Abstract

Projection neurons in lamina I, together with those in laminae III–IV that express the neurokinin 1 receptor (NK1r), form a major route through which nociceptive information reaches the brain. Axons of these cells innervate various targets, including thalamus, periaqueductal gray matter (PAG), and lateral parabrachial area (LPb), and many cells project to more than one target. The aims of this study were to quantify projections from cervical enlargement to PAG and LPb, to determine the proportion of spinothalamic neurons at lumbar and cervical levels that were labelled from PAG and LPb, and to investigate morphological differences between projection populations. The C7 segment contained fewer lamina I spinoparabrachial cells than L4, but a similar number of spino-PAG cells. Virtually all spinothalamic lamina I neurons at both levels were labelled from LPb and between one-third and one-half from PAG. This suggests that significant numbers project to all three targets. Spinothalamic lamina I neurons differed from those labelled only from LPb in that they were generally larger, were more often multipolar, and (in cervical enlargement) had stronger NK1r immunoreactivity. Most lamina III/IV NK1r cells at both levels projected to LPb, but few were labelled from PAG. The great majority of these cells in C7 and over one-fourth of those in L4 were spinothalamic, and at each level some projected to both thalamus and LPb. These results confirm that neurons in these laminae have extensive collateral projections and suggest that different neuronal subpopulations in lamina I have characteristic patterns of supraspinal projection. J. Comp. Neurol. 515:629–646, 2009.

Highlights

  • Projection neurons in lamina I, together with those in laminae III–IV that express the neurokinin 1 receptor (NK1r), form a major route through which nociceptive information reaches the brain

  • The posterior triangular nucleus of the thalamus (PoT) nucleus was targeted for the thalamic injections, because this is a major termination zone for projections from the superficial dorsal horn (Gauriau and Bernard, 2004a), and we have shown that injections of tracer into this region label virtually all spinothalamic neurons in lamina I, together with those in laminae III and IV that express the NK1r (Al-Khater et al, 2008)

  • These indicate that the PoT was completely filled with Fluorogold in each case, with spread into surrounding areas but not into hypothalamus, periaqueductal gray matter (PAG), or lateral parabrachial area (LPb)

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Summary

Introduction

Projection neurons in lamina I, together with those in laminae III–IV that express the neurokinin 1 receptor (NK1r), form a major route through which nociceptive information reaches the brain Axons of these cells innervate various targets, including thalamus, periaqueductal gray matter (PAG), and lateral parabrachial area (LPb), and many cells project to more than one target. There is a population of large NK1r-immunoreactive projection neurons in laminae III and IV with prominent dorsal dendrites that enter lamina I (Marshall et al, 1996; Naim et al, 1997; Todd et al, 2000) Cells belonging to both of these populations send predominantly contralateral projections to several brain regions, including the lateral parabrachial area (LPb), periaqueductal gray matter (PAG), and thalamus. The contribution to this tract from lamina III/IV NK1r projection neurons is considerably greater in the cervical enlargement (AlKhater et al, 2008)

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