Specific patterns of neuronal connexions involved in the control of the rabbit's vestibulo‐ocular reflexes by the cerebellar flocculus.

1. In anaesthetized albino rabbits, the occurrence of Purkinje cell inhibition on canal‐ocular reflexes was surveyed with a reflex testing method. 2. Test reflexes were elicited by electrical stimulation of the semicircular canals. The results were appaised by recording potentials and tension from extraocular muscles. Twelve reflexes were defined in terms of the receptor canal and the effector muscle. 3. Conditioning electrical stimuli were applied to the flocculus, the inferior olive, and optic pathways at the retinae, optic chiasm, pretectal area and upper medulla. 4. The conditioning stimulation at the ipsilateral flocculus induced depression in six of the twelve canal‐ocular reflexes; four of the six arose from the anterior canal and the remaining two from the horizontal canal. 5. The effect of stimulation of the contralateral inferior olive was similar to that of the ipsilateral flocculus, though less clear in two of the four reflexes from the anterior canal because of a contaminating effect. 6. The two reflexes from the horizontal canal were depressed by stimulation of the ipsilateral optic pathway which reached the ipsilateral flocculus via the contralateral pretectal area and inferior olive. 7. The four reflexes from the anterior canal were affected by stimulation of optic pathways in a different manner from each other. One was depressed from the contralateral retina via the ipsilateral pretectal area, while another was depressed from the ipsilateral retina via the contralateral pretectal area, though only occasionally. The third reflex was depressed from the ipsilateral pretectal area but not from the retina. The fourth was affected from neither the retina nor the pretectal area. 8. On the basis of latency measurements, it was concluded that the depression of canal‐ocular reflexes was due to inhibition of relay neurones of the testing reflexes by flocculus Purkinje cells which were activated either directly, or indirectly through olivocerebellar climbing fibre afferents. 9. The above conclusion was supported by the observation that the depression induced by stimulation of the inferior olive and optic pathways was abolished by acute destruction of the ipsilateral flocculus. 10. The possible functional significance of the specific patterns of connexions from flocculus Purkinje cells to canal‐ocular reflex pathways is discussed, and specialization among flocculus Purkinje cells in relationship with vestibulo‐ocular reflexes is postulated.

[1]  R. Dow,et al.  Efferent connections of the flocculo nodular lobe in macaca mulatta , 1938 .

[2]  J. Szentágothai The elementary vestibulo-ocular reflex arc. , 1950, Journal of neurophysiology.

[3]  J. Eccles,et al.  Correlation of the inhibitory post‐synaptic potential of motoneurones with the latency and time course of inhibition of monosynaptic reflexes , 1960, The Journal of physiology.

[4]  M. B. Bender,et al.  XVI Eye Movements from Semicircular Canal Nerve Stimulation in the Cat , 1964, Annals of Otology, Rhinology and Laryngology.

[5]  Professor Dr. John C. Eccles,et al.  The Cerebellum as a Neuronal Machine , 1967, Springer Berlin Heidelberg.

[6]  A. Brodal,et al.  The projection of the "vestibulocerebellum" onto the vestibular nuclei in the cat. , 1967, Archives italiennes de biologie.

[7]  M. Ito,et al.  Cerebellar inhibition of the vestibulo-ocular reflex in rabbit and cat and its blockage by picrotoxin. , 1970, Brain research.

[8]  M. Carpenter,et al.  Primary vestibulocerebellar fibers in the monkey: distribution of fibers arising from distinctive cell groups of the vestibular ganglia. , 1972, The American journal of anatomy.

[9]  M. Ito,et al.  Neural design of the cerebellar motor control system. , 1972, Brain research.

[10]  M. Yamamoto,et al.  Specific neural connections for the cerebellar control of vestibulo-ocular reflexes. , 1973, Brain Research.

[11]  J. Simpson,et al.  Climbing fiber responses evoked in vestibulocerebellum of rabbit from visual system. , 1973, Journal of neurophysiology.

[12]  K. Maekawa,et al.  Inhibition of climbing fiber responses of rabbit's flocculus Purkinje cells induced by light stimulation of the retina. , 1974, Brain research.

[13]  THE VESTIBULO–CEREBELLAR RELATIONSHIPS: VESTIBULO–OCULAR REFLEX ARC AND FLOCCULUS , 1975 .

[14]  Toshiaki Takeda,et al.  Mossy fiber responses evoked in the cerebellar flocculus of rabbits by stimulation of the optic pathway , 1975, Brain Research.

[15]  Yasushi Miyashita,et al.  The Effects of Chronic Destruction of the Inferior Olive upon Visual Modification of the Horizontal Vestibulo-Ocular Reflex of Rabbits , 1975 .

[16]  Toshiaki Takeda,et al.  Electrophysiological identification of the climbing and mossy fiber pathways from the rabbit's retina to the contralateral cerebellar flocculus , 1976, Brain Research.

[17]  M. Yamamoto,et al.  Pathways for the vestibulo-ocular reflex excitation arising from semicircular canals of rabbits , 1976, Experimental Brain Research.