Abstract
The flocculus and paraflocculus of cat and sheep cerebellum were studied with immunohistochemical methods, using antisera to corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF). CRF immunoreactivity was present within 3 populations of varicose nerve fibers. One population of CRF-immunoreactive (CRF-IR) fibers appeared to appose Purkinje cell somata and to follow their dendrites into the molecular layer. This arrangement suggested they were climbing fibers. A second group of CRF-IR profiles reminiscent of mossy fibers was widely distributed throughout the granule cell layer. A third population of CRF-IR fibers was present as a beaded plexus lying parallel to the pial surface, above and subadjacent to the Purkinje cell layer. The fibers of this plexus extended into the Purkinje cell layer and surrounded these somata. The source of some of the CRF-IR fibers within the flocculus and paraflocculus was determined by a retrograde axonal transport study utilizing the fluorescent tracer Fast blue (FB) in combination with the immunohistochemical localization of CRF. It was determined that CRF-IR perikarya within the inferior olivary nucleus gave rise to a population of climbing fibers within those lobules. Furthermore, all divisions of the inferior olive were found to contain CRF-IR somata. This latter finding suggests the potential for CRF-IR climbing fiber projections from the inferior olive to other regions of the cerebellar cortex. The existence of CRF-IR mossy fibers and fibers within the ganglionic plexus suggests the possibility of CRF-IR afferent projections from other regions of the brain stem to the flocculus and paraflocculus.
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