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  • Title: Fiber Connections of the Caudal Corpus Cerebelli, with Special Reference to the Intrinsic Circuitry, in a Teleost (Oreochromis niloticus).
    Author: Imura K, Yamamoto N, Yoshimoto M, Endo M, Funakoshi K, Ito H.
    Journal: Brain Behav Evol; 2017; 89(1):15-32. PubMed ID: 28231568.
    Abstract:
    The caudal part of the corpus cerebelli of Nile tilapia can be divided into dorsal and ventral regions. The granule cell layer of the dorsal (dGL) and ventral (vGL) regions of the caudal corpus cerebelli is known to receive indirect inputs from the telencephalon relayed by the nucleus paracommissuralis. The descending pathways are topographically organized, and the dGL and vGL receive inputs from different dorsal telencephalic parts. The caudal corpus cerebelli, in turn, projects extracerebellar efferents. However, it remains unknown how the descending telencephalic inputs are processed within the cerebellum. Therefore, the present study investigated intrinsic connections of the caudal corpus cerebelli by injecting neural tracers into the molecular layer of dorsal and ventral regions. Injections of tracers into the ventral molecular layer resulted in labeled cells in the vGL and the ganglionic layer of the ventral corpus. The axonal trajectories from labeled cells in the ganglionic layer were analyzed in detail via single-axon reconstructions, which suggested that the terminal portions were confined to the ganglionic layer of the dorsal corpus. No labeled terminals were observed outside the caudal corpus cerebelli. Tracer applications to the dorsal molecular layer resulted in labeled cells not only in the ganglionic layer and the granule cell layer of the dorsal corpus but also in the ganglionic layer of the ventral corpus. The latter finding confirms the presence of intrinsic projections from the ventral region to the dorsal region in the caudal corpus cerebelli. We further revealed that the intrinsic projection neurons are Purkinje cells by immunohistochemistry for zebrin II (aldolase C), which is a marker of Purkinje cells, combined with tracer injections into the dorsal corpus. Unlike injections into the ventral corpus, injections into the dorsal corpus resulted in labeled terminals in extracerebellar structures, such as the nucleus of the medial longitudinal fascicle and reticular formation. The present study suggests that indirect inputs from different telencephalic parts received and processed by distinct regions of caudal corpus cerebelli are sent out of the corpus through the efferent neurons in the dorsal corpus.
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