Functional and anatomical organization of floccular zones: A preserved feature in vertebrates

Ever since Cajal’s work, the cerebellum has been an attractive site for systems neuroscience investigation, in part because the circuitry appears to be simple. There are only two major inputs (mossy fibers and climbing fibers), a single output (the Purkinje cells), and few interneurons. Nevertheless, its function still remains elusive. Study of the cerebellar flocculus, in particular, has been important in addressing two major questions in modern neuroscience. The first involves neural transformations, because the flocculus is a site of multimodal sensory and sensory-motor integration important for retinal image stabilization. Visual and vestibular signals converge upon the flocculus, and its main output is to the extraocular muscles. Research by Simpson, Graf, and colleagues has shown that the visual inputs to the flocculus, the semicircular canals, and the extraocular muscles share a common three-dimensional frame of reference. That is, there is a very close correspondence between the axes of rotation of the three pairs of eye muscles, the axes of the three semicircular canal pairs, and the axis of rotation of the visual world that results in maximal modulation of the visual inputs to the flocculus (Simpson and Graf, 1981; see Fig. 3A,B). Second, the flocculus is an ideal site for studying the mechanisms underlying neural plasticity, because the flocculus is important for the adaptive modification of the vestibuloocular reflex (VOR). The flocculus can be subdivided into compartments, each of which monitors rotation of the eye by two of the six extraocular muscles. The compartmentation of the mammalian flocculus has a long history, culminating in the paper by Sugihara et al. (2004) published in this issue of the Journal. This commentary was prompted by recent findings of a very similar arrangement in the avian flocculus, suggesting that this property of the cerebellum is a highly conserved feature (Winship and Wylie, 2003). Many studies of the compartmentation of the flocculus are rooted in Ito’s (1972) hypothesis on the role of the flocculus in long-term adaptation of the VOR. Simultaneous activation of parallel fibers, bearing a signal from the semicircular canals, and climbing fibers from the inferior olive bearing a signal of retinal slip caused by imperfect stabilization of the eyes, supposedly would cause a long-term reduction in the firing rate of the Purkinje cells, upon which the visual and vestibular signals converge. Subsequent disinhibition of vestibuloocular relay cells would compensate for the imperfect stabilization by the VOR. Ito established that stimulation of the flocculus of the rabbit affects six specific canal-ocular pathways. Two of these pathways link the horizontal canal with the medial and lateral recti. The pathway to the ipsilateral medial rectus and the contralateral lateral rectus is excitatory, and the pathway to the ipsilateral lateral rectus and the contralateral medial rectus muscle is inhibitory. Stimulation of the horizontal canal causes adduction of the ipsilateral eye and abduction of the contralateral eye (see Fig. 3A). Stimulation of the flocculus inhibits these pathways and the direction of the evoked eye movement is reversed (see Fig. 3C). The other four pathways arise from the anterior canal. They excite the ipsilateral superior rectus and the contralateral inferior oblique muscles and inhibit their antagonists, the ipsilateral inferior rectus and the contralateral superior oblique (Ito et al., 1973, 1977). These muscles rotate the eye about an axis located in the horizontal plane that is oriented at 135° ipsilateral azimuth/45° contralateral azimuth, i.e., an axis that is approximately orthogonal to plane of the ipsilateral anterior canal. The correspondence of the axis of the anterior canal and the rotation axis of the eyes on stimulation of this canal is illustrated in Figure 3B. The effects of stim-

[1]  N. Gerrits,et al.  Organization of the Vestibulocerebellum , 1996, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[2]  M. Heaton,et al.  Patterns of extraocular innervation by the oculomotor complex in the chick , 1983, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[3]  Masao Ito,et al.  Functional localization in the rabbit's cerebellar flocculus determined in relationship with eye movements , 1977, Neuroscience Letters.

[4]  J. Simpson,et al.  Projections of individual purkinje cells of identified zones in the flocculus to the vestibular and cerebellar nuclei in the rabbit , 1994, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[5]  B. Frost,et al.  Common reference frame for neural coding of translational and rotational optic flow , 1998, Nature.

