Abstract

The intergeniculate leaflet of the thalamus is known to give rise to neuronal projections to the suprachiasmatic nuclei and the rostral part of the pineal gland. Via these projections the intergeniculate leaflet is considered to play a role in regulation of circadian rhythms. Iontophoretic injections of the anterograde tracer Phaseolus vulgaris-leucoagglutinin were placed in various subnuclei of the lateral geniculate nucleus in order to study the topographical organization of the crossed geniculogeniculate pathway in the rat. Injections involving neurons in the intergeniculate leaflet or the medial subpart of the ventral nucleus (which presumably is part of the intergeniculate leaflet of the thalamus too) gave rise to labeled nerve fibers in the opposite lateral geniculate nucleus. The axons contained in this pathway were followed either medially via the posterior commissure, or via the optic tracts and optic chiasm, to the contralateral hemisphere. In the contralateral lateral geniculate nucleus, the intergeniculate leaflet was most densely innervated, but a substantial innervation of the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus was observed as well. Only a few labeled fibers were observed in the dorsal subnucleus. However, the dense innervation of the contralateral intergeniculate leaflet not only covered the small zone between the dorsal and ventral nuclei, but also a dorsomedial part of the ventral nucleus that merged caudally with the lateral part of the zona incerta. In the remaining part of the ventral nucleus, single Phaseolus vulgaris-leucoag-glutinin-labeled fibers surrounded specific cells. The demonstration of a divergent projection between the intergeniculate leaflet and specific subparts of the contralateral geniculate nuclei indicates that the two lateral geniculate nuclei are regulating each other. The function of this pathway is suggested to be related to the regulation of circadian rhythmicity, but experimental evidence for this hypothesis is still lacking.

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