Jwair Saad, Coulon Patrice, Ruigrok Tom J H
Department of Neuroscience, Erasmus Medical Center Rotterdam, Netherlands.
Institut de Neurosciences de la Timone, Aix-Marseille Université, CNRS Marseille, France.
Front Neuroanat. 2017 Feb 28;11:13. doi: 10.3389/fnana.2017.00013. eCollection 2017.
In the last decade, the interplay between basal ganglia and cerebellar functions has been increasingly advocated to explain their joint operation in both normal and pathological conditions. Yet, insight into the neuroanatomical basis of this interplay between both subcortical structures remains sparse and is mainly derived from work in primates. Here, in rodents, we have studied the existence of a potential disynaptic connection between the subthalamic nucleus (STN) and the cerebellar cortex as has been demonstrated earlier for the primate. A mixture of unmodified rabies virus (RABV: CVS 11) and cholera toxin B-subunit (CTb) was injected at places in the posterior cerebellar cortex of nine rats. The survival time was chosen to allow for disynaptic retrograde transneuronal infection of RABV. We examined the STN for neurons infected with RABV in all nine cases and related the results with the location of the RABV/CTb injection site, which ranged from the vermis of lobule VII, to the paravermis and hemispheres of the paramedian lobule and crus 2a. We found that cases with injection sites in the vermis of lobule VII showed prominent RABV labeling in the STN. In contrast, almost no subthalamic labeling was noted in cases with paravermal or hemispheral injection sites. We show circumstantial evidence that not only the pontine nuclei but also the pedunculotegmental nucleus may act as the intermediary in the connection from STN to cerebellar cortex. This finding implies that in the rat the STN links disynaptically to the vermal part of lobule VII of the cerebellar cortex, without any major involvement of the cerebellar areas that are linked to sensorimotor functions. As vermal lobule VII recently has been shown to process disynaptic input from the retrosplenial and orbitofrontal cortices, we hypothesize that in the rat the subthalamic input to cerebellar function might be used to influence more prominently non-motor functions of the cerebellum than motor functions. This latter aspect seems to contradict the primate results and could point to a more elaborate interaction between basal ganglia and cerebellum in more demanding motor tasks.
在过去十年中,基底神经节与小脑功能之间的相互作用越来越多地被认为可以解释它们在正常和病理状态下的联合运作。然而,对这两个皮质下结构之间这种相互作用的神经解剖学基础的了解仍然很少,主要来自灵长类动物的研究。在此,我们在啮齿动物中研究了丘脑底核(STN)与小脑皮质之间潜在的双突触连接的存在,正如先前在灵长类动物中所证实的那样。将未修饰的狂犬病病毒(RABV:CVS 11)和霍乱毒素B亚基(CTb)的混合物注射到9只大鼠小脑后皮质的不同部位。选择存活时间以允许RABV进行双突触逆行跨神经元感染。我们检查了所有9只大鼠的丘脑底核中被RABV感染的神经元,并将结果与RABV/CTb注射部位的位置相关联,注射部位范围从小叶VII的蚓部到旁正中小叶和2a脚的旁蚓部和半球。我们发现,注射部位在小叶VII蚓部的大鼠,丘脑底核中有明显的RABV标记。相比之下,旁蚓部或半球注射部位的大鼠几乎没有丘脑底核标记。我们提供的间接证据表明,不仅脑桥核,而且脚桥被盖核可能在从STN到小脑皮质的连接中充当中间环节。这一发现意味着在大鼠中,STN与小脑皮质小叶VII的蚓部部分双突触相连,而与感觉运动功能相关的小脑区域没有任何主要参与。由于最近已表明小叶VII蚓部处理来自 retrosplenial和眶额皮质的双突触输入,我们假设在大鼠中,丘脑底核输入到小脑功能可能更多地用于影响小脑的非运动功能而非运动功能。后一个方面似乎与灵长类动物的结果相矛盾,可能表明在要求更高的运动任务中,基底神经节与小脑之间存在更复杂的相互作用。