[6]  N. Gerrits,et al.  Zonal organization of the climbing fiber projection to the flocculus and nodulus of the rabbit: A combined axonal tracing and acetylcholinesterase histochemical study , 1995, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[7]  Miyuki Yamamoto Topographical representation in rabbit cerebellar flocculus for various afferent inputs from the brainstem investigated by means of retrograde axonal transport of horseradish peroxidase , 1979, Neuroscience Letters.

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

[9]  I. Winship,et al.  Responses of neurons in the medial column of the inferior olive in pigeons to translational and rotational optic flowfields , 2001, Experimental Brain Research.

[10]  N. Crowder,et al.  Zonal organization of the vestibulocerebellum in pigeons (Columba livia): II. Projections of the rotation zones of the flocculus , 2003, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[11]  J. Voogd,et al.  Organization of inferior olivary projections to the flocculus and ventral paraflocculus of the rat cerebellum , 1992, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[12]  O. Larsell The development and subdivisions of the cerebellum of birds , 1948, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[13]  Yu Sato,et al.  Identification of the Purkinje cell/climbing fiber zone and its target neurons responsible for eye-movement control by the cerebellar flocculus , 1991, Brain Research Reviews.

[14]  J. Simpson,et al.  Functional and anatomic organization of three-dimensional eye movements in rabbit cerebellar flocculus. , 1994, Journal of neurophysiology.

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

[16]  H P Zeigler,et al.  Organization of the cerebellum in the pigeon (Columba livia): I. Corticonuclear and corticovestibular connections , 1991, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[17]  Yu Sato,et al.  The neuronal pathway from the flocculus to the oculomotor nucleus: An electrophysiological study of group y nucleus in cats , 1986, Brain Research.

[18]  W. Graf,et al.  A quantitative analysis of the spatial organization of the vestibulo-ocular reflexes in lateral- and frontal-eyed animals—I. Orientation of semicircular canals and extraocular muscles , 1984, Neuroscience.

[19]  Masao Ito,et al.  Eye field in the cerebellar flocculus of pigmented rabbits determined with local electrical stimulation , 1985, Neuroscience Research.

[20]  S. Highstein,et al.  The organization of the vestibulo-oculomotor and trochlear reflex pathways in the rabbit , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.

[21]  Brie A. Linkenhoker,et al.  Topographical organization of inferior olive cells projecting to translation and rotation zones in the vestibulocerebellum of pigeons , 1998, Neuroscience.

[22]  Naoki Hirai,et al.  Superior vestibular nucleus neurones related to the excitatory vestibulo-ocular reflex of anterior canal origin and their ascending course in the cat , 1984, Neuroscience Research.

[23]  Yoshikazu Shinoda,et al.  Functional compartmentalization in the flocculus and the ventral dentate and dorsal group y nuclei: An analysis of single olivocerebellar axonal morphology , 2004, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[24]  S. Highstein,et al.  Vestibular nucleus neurons relaying excitation from the anterior canal to the oculomotor nucleus , 1978, Brain Research.

[25]  J. Voogd,et al.  Zonal organization of the flocculovestibular nucleus projection in the rabbit: A combined axonal tracing and acetylcholinesterase histochemical study , 1995, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[26]  J. Simpson,et al.  Spatial organization of visual messages of the rabbit's cerebellar flocculus. II. Complex and simple spike responses of Purkinje cells. , 1988, Journal of neurophysiology.

[27]  N. Crowder,et al.  Topographic organization of inferior olive cells projecting to translational zones in the vestibulocerebellum of pigeons , 2000, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[28]  N. Gerrits,et al.  The climbing fiber projection to the flocculus and adjacent paraflocculus in the cat , 1982, Neuroscience.

[29]  I S Curthoys,et al.  Morphology of physiologically identified second‐order vestibular neurons in cat, with intracellularly injected HRP , 1988, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[30]  C I De Zeeuw,et al.  Signal processing in the C2 module of the flocculus and its role in head movement control. , 1997, Progress in brain research.

