Abstract

The peripheral and central efferent projections of the rostral part of the Edinger-Westphal nucleus in the rat were investigated at the light and electron microscopic level by means of iontophoretic injections of the anterograde tracer Phaseolus vulgaris-leucoagglutinin and retrograde tracer injections of Fast blue and Nuclear yellow into the facial nucleus and into the principal olive. Two pathways leaving the rostral part of the Edinger-Westphal nucleus were studied, a peripheral and a central descending pathway. Fluorescent experiments demonstrated that the central pathway fibers originated from distinct individual Edinger-Westphal neurons. These neurons were mainly distributed throughout the rostral part of the Edinger-Westphal nucleus and had fusiform cell bodies. The neurons rarely form collateral projections. The central descending pathway left the Edinger-Westphal nucleus medially and terminated bilaterally in the principal olive, in the subnuclei A, B and C of the inferior olive and ipsilaterally in the medial accessory olive. The central pathway also terminated contralaterally in the lateral parabrachial nucleus, the facial nucleus, the trigeminal brainstem nuclear complex, the lateral reticular nucleus and the rostroventral reticular nucleus. The projection to the facial nucleus provides evidence for the existence of a polysynaptic loop forming the central part of the corneal blink reflex. Projections from the Edinger-Westphal nucleus to the cerebellar cortex or the deep nuclei, as described in cat and primate, could not be confirmed. The peripheral pathway left the Edinger-Westphal nucleus ventrally and terminated on dendrites of ciliary ganglion cells, along smooth muscle cells of ciliary ganglion associated arterioles and in the proximity of ciliary ganglion associated venules. The central and peripheral terminals that originate in the Edinger-Westphal nucleus all had similar ultrastructural features: clear, round vesicles and electron dense mitochondria. The terminals originating from the central descending pathway were often found to be arranged in glomerular-like structures. The central and peripheral terminals made asymmetric synaptic membrane specializations (Gray type one), except terminals innervating the ciliary ganglion associated vessels, which showed no synaptic contacts.

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