Abstract

The projections from the amygdala and hippocampus (including subiculum and presubiculum) to prefrontal cortex were compared using anterograde tracers injected into macaque monkeys (Macaca fascicularis, Macaca mulatta). Almost all prefrontal areas were found to receive some amygdala inputs. These connections, which predominantly arose from the intermediate and magnocellular basal nucleus, were particularly dense in parts of the medial and orbital prefrontal cortex. Contralateral inputs were not, however, observed. The hippocampal projections to prefrontal areas were far more restricted, being confined to the ipsilateral medial and orbital prefrontal cortex (within areas 11, 13, 14, 24a, 32, and 25). These hippocampal projections principally arose from the subiculum, with the fornix providing the sole route. Thus, while the lateral prefrontal cortex essentially receives only amygdala inputs, the orbital prefrontal cortex receives both amygdala and hippocampal inputs, though these typically target different areas. Only in medial prefrontal cortex do direct inputs from both structures terminate in common sites. But, even when convergence occurs within an area, the projections predominantly terminate in different lamina (hippocampal inputs to layer III and amygdala inputs to layers I, II, and VI). The resulting segregation of prefrontal inputs could enable the parallel processing of different information types in prefrontal cortex.

Highlights

  • The prefrontal cortex is assumed to orchestrate multiple classes of information to maintain cognitive control (Miller and Cohen 2001)

  • The projections from the amygdala and hippocampus to prefrontal cortex were compared using anterograde tracers injected into macaque monkeys (Macaca fascicularis, Macaca mulatta)

  • Even when convergence occurs within an area, the projections predominantly terminate in different lamina

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Summary

Introduction

The prefrontal cortex is assumed to orchestrate multiple classes of information to maintain cognitive control (Miller and Cohen 2001). 4352 | Cerebral Cortex, 2015, Vol 25, No 11 hippocampal projections appear more restricted, with inputs focused on medial (areas 25 and 32) and orbital (areas 11, 13, and 14) prefrontal cortex (Rosene and Van Hoesen 1977; Morecraft et al 1992; Barbas and Blatt 1995; Carmichael and Price 1995; Insausti and Munoz 2001) Most of these connection studies have, relied on placing retrograde tracers within different parts of prefrontal cortex, with the consequence that far less is known about the specific termination sites of these projections within prefrontal cortex. Key features of the amygdala experiments include the number of tracer injections targeting individual amygdala nuclei, along with the use of more fine-grained distinctions within prefrontal areas than reported by Ghashgaei et al (2007) By combining both amygdala and hippocampal projection data in one study, it was possible to provide direct comparisons between their prefrontal inputs. A subset of macaque monkeys that had received fornix transections, principally for the purpose of behavioral studies, received anterograde tracer injections in the hippocampus

Materials and Methods
II III V VI
I-VI I II-VI II - II-VI
VI II VI II III
Results
Discussion
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