Abstract

Efferent projections from the cerebellar nuclei to the superior colliculus and the pretectum have been studied using both retrograde and orthograde labeling techniques in the cat. In order to identify what parts of the cerebellar nuclei project to the superior colliculus and the pretectum, the retrograde horseradish labeling technique was employed. In another set of experiments, tritiated amino acids were injected into each of the cerebellar regions from which the cerebello-tectal and cerebellopretectal projections arise, and the laminar and spatial distributions of orthograde labeling in the superior colliculus and the pretectum were compared. The results showed that the cerebello-tectal projections arise from two different regions of the cerebellar nuclei: the caudal half of the medial nucleus and the ventrolateral part of the posterior interposed nucleus. Fibers arising from the medial nucleus distribute bilaterally in the superficial zone of the intermediate gray layer in the superior colliculus, while those originating from the posterior interposed nucleus terminate contralaterally in the deeper aspect of the intermediate gray layer and in the deep gray and white layers. Although the lateral nucleus does not contribute to the cerebello-tectal projection, it projects profusely to the pretectum contralaterally. The origin of the cerebello-pretectal projection lies in the parvicellular part of the lateral nucleus. Among several pretectal nuclei, the posterior pretectal, the medial pretectal nucleus and the reticular part of the anterior pretectal nucleus receive the cerebellar afferents. The findings of the differential projections from the cerebellum to the superior colliculus and the pretectum suggest that the cerebellum exerts a regulatory influence on visuo-motor and somato-motor transfer in these midbrain structures by differential circuits.

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