Abstract

Large cholinergic synaptic boutons called “C-terminals” contact motoneurons and regulate their excitability. C-terminals in the spinal somatic motor nuclei originate from cholinergic interneurons in laminae VII and X that express a transcription factor Pitx2. Cranial motor nuclei contain another type of motoneuron: branchiomotor neurons. Although branchiomotor neurons receive abundant C-terminal projections, the neural source of these C-terminals remains unknown. In the present study, we first examined whether cholinergic neurons express Pitx2 in the reticular formation of the adult mouse brainstem, as in the spinal cord. Although Pitx2-positive cholinergic neurons were observed in the magnocellular reticular formation and region around the central canal in the caudal medulla, none was present more rostrally in the brainstem tegmentum. We next explored the origin of C-terminals in the branchiomotor nuclei by using biotinylated dextran amine (BDA). BDA injections into the magnocellular reticular formation of the medulla and pons resulted in the labeling of numerous C-terminals in the branchiomotor nuclei: the ambiguous, facial, and trigeminal motor nuclei. Our results revealed that the origins of C-terminals in the branchiomotor nuclei are cholinergic neurons in the magnocellular reticular formation not only in the caudal medulla, but also at more rostral levels of the brainstem, which lacks Pitx2-positive neurons.

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