Abstract

The olivary pretectal nucleus is the first central connection in the pupillary light reflex pathway, the circuit that adjusts the diameter of the pupil in response to ambient light levels. This study investigated aspects of the morphology and connectivity of the olivary pretectal nucleus in macaque monkeys by use of anterograde and retrograde tracers. Within the pretectum, the vast majority of neurons projecting to the preganglionic Edinger-Westphal nucleus were found within the olivary pretectal nucleus. Most of these neurons had somata located at the periphery of the nucleus and their heavily branched dendrites extended into the core of the nucleus. Retinal terminals were concentrated within the borders of the olivary pretectal nucleus. Ultrastructural examination of these terminals showed that they had clear spherical vesicles, occasional dense-core vesicles, and made asymmetric synaptic contacts. Retrogradely labeled cells projecting to the preganglionic Edinger-Westphal nucleus displayed relatively few somatic contacts. Double labeling indicated that these neurons receive direct retinal input. The concentration of retinal terminals within the nucleus and the extensive dendritic trees of the olivary projection cells provide a substrate for very large receptive fields. In some species, pretectal commissural connections are a substrate for balancing the direct and consensual pupillary responses to produce pupils of equal size. In the macaque, there was little evidence for such a commissural projection based on either anterograde or retrograde tracing. This may be due to the fact that each macaque retina provides nearly equal density projections to the ipsilateral and contralateral olivary pretectal nucleus.

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