Cuneate Nucleus


In this paper we examined the neuronal activities of external cuneate nucleus, spinocerebellar Purkinje cells and interpositus nucleus during passive forelimb movements in anesthetized rats with the aim of identifying common or different patterns of activation across structures. This difference in the forelimb kinematics representation observed in external cuneate nucleus and spinocerebellar cortex compared with the interpositus nucleus is discussed with respect to the specific role that these structures may play also during active control of limb movements..  

RESULTS: 1) After injection of PRV, PRV-IR positive cells widely distributed in the spinal cord (cervical, thoracic and lumbar segments), brain stem (nucleus of solitary tract, cuneate nucleus, gigantocellular reticular nucleus, nucleus of spinal tract of trigeminal nerve, nucleus raphe magnus, locus caeruleus, etc), hypothalamus and cerebral cortex in each group.  

Previous studies have demonstrated that following complete median nerve transection (CMNT), neuropeptide Y-like immunoreactive (NPY-LI) fibers were dramatically increased and predominantly expressed in the ventral portion of the middle cuneate nucleus (CN), reaching maximum numbers at four weeks.  

This change was not observed in the nonrespiratory cuneate nucleus.  

A high density of calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive perikarya was found in the superior colliculus, the dorsal nucleus of the raphe, the trochlear nucleus, the lateral division of the marginal nucleus of the brachium conjunctivum, the motor trigeminal nucleus, the facial nucleus, the pons reticular formation, the retrofacial nucleus, the rostral hypoglossal nucleus, and in the motor dorsal nucleus of the vagus, whereas a high density of fibers containing calcitonin gene-related peptide was observed in the lateral division of the marginal nucleus of the brachium conjunctivum, the parvocellular division of the alaminar spinal trigeminal nucleus, the external cuneate nucleus, the nucleus of the solitary tract, the laminar spinal trigeminal nucleus, and in the area postrema.  

Immunostaining of human brain sections at the level of the medulla oblongata strengthened these data, showing for the first time a high density of immunoreactive neuronal cell bodies and fibers in the motor hypoglossal nucleus, the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus, the nucleus of the solitary tract, the Roller nucleus, the ambiguus nucleus, the inferior olivary complex, and in the external cuneate nucleus.  

Peroxidase injections into the LCN revealed retrogradely labelled neurons in the medial part of laminae I-III of the ipsilateral L3 and L4 spinal segments, while injections of HRP into the PVN revealed retrogradely labelled cells in the contralateral LCN and the medial cuneate nucleus. Taking into account the results obtained, it is concluded that the transmission of the afferent input from the nipples to the PVN is accomplished by at least two pathways: one employing a single relay station located in the medial cuneate nucleus, and another possessing two relay stations located in the medial part of laminae I-III of the dorsal horn of L3 and L4 spinal segments and in the LCN..  

P2X7-positive neurons were found in the anterior olfactory nucleus, cerebral cortex, piriform cortex (Pir), lateral septal nucleus (LS), hippocampal pyramidal cell layers of CA1, CA3, CA4, pontine nuclei, external cuneate nucleus, and medial vestibular nucleus.  

Using double fluorescent dyes tracing, we detected that some of the injured DRG neurons were NPY-LI neurons that projected to the cuneate nucleus (CN).  

Injections in the magnocellular part of the red nucleus caused labeling of cells in the rostral, intermediate, and caudal paratrigeminal nucleus (Pa5), dorsal paramarginal nucleus (PaMD), insular trigemeo-lateral cuneate nucleus (I5CuL), and the trigeminal extension of the parvocellular reticular formation (5RPC).  

Neonatal forelimb amputation in rats produces sprouting of sciatic nerve afferent fibers into the cuneate nucleus (CN) and results in 40% of individual CN neurons expressing both forelimb-stump and hindlimb receptive fields.  

These recoveries appear to be mediated, at least in part, by the sprouting of preserved afferents within the cuneate nucleus of the dorsal column-trigeminal complex. In rats, such functional collateral sprouting has been promoted by the post-lesion digestion of the perineuronal net in the cuneate nucleus.  

As an initial step, the present study examined whether recovery of upper limb SSEPs after contusive cervical SCI was due to the integrity of some spared dorsal column primary afferents that terminate within the cuneate nucleus and not one of several alternate routes. Electrophysiological techniques were used in the same rat to determine forelimb evoked neuronal responses in both cortex (SSEPs) and the cuneate nucleus (terminal extracellular recordings). Forelimb evoked activity in the cuneate nucleus at 15 but not 3 days post-injury occurred despite dorsal column damage throughout the cervical injury (as seen histologically).  

