Abstract

The anatomical features of the dorsolateral pontine nucleus (DLPN) implicate a role of the nucleus in the generation of smooth-pursuit eye movements. The DLPN receives convergent inputs from a variety of parieto-occipital cortical visual areas and projects its fibers to the flocculus and vermal lobules VI and VII. In addition to cortical afferent fibers, the DLPN receives descending fibers from the nucleus of the optic tract which is indicated as the first subcortical optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) relay. DLPN units respond not only to a discrete visual spot but also to large-field OKN stimuli. On the basis of the above anatomical and physiological features, OKN was investigated in 2 alert monkeys whose DLPN was physiologically identified and into which reversible lidocaine was injected. The present findings showed that a rapid rise in OKN velocity was reduced in both monkeys, whose lesions included the uppermost rostral part of the nucleus in the one monkey and the entire nucleus in the other, whereas optokinetic after-nystagmus velocity was affected only in the latter. Taken together with physiological data, the DLPN possibly shares the domain of low selectivity speed selection in OKN and does not play a main role in the generation of OKN.

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