocculus was lesioned, the spontaneous complex spike firing frequency did not change significantly; but when both NPHs were lesioned, the spontaneous complex spike firing frequency increased significantly. When only the contralateral NPH was lesioned, the spontaneous complex spike firing frequency decreased significantly. Neither unilateral nor bilateral lesions had a significant influence on the depth of complex spike modulation during constant velocity optokinetic stimulation or on the transient continuation of complex spike modulation that occurred when the constant velocity optokinetic stimulation stopped. The effects of the lesions on the spontaneous complex spike firing frequency could not be explained when only the projections from the NPH to the inferior olive were considered. Therefore we investigated at the electron microscopic level the nature of the commissural connection between the two NPHs. The terminals of this projection were found to be predominantly GABAergic and to terminate in part on GABAergic neurons. When this inhibitory commissural connection is taken into consideration, then the effects of NPH lesions on the spontaneous firing frequency of floccular complex spikes are qualitatively explicable in terms of relative weighting of the commissural and caudal dc projections of the NPH. In summary, we conclude that in the anesthetized rabbit the inhibitory projection of the NPH to the caudal dc influences the spontaneous firing frequency of floccular complex spikes but not their modulation by optokinetic stimulation.




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