Retrogradely labeled neurons in the external cuneate nucleus were more dorsally shifted in the reeler mice compared with their normal counterparts.  

It was seen heaviest in the pontine nuclei and moderate in the pontine reticulotegmental nucleus; however, it was seen less in the medial solitary nucleus, red nucleus, lateral reticular nucleus, inferior olivary nucleus, external cuneate nucleus and vestibular nuclear complex.  

Here we describe the technique in detail using the injection of biotinylated-dextran amine (BDA) in the rat cuneate nucleus and its projection through the pyramidal decussation as an example.  

Innocuous electrical stimulation of the rat forepaw delineated BOLD contrast responses consistent with known somatosensory processing pathways (contralateral primary somatosensory cortex (S1), a region consistent with secondary somatosensory cortex, the ventral posterolateral thalamic nucleus and ipsilateral cuneate nucleus), providing face validity for the technique.  

NPR-A-immunoreactive perikarya were found in the red nucleus and the oculomotor nucleus in the midbrain, the parabrachial nucleus and the locus coeruleus in the pons, and the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus, the hypoglossal nucleus, the cuneate nucleus, the gracile nucleus, the nucleus ambiguus, the lateral reticular nucleus, the reticular formation, and the inferior olivary nucleus in the medulla oblongata.  

Brain-behavior correlations indicated that the activity of the external cuneate nucleus strongly predicted the conditioned response in the renewal group.  

This gender difference was maintained after nicotine exposure in the ION with additional gender differences observed including greater mRNA in the cuneate nucleus (P = 0.04) and nucleus of the spinal trigeminal tract (P = 0.03) of males compared with females.  

We have previously shown that within the early weeks and months following one of these lesions, there is 1) a re-emergence of part or all of the cortical hand map; 2) central axonal sprouting of spared primary afferents into the dorsal horn and cuneate nucleus; and 3) substantial although incomplete recovery of hand function (Darian-Smith [ 204] J. In this study we asked: What neuronal reorganization occurs in the cuneate nucleus during this "recovery" period? And, does it contribute to the recovery of manual dexterity? To address these questions, the representation of the hand was electrophysiologically mapped (by unitary receptive field [ RF] recordings) in the pars rotunda of the cuneate nucleus at either 1-2 weeks (short term) or 16-32 weeks (long term) post-rhizotomy. However, at 16-32 weeks later, when dexterity had largely recovered, RFs of cuneate neurons could again be mapped within the cuneate nucleus, primarily in a region bordering the deprived zone.  

In contrast, survival duration had no appreciable effect on the frequency of multiple-digit receptive fields in either the cuneate nucleus of the brainstem or the ventroposterior lateral nucleus of the thalamus.  

The present study aimed at determining if GABA(A) subunit switching occurred in another respiratory nucleus, the ventrolateral subnucleus of the solitary tract nucleus (NTS(VL)), and in a non-respiratory cuneate nucleus (CN) of P0 to P21 rats.  

In the present study, the effect of degrading CSPGs with the application of the bacterial enzyme chondroitinase ABC (chABC) into the cuneate nucleus of rats partially denervated of forepaw dorsal column axons was examined. After 1 additional week, the rats underwent electrophysiological receptive field mapping of the cuneate nucleus and/or anatomical evaluation. Importantly, in the chABC-treated rats (but not in the P-ase controls), a significantly greater area of the cuneate nucleus was occupied by physiologically active CTB traced forepaw afferents that had been spared by the initial cord lesion.  

In situ hybridization analysis shows that at least four classic cadherins, cadherin 6 (Cad6), cadherin 8 (Cad8), cadherin11 (Cad11) and N-cadherin (Ncad), are expressed in the migratory streams of lateral reticular nucleus and external cuneate nucleus (LRN/ECN) neurons.  

C2 DRG injections produced anterograde labeling in the external cuneate nucleus, cuneate nucleus, nucleus X, central cervical nucleus, dorsal horn of upper cervical spinal segments, and cochlear nucleus.  

The nuclei examined included the hypoglossal nucleus (XII), dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus (DMNV), solitary tract nucleus (STN), vestibular nucleus (Ve), cuneate nucleus (Cu), nucleus of the spinal trigeminal tract (NSTT), principal inferior olivary nucleus (PION), medial inferior olivary nucleus (MION) and dorsal inferior olivary nucleus (DION).  