[31]  M. Yamamoto,et al.  Specific patterns of neuronal connexions involved in the control of the rabbit's vestibulo‐ocular reflexes by the cerebellar flocculus. , 1977, The Journal of physiology.

[32]  N. Gerrits,et al.  Parasagittal Zonation of the Cerebellum in Macaques: An Analysis based on Acetylcholinesterase Histochemistry , 1987 .

[33]  I. Winship,et al.  Zonal organization of the vestibulocerebellum in pigeons (Columba livia): I. Climbing fiber input to the flocculus , 2003, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[34]  J. Voogd,et al.  Topographical Aspects of the Olivocerebellar System in the Pigeon , 1989 .

[35]  Y. Kawaguchi Two groups of secondary vestibular neurons mediating horizontal canal signals, probably to the ipsilateral medial rectus muscle, under inhibitory influences from the cerebellar flocculus in rabbits , 1985, Neuroscience Research.

[36]  B. Frost,et al.  Responses of pigeon vestibulocerebellar neurons to optokinetic stimulation. I. Functional organization of neurons discriminating between translational and rotational visual flow. , 1993, Journal of neurophysiology.

[37]  S. Highstein,et al.  The ascending tract of Deiters' conveys a head velocity signal to medial rectus motoneurons , 1979, Brain Research.

[38]  R. W. Allan,et al.  Organization of the cerebellum in the pigeon (Columba livia): III. Corticovestibular connections with eye and neck premotor areas , 1991, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[39]  J. McKENDRICK,et al.  The Central Nervous System of Vertebrates , 1909, Nature.

[40]  W. Precht,et al.  Synaptic organization of the vestibulo-trochlear pathway , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.

[41]  H. Shojaku,et al.  Vestibularly induced slow oscillations in climbing fiber responses of Purkinje cells in the cerebellar nodulus of the rabbit , 1992, Neuroscience.

[42]  J. Simpson,et al.  Spatial organization of visual messages of the rabbit's cerebellar flocculus. I. Typology of inferior olive neurons of the dorsal cap of Kooy. , 1988, Journal of neurophysiology.

[43]  S. Highstein,et al.  Synaptic linkage in the vestibulo-ocular and cerebello-vestibular pathways to the VIth nucleus in the rabbit , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.

[44]  J I Simpson,et al.  EYE‐MUSCLE GEOMETRY AND COMPENSATORY EYE MOVEMENTS IN LATERAL‐EYED AND FRONTAL‐EYED ANIMALS * , 1981, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[45]  Ichiro Shimoyama,et al.  Differential localization of rabbit's flocculus Purkinje cells projecting to the medial and superior vestibular nuclei, investigated by means of the horseradish peroxidase retrograde axonal transport , 1977, Neuroscience Letters.

[46]  M. Ito,et al.  Differential localization within the vestibular nuclear complex of the inhibitory and excitatory cells innervating 3d nucleus oculomotor neurons in rabbit. , 1971, Brain research.

[47]  M. Kusunoki,et al.  Nature of optokinetic response and zonal organization of climbing fiber afferents in the vestibulocerebellum of the pigmented rabbit , 1990, Experimental Brain Research.

[48]  N. Isu,et al.  Second-order vestibular neuron morphology of the extra-MLF anterior canal pathway in the cat , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.

[49]  M. Yamamoto,et al.  Topographical representation of vestibulo-ocular reflexes in rabbit cerebellar flocculus , 1982, Neuroscience.

[50]  B. Frost,et al.  Complex spike activity of Purkinje cells in the ventral uvula and nodulus of pigeons in response to translational optic flow. , 1999, Journal of neurophysiology.

[51]  J. Voogd,et al.  Anatomical compartments in the white matter of the rabbit flocculus , 1995, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[52]  Miyuki Yamamoto,et al.  Localization of rabbit's flocculus purkinje cells projecting to the cerebellar lateral nucleus and the nucleus prepositus hypoglossi investigated by means of the horseradish peroxidase retrograde axonal transport , 1978, Neuroscience Letters.