Afferent and efferent connections of the secondary general visceral sensory nucleus in goldfish

Author:

Uezono Shiori12,Kato Takeshi1,Yamada Yuusuke1,Yoshimoto Masami2,Yamamoto Naoyuki1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Fish Biology, Department of Animal Sciences, Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences Nagoya University Chikusa‐ku Japan

2. Department of Rehabilitation Sciences University of Tokyo Health Sciences Tama Japan

Abstract

AbstractThe secondary general visceral sensory nucleus (SVN) receives ascending fibers from the commissural nucleus of Cajal (NCC), or the primary general visceral sensoru in the medulla oblongata of teleosts. However, the full set of fiber connections of the SVN have been studied only in the Nile tilapia. We have investigated the connections of the SVN in goldfish by tracer injection experiments to the nucleus. We paid special attention to the possible presence of spinal afferents, since the spinal cord projects to the lateral parabrachial nucleus, or the presumed homologue of SVN, in mammals. We found that the SVN indeed receives spinal projections. Spinal terminals were restricted to a region ventrolaterally adjacent to the terminal zone of NCC fibers, suggesting that the SVN can be subdivided into two subnuclei: the commissural nucleus‐recipient (SVNc) and spinal‐recipient (SVNsp) subnuclei. Tracer injections to the SVNc and SVNsp as well as reciprocal injections to the diencephalon revealed that both subnuclei project directly to diencephalic structures, such as the posterior thalamic nucleus and nucleus of lateral recess, although diencephalic projections of the SVNsp were rather sparse. The SVNsp appears to send fibers to more wide‐spread targets in the preoptic area than the SVNc does. The SVNc projects to the telencephalon, while the SVNsp sends scarce or possibly no fibers to the telencephalon. Another notable difference was that the SVNsp gives rise to massive projections to the dorsal diencephalon (ventromedial thalamic, central posterior thalamic, and periventricular posterior tubercular nuclei). These differential connections of the subnuclei may reflect discrete functional significances of the general visceral sensory information mediated by the medulla oblongata and spinal cord.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Neuroscience

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