Labelled neurons in the tangential migratory streams form contralateral clusters in the external cuneate nucleus (ECN) and lateral reticular nucleus (LRN) in the myelencephalon, and bilateral clusters in the pontine grey nucleus (PGN) and reticulotegmental nucleus (RTN) in the metencephalon.  

This study examined the modulatory influence exerted by GABA(B) receptors on the transmission of cutaneous afferent input to cuneate nucleus neurons in anesthetized cats. Electrical stimulation at the center of a receptive field activated cuneate nucleus cells at latencies of < or = 7 ms whereas stimulation at neighboring sites (receptive field edge) increased the response latency. From these results it is concluded that activation of GABA(B) receptors precludes cuneate cells from reaching firing threshold when afferent inputs are weak, spatially modulate cuneate nucleus excitability, play a major role in temporal pattern of discharges, and shape cutaneous receptive fields..  

The neurons with strong positive immuno-reaction signals were detected in cerebral cortex, cerebellar Purkinje cells, cerebellar nuclei, pyramidal neurons of hippocampus, caudate nucleus, lentiform nucleus, claustrum, nuclei in diencephalons, substantia nigra, cranial nerve nuclei, reticular formation in brain stem, pontine nuclei, red nucleus, superior and inferior olivary nucleus, gracile nucleus, cuneate nucleus, also the ventral horn, lateral horn, dorsal horn and the central gray matter in spinal cord.  

Compared with controls, nicotine-exposed male piglets had increased TUNEL staining in the cuneate nucleus (P=0.05), and increased active caspase-3 in the hypoglossal, gracile and dentate gyrus (P<0.05 for each).  

The present study examined the expression of glutamate, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor subunit 1 (NMDAR1), GABA, GABAB receptors, glycine receptors, and glutamate receptor subunit 2 (GluR2) in the ventrolateral subnucleus of the solitary tract nucleus, nucleus ambiguus, hypoglossal nucleus, medial accessory olivary nucleus, dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus, and cuneate nucleus, from P2 to P21 in rats. These features were present but less pronounced in hypoglossal nucleus and dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus and were absent in the cuneate nucleus.  

In the CTb cases, terminations were also found in the dorsolateral part of the cuneate nucleus.  

Immunoreactive cell bodies were found in the reticular formation of the medulla oblongata (in which we observed the highest density of immunoreactive cell bodies) and the pons, the solitary nucleus, the hypoglossal nucleus, the medial and spinal vestibular nuclei, the lateral cuneate nucleus, the nucleus prepositus, the central gray of the pons and mesencephalon, the central and pericentral nuclei of the inferior colliculus, the superior colliculus, ventral to the superior olive and in the midline region of the pons and mesencephalon.  

The cutaneous primary afferents from the upper trunk and forelimbs reach the medial cuneate nucleus in their way towards the cerebral cortex. Overall, the results support a model whereby the primary afferent cutaneous input induces a centre-surround antagonism in the cuneate nucleus by activating (via AMPA, NMDA and kainate receptors) and disinhibiting (via serial glycinergic-GABAergic interactions) a population of CL cells with overlapped receptive fields that at the same time inhibit (via GABAergic cells) other neighbouring CL cells with different receptive fields..  

Using median nerve injury and immunocytochemical methods, we examined the temporal changes in neuropeptide Y (NPY) expression in the cuneate nucleus (CN) in rats following median nerve transection.  

Primary afferent terminal proliferation was assessed in the spinal dorsal horn and cuneate nucleus at 7 days and 15-25 postlesion weeks. Distributions were significantly larger on the side of the lesion in the dorsal horn and cuneate nucleus at 15-25 weeks after the dorsal rootlet section, than those mapped only 7 days postlesion. Our results provide direct evidence for localized sprouting of spared (uninjured) primary afferent terminals in the dorsal horn and cuneate nucleus after a restricted dorsal root injury..  

In the brainstem, co-localisation of P2X(7)R-IR with VGLUT2-IR was widespread, but co-localisation with VGLUT1-IR was seen only in the external cuneate nucleus and spinocerebellar tract region of the ventral medulla.  

the tonic gravitational field experienced after landing potentiating the effects of increased phasic gravitational forces experienced during landing.The specificity of these results is demonstrated by an absence of direct gravity-related changes in Fos expression in other precerebellar structures such as the external cuneate nucleus, group X, and the dorsal column nuclei that transmit exteroceptive and proprioceptive signals to thalamic nuclei and somatosensory areas of the cerebral cortex.  

