Abstract

Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was injected into the cerebellar flocculus of 20 cats to determine: (a) the proportions of afferents from the various brain stem nuclei; (b) possible projections from the basilar pontine nuclei; and (c) sources of saccadic eye movement signals recorded from flocculus Purkinje cells. Results confirm earlier findings that the flocculus receives large numbers of mossy fibre afferents from the vestibular and perihypoglossal nuclei, bilaterally, and climbing fibres from the contralateral inferior olive (dorsal cap, ventrolateral outgrowth, medial accessory olive, ventral bend of principal olive). In addition, large numbers of HRP-labeled neurons have been identified within: (i) the basilar pontine nuclei, bilaterally, where they are distributed in columns in the dorsolateral, lateral, ventral medial and dorsomedial nuclei; (ii) the nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis; (iii) several of the cranial motor nuclei, VI, VII, X (retrofacial n.), XI (n. ambiguus), and XII; (iv) the raphe magnus, pontis and obscurus; (v) the lateral reticular nucleus, pars subtrigeminalis. Finally, new information is presented which shows that large numbers of flocculus projecting neurons are located within the medial longitudinal fasciculus at two locations; one just rostral to the hypoglossal nucleus and another group extends 2-3 mm rostral to the abducens nucleus. These groups are bilateral, and have been termed, respectively, the caudal and intermediate interstitial nucleus of the medial longitudinal fasciculus. Both groups correspond in location to physiologically identified neurons in cat which fire in relation to saccadic eye movements. Their projection to the flocculus, in part, explains the saccadic discharge of Purkinje cells in the flocculus.

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