4.5 Article

Pretecto- and ponto-cerebellar pathways to the pigeon oculomotor cerebellum follow a zonal organization

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY
Volume 530, Issue 5, Pages 817-833

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cne.25247

Keywords

cortico-cerebellar system; lentiformis mesencephali; optic flow; ponto-cerebellar; pretectum; spiriformis medialis; visual control of flight

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. Canadian Institute forHealth Research (CIHR)

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The study investigated the organization of projections from different nuclei to the oculomotor cerebellum in pigeons, finding that these inputs follow a zonal organization. Different zones receive projections from different nuclei, with Zone A1 processing mainly visuo-motor information to spinal premotor areas, while Zone A2/C may have a feedback/modulatory role in processing somato-motor and visuo-motor information.
Both birds and mammals have relatively large forebrains and cerebella. In mammals, there are extensive sensory-motor projections to the cerebellum through the pontine nuclei originating from several parts of the cerebral cortex. Similar forebrain-to-cerebellum pathways exist in birds, but the organization of this circuitry has not been studied extensively. Birds have two nuclei at the base of the brainstem that are thought to be homologous to the pontine nuclei of mammals, the medial and lateral pontine nuclei (PM, PL). Additionally, birds are unique in that they have a pretectal nucleus called the medial spiriform nucleus (SpM) that, like the pontine nuclei, also receives projections from the forebrain and projects to the oculomotor cerebellum (OCb; folia VI to VIII). The OCb also receives input from the pretectal nucleus lentiformis mesencephali (LM), which analyzes visual optic flow information resulting from self-movement. In this study, we used single or double injections of fluorescent tracers to study the organization of these inputs from PM, PL, SpM and LM to the OCb in pigeons. We found that these inputs follow a zonal organization. The most medial zone in the OCb, zone A1, receives bilateral inputs from the lateral SpM, PL and LM. Zones A2 and C receive a bilateral projection from the medial SpM, and a mostly contralateral projection from PM and LM. We discuss how the pathway to zone A1 processes mainly visuo-motor information to spinal premotor areas, whereas the pathways to zone A2/C processes somato-motor and visuo-motor information and may have a feedback/modulatory role.

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