The principal brainstem areas of saccular nerve termination were lateral, particularly the spinal vestibular nucleus, the lateral portion of the superior vestibular nucleus, ventral nucleus y, the external cuneate nucleus, and cell group l.  

After 4 days of IHH, CASP3 remained elevated in the cuneate nucleus (P<0.01) but decreased in the hypoglossal and DMNV (P<0.05) when compared to controls.  

Hsp70 immunoreactivity was observed in the cytoplasm of some neurons in the hypoglossal nucleus (XII), the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagal nerve (X), the lateral cuneate nucleus (Cun), and the inferior olive (Oli).  

Cells in the main cuneate nucleus (MCN) are known to provide a direct projection to the cerebellum, but the precise nature of the information these cells transmit to the cerebellum is unknown.  

In wakefulness the model predicts a set of synaptically driven firing modes that could be associated with information processing strategies in the middle cuneate nucleus..  

Saccular afferents projected strongly to the spinal vestibular nucleus, weakly to other vestibular nuclei, to the interstitial nucleus of the eighth nerve, the cochlear nuclei, the external cuneate nucleus, and nucleus y.The current findings reinforce the preponderance of literature.  

No evidence for propagation failure was found at the two major axonal branch points prior to the cuneate nucleus, namely, the T-junction at the dorsal root ganglion, and the major branch point near the cord entry point, even for the highest impulse rates (approximately 400 impulses s(-1)) at which these fibres could be driven.  

In the medulla oblongata, immunoreactive cell bodies were observed in the laminar spinal trigeminal nucleus and in the lateral tegmental field; the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus; the prepositus hypoglossal nucleus; the medial nucleus of the solitary tract; the rostral division of the cuneate nucleus, and close to the parvocellular division of the alaminar spinal trigeminal nucleus. The highest (moderate) density of immunoreactive fibres was observed in the periaqueductal grey; the parvocellular and magnocellular divisions of the alaminar spinal trigeminal nucleus; the laminar spinal trigeminal nucleus; the rostral division of the cuneate nucleus; the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus; the lateral nucleus of the solitary tract, and in the midline between the central divisions of the reticulotegmental pontine nucleus.  

Transmission between single identified, kinesthetic afferent fibers of joint origin and their central target neurons of the cuneate nucleus was examined in anesthetized cats by means of paired electrophysiological recording.  

In the medulla, CTb but not WGA-HRP labelled terminals were found in a small dorsolateral extension of the cuneate nucleus.  

In addition to the nuclei mentioned above, the highest densities of such immunoreactive fibers were located in the spinal trigeminal nucleus, the lateral reticular nucleus, the nucleus of the solitary tract, the superior colliculus, the substantia nigra, the nucleus ambiguus, the gracile nucleus, the cuneate nucleus, the motor hypoglossal nucleus, the medial and superior vestibular nuclei, the nucleus prepositus hypoglossi and the interpeduncular nucleus.  

The ascending cutaneous transmission through the middle cuneate nucleus is subject to cortico-feedback modulation.  

Neurones with inclusion bodies occur in the inferior olivary nuclear complex, lateral reticular nucleus, external cuneate nucleus, conterminal nucleus, interfascicular nucleus, nucleus of Roller, dorsal paramedian reticular nucleus, subventricular nucleus, arcuate nucleus, pontobulbar body and pontine grey.  

These results indicate that Pax-6 plays a role in the migration of medullary precerebellar neurons, although neurons generated in the lower rhombic lip can nevertheless migrate and settle to form the external cuneate nucleus in the absence of Pax-6..  

We studied how lemniscal feedback affects ascending transmission of cutaneous neurons of the middle cuneate nucleus.  

Owing to its anatomical connections, the external cuneate nucleus (ECU) plays a crucial role in processing proprioceptive input from the upper trunk and upper limbs.  

As previously described for neurons in the cuneate nucleus, deafferentation produced a significant decrease in the spontaneous activity of PSDC neurons, indicating that they receive a tonic excitatory input from the periphery.  

In addition, terminals were observed in the interstitial nucleus of the eighth nerve, nucleus Y, external cuneate nucleus, and lobules I, IV, V, IX, and X of the cerebellar vermis.  

Two hours after injury of the median nerve when given electrical stimulation, c-Fos-immunoreactive (c-Fos-IR) cells were barely detected in the ipsilateral cuneate nucleus (CN).  

