4.5 Article

Axonal mapping of the motor cranial nerves

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROANATOMY
Volume 17, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnana.2023.1198042

Keywords

facial nerve; hypoglossal nerve; masseteric nerve; facial muscles; sensory feedback; sympathetic axons; motor control; proprioception

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Basic behaviors such as swallowing, speech, and emotional expressions involve the coordinated control of multiple head muscles. This study investigated the neural components responsible for motor control of facial, masticatory, and tongue muscles in humans. The findings suggest that facial expressions and tongue movements require a larger population of motor axons compared to muscles in the upper extremity. Sensory axons are involved in providing neural feedback for control of facial and tongue muscles, while sympathetic axons may play a role in involuntary muscle tone control.
Basic behaviors, such as swallowing, speech, and emotional expressions are the result of a highly coordinated interplay between multiple muscles of the head. Control mechanisms of such highly tuned movements remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated the neural components responsible for motor control of the facial, masticatory, and tongue muscles in humans using specific molecular markers (ChAT, MBP, NF, TH). Our findings showed that a higher number of motor axonal population is responsible for facial expressions and tongue movements, compared to muscles in the upper extremity. Sensory axons appear to be responsible for neural feedback from cutaneous mechanoreceptors to control the movement of facial muscles and the tongue. The newly discovered sympathetic axonal population in the facial nerve is hypothesized to be responsible for involuntary control of the muscle tone. These findings shed light on the pivotal role of high efferent input and rich somatosensory feedback in neuromuscular control of finely adjusted cranial systems.

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