Abstract

Studies detailing the anatomy of the brain of the golden moles are few. A recent study indicated that in the Hottentot golden mole (a member of the Amblysominae clade), there was a broad, atypical, distribution of cholinergic interneurons in the olfactory bulb, cerebral cortex, hippocampus and amygdala. To determine whether this broad distribution of cholinergic neurons is shared by other species of golden mole, we here examine the brain of the Cape golden mole (a member of the Chrysochlorinae clade, representing the second major clade within the family Chrysochloridae). Our analyses indicates the presence of a similar widespread distribution of cholinergic interneurons in the Cape golden mole. Thus, we conclude that these features are derived morphological traits in the brains of golden moles. In addition, we describe the nuclei generally considered to be part of the typical cholinergic system in mammals. Whereas the vast majority of these generally reported cholinergic nuclei were the same as recorded in other Eutherian mammals, it was noted that the cholinergic nuclei involved in oculomotion were substantially reduced in size, or absent in the case of the abducens nucleus. In addition, there was an absence of the cholinergic medial septal nucleus, but the presence of a cholinergic lateral septal nucleus. The laterodorsal and pedunculopontine tegmental nuclei evince regions where the cholinergic neurons are densely packed. These are atypical features of the mammalian cholinergic system, which when combined with the widespread atypical distribution of cholinergic interneurons, reveals a family-specific complement of cholinergic nuclei in the Chrysochloridae.

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