Abstract

Sensory nerve fibers from the lateral line system and labyrinth of Anguilla anguilla were labeled with horseradish peroxidase and traced to various targets in the ipsilateral brainstem. The three rami of the anterior lateral line nerve and the supratemporal ramus of the posterior lateral line nerve form overlapping terminal zones in the ventral portion of nucleus medialis. The posterior lateral line nerve on the body is represented exclusively in the dorsal half of the nucleus medialis. Eighth nerve fibers from the otolithic end organs in the inner ear send fibers into dorsal portions of three octavus nuclei: anterior, magnocellular, and descending, and saccular fibers lie most medial and utricular fibers most lateral. Fibers from vestibular organs, especially the semicircular canals and utricle, end densely in ventral portions of these nuclei and in the tangential nucleus. All labyrinthine sense organs send fibers into the region of a Mauthner-like neuron, and all except the saccule terminate in the reticular formation, tangential nucleus, and eminentia granularis of the cerebellum. Primary sensory input to the octavolateralis efferent nucleus comes only from the labyrinth, and fibers from the saccule alone penetrate the region of efferent neuronal somata. Fibers from labyrinthine end organs except the saccule project to the reticular formation where they may contact the dendrites of efferent somata. Fibers from the lateral line and the eighth nerve overlap most extensively at the rostral pole of the nucleus medialis and in the eminentia granularis of the cerebellum.

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