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  • Title: Localization of trigeminal, spinal, and reticular neurons involved in the rat blink reflex.
    Author: Zerari-Mailly F, Dauvergne C, Buisseret P, Buisseret-Delmas C.
    Journal: J Comp Neurol; 2003 Dec 08; 467(2):173-84. PubMed ID: 14595767.
    Abstract:
    Electrical stimulation of the supraorbital nerve (SO) induces eyelid closure by activation of orbicularis oculi muscle motoneurons located in the facial motor nucleus (VII). Neurons involved in brainstem central pathways implicated in rat blink reflex were localized by analyzing c-Fos protein expression after SO stimulation in conjunction with tracing experiments. A retrograde tracer (gold-horseradish peroxidase [HRP]) was injected into the VII. The distribution patterns of activated c-Fos-immunoreactive neurons and of neurons exhibiting both c-Fos immunoreactivity and gold-HRP labeling were determined in the sensory trigeminal complex (STC), the cervical spinal cord (C1), and the pontomedullary reticular formation. Within the STC, c-Fos immunoreactivity labeled neurons in the ipsilateral ventral part of the principal nucleus, the pars oralis and interpolaris, and bilaterally in the pars caudalis. Colocalization of gold-HRP and c-Fos immunoreactivity was observed in neurons of ventral pars caudalis layers I-IV and ventral pars interpolaris. In C1, SO stimulation revealed c-Fos neurons in laminae I-V. After additional injections in VII, the double-labeled c-Fos/gold-HRP neurons were concentrated in laminae IV and V. Although c-Fos neurons were found throughout the pontomedullary reticular formation, most appeared rostrally around the motor trigeminal nucleus and in the ventral parvocellular reticular nucleus medial to the fiber bundles of the seventh nerve. Caudally, c-Fos neurons were in the lateral portion of the dorsal medullary reticular field. In addition, these reticular areas contained double-labeled neurons in electrically stimulated rats that had received gold-HRP injections in the VII. The presence of double-labeled neurons in the STC, C1, and the reticular formation implies that these neurons receive sensory information from eyelids and project to the VII. These double-labeled neurons could then be involved in di- or trisynaptic pathways contributing to the blink reflex.
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