Abstract

Anterograde and retrograde tracing techniques were combined to determine whether auditory cortical axons contact cells in the cochlear nucleus that project to the inferior colliculus. FluoroRuby or fluorescein dextran was injected into auditory cortex to label cortical axons by anterograde transport. Different fluorescent tracers (Fast Blue, FluoroGold, FluoroRuby or fluorescein dextran) were injected into one or both inferior colliculi to label cells in the cochlear nucleus. After 12–15 days, the brain was processed for fluorescence microscopy and the cochlear nuclei were examined for apparent contacts between cortical axons and retrogradely labeled cochlear nucleus cells. The results suggest that axons from the ipsilateral or contralateral cortex contact fusiform and giant cells in the dorsal cochlear nucleus and multipolar cells in the ventral cochlear nucleus that project directly to the inferior colliculus. The contacts occur on cell bodies and dendrites. The target cells in the cochlear nucleus include cells that project ipsilaterally, contralaterally or bilaterally to the inferior colliculus. The results suggest that auditory cortex is in a position to exert direct effects on the monaural pathways that ascend from the cochlear nucleus.

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