A study of the organization of the locus coeruleus projections to the lateral geniculate nuclei in the albino rat

Abstract The lateral geniculate nuclei of the rat are known to receive an innervation from catecholamine-containing neurons. In the present study the origin, axonal projections and terminal distribution of this innervation was studied. The lateral geniculate nuclei contain a356 ± 20 ng norepinephrine/g and64 ± 7 ng dopamine/g tissue; the latter is within the range expected for dopamine as a precursor in a region innervated by a norepinephrine-containing terminal system. When separate norepinephrine-containing cell groups located at various brain stem levels are ablated or their axonal projections destroyed, only lesions in the locus coeruleus produce a significant decrease in the norepinephrine content of the lateral geniculate nuclei. Injections of horseradish peroxidase into the lateral geniculate nuclei result in retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase only to the noradrenergic neurons of the locus coeruleus. The labelled neurons are pretent throughout the rostrocaudal and dorsoventral axes of both the ipsilateral (60%) and contralateral (40%) nucleus. Autoradiographic and fluorescence histo-chemical experiments indicate that axons that ascend from the locus coeruleus reach the lateral geniculate nuclei via the dorsal tegmental catecholamine-containing bundle and the medial forebrain bundle. These fibers enter the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus from the zona incerta and the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus from the superior thalamic radiation, thalamic reticular nucleus, and lateral posterior nucleus. Contralateral fibers from the locus coeruleus cross in the posterior commissure, supraoptic and pontine decussations and join the ipsilateral projections to the lateral geniculate nuclei. The bilateral locus coeruleus innervation of the nuclei is comprised of a highly branched network of varicose axons. Neither the ipsilateral nor the contralateral projections appear to be topographically organized; instead, a single fiber may have collateral axons that branch throughout large areas of the nuclei. This innervation is moderately dense in the ventral, and very dense in the dorsal, lateral geniculate nucleus. The study indicates that both the dorsal and ventral lateral geniculate nuclei receive a diffuse catecholamine-containing innervation which arises solely from the norepinephrine-containing neurons of the locus coeruleus. The innervation of each lateral geniculate nucleus is bilateral, with noradrenergic neurons located throughout both the ipsilateral and the contralateral locus coeruleus contributing to ascending pathways that terminate as a diffuse, plexiform innervation interspersed among other afferents to the lateral geniculate nuclei. It is speculated that such a diffuse noradrenergic innervation might depress the spontaneous activity of neurons in the lateral geniculate nuclei, while preserving or enhancing their responsiveness to afferent optic stimulation.

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