Knudsen E I, Cohen Y E, Masino T
Department of Neurobiology, Stanford University School of Medicine, California 94305-5401, USA.
J Neurosci. 1995 Jul;15(7 Pt 2):5139-51. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.15-07-05139.1995.
We present evidence that the archistriatum in the forebrain of the barn owl participates in gaze control, that it can mediate gaze changes independently of the optic tectum (OT), and that it projects in parallel to both the OT and to saccade-generating circuitry in the brainstem tegmentum. These properties are similar to those of the frontal eye fields (FEF) in the prefrontal cortex of primates. The forebrain was surveyed for sites where electrical microstimulation would induce head saccades. Head (and eye) saccades were elicited from the anterior 70% of the archistriatum, a region that we refer to as the archistriatal gaze fields (AGF). At single stimulation sites in the AGF, saccade amplitude tended to vary as a function of stimulation parameters (current strength, pulse frequency, and train duration) and starting head position. In contrast, saccade direction was largely independent of these parameters. Saccade direction did vary over a wide range of primarily contraversive directions with the site of stimulation in the AGF. Using anatomical pathway tracing techniques, we found that the archistriatum projects strongly and in parallel to the deep layers of the OT and to nuclei in the midline brainstem tegmentum. Previous work has shown that electrical microstimulation of either of these brainstem regions evokes saccadic movements of the head and/or eyes (du Lac and Knudsen, 1990; Masino and Knudsen, 1992b). Inactivation of the OT with lidocaine reduced the size but did not eliminate (or change the direction of) the saccades evoked by AGF stimulation. The direct anatomical pathway from the archistriatum to the midline tegmental nuclei can account for saccades that persist following OT inactivation. The similarities between the AGF in barn owls and the FEF in primates suggest that the same general plan of anatomical and functional organization supports the contribution of the forebrain to gaze control in a wide variety of species.
我们提供的证据表明,仓鸮前脑的古纹状体参与了注视控制,它能够独立于视顶盖(OT)介导注视变化,并且它与OT以及脑干被盖中产生扫视的神经回路平行投射。这些特性与灵长类动物前额叶皮质中的额叶眼区(FEF)相似。我们在前脑中寻找电微刺激会诱发头部扫视的部位。头部(和眼睛)扫视是由古纹状体前70%的区域诱发的,我们将该区域称为古纹状体注视区(AGF)。在AGF的单个刺激部位,扫视幅度往往随刺激参数(电流强度、脉冲频率和串持续时间)以及起始头部位置而变化。相比之下,扫视方向在很大程度上与这些参数无关。随着AGF中刺激部位的不同,扫视方向确实在主要为对侧的广泛方向范围内变化。使用解剖通路追踪技术,我们发现古纹状体强烈且平行地投射到OT的深层以及中线脑干被盖中的核团。先前的研究表明,对这些脑干区域中的任何一个进行电微刺激都会诱发头部和/或眼睛的扫视运动(du Lac和Knudsen,1990;Masino和Knudsen,1992b)。用利多卡因使OT失活会减小AGF刺激诱发的扫视幅度,但不会消除(或改变其方向)。从古纹状体到中线被盖核团的直接解剖通路可以解释OT失活后持续存在的扫视。仓鸮的AGF与灵长类动物的FEF之间的相似性表明,相同的一般解剖和功能组织模式支持前脑在多种物种中对注视控制的贡献。