Axons and terminal processes of cervical dorsal horn cells projecting to the medulla were present in the cuneate nucleus (Cu), the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS), the lateral reticular nucleus, (LRt) as well as the caudal and rostral ventrolateral medulla (VLM).  

The morphometric development of the human lateral cuneate nucleus was examined in nine fetuses and neonates at 18-40 weeks of gestation, a 2-month-old infant and a 63-year-old adult. The authors observed serial sections of the brain containing lateral cuneate nucleus and measured the volume of nuclear column and the number, cell body area and perimeter of neurons using a microscope with a drawing tube and an image-analyzing computer system. A morphometric evaluation revealed that a turning point in the development of the human lateral cuneate nucleus occurring at 30 WG, as this marks the beginning of a gradual increase in the average area and average perimeter; And it is the point at which the neuropil index suddenly increases sharply, to fall back down to lower levels afterwards. The establishment of a neuronal connection between the lateral cuneate nucleus and the cerebellum, which is necessary for proper performance of movements in the upper part of the body..  

Binding to NA transporters revealed increased densities in sensory nuclei of cranial nerves, granular layer of the cerebellar cortex, as well as in cerebellar-related and basal ganglia structures, such as the lateral cuneate nucleus, pontine nuclei, substantia nigra, pontine reticular formation, median raphe nucleus and superior colliculus.  

DNPI immunoreactivity was much more intense than VGluT1 immunoreactivity in many brainstem and spinal cord regions, except the pontine nuclei, interpeduncular nucleus, cochlear nuclei, and external cuneate nucleus.  

The genesis of the cuneothalamic neurons (CTNs) in the rat cuneate nucleus was determined by a double-labeling method using 5'-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), the thymidine analogue, and Fluoro-Gold (FG), a retrograde fluorescent tracer. BrdU-positive cells were observed in the cuneate nucleus in all rats receiving BrdU injection at embryonic days (E) E13--E16; none was detected in rats given BrdU injection at E12. The present results suggest that the CTNs are generated prior to the NO-containing neurons in the cuneate nucleus..  

This article reviews experimental evidence leading to a better understanding of this issue at the level of the cuneate nucleus (Burdach nucleus). DEVELOPMENT: The primary afferents and the corticocuneate fibers make synaptic contact with cuneothalamic neurons and with inhibitory interneurons in the middle cuneate nucleus.  

However, the similar response latencies of the two groups of neurons makes it unlikely that PSDC neurons could contribute to the rapid initial processing of cutaneous information by the cuneate nucleus..  

Transmission from single, identified hair follicle afferent (HFA) nerve fibers to their target neurons of the cuneate nucleus was examined in anesthetized cats by means of paired recording from individual cuneate neurons and from fine, intact fascicles of the lateral branch of the superficial radial nerve in which it is possible to identify and monitor the activity of each group II fiber.  

We report that the extent of cutaneously-driven reorganization in both the cuneate nucleus of the brainstem and the ventroposterior lateral nucleus of the thalamus is comparable to that previously documented for area 3b of cortex.  

Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-diaphorase (NADPH-d) histochemistry and nitric oxide synthase (NOS) immunohistochemistry have been used to characterize the nitric oxide (NO)-containing neurons in the rat cuneate nucleus. They made up 7-10% of the neuronal population in the cuneate nucleus. Numerous FG-labeled neurons were present in the contralateral cuneate nucleus, but none were reactive for NADPH-d. The present results suggest that approximately 60% of the NADPH-d/NOS-IR neurons in the cuneate nucleus are interneurons containing GABA and/or glycine..  

In the rats subjected to the noxious pinch coupled with FG injection into the right cuneate nucleus, PSDC neurons double labeled with Fos and FG were localized in the ipsilateral laminae III and IV extending from segment C5 to T1, with about 70% of them distributed at segments C6 and C7. At segment C6 or C7, double-labeled neurons made up about 10% of the PSDC neurons that projected their axons to the cuneate nucleus. The present results suggest that the morphologically distinct, subclasses of PSDC neurons in spinal laminae III and IV may contribute to the central transmission of mechanical nociceptive information through the dorsal column into the cuneate nucleus..  

This study was aimed to clarify whether the primary afferent terminals (PATs), GABAergic terminals, and glutamatergic terminals made direct synaptic contacts with glycine-IR neurons in the cuneate nucleus of rats. On the other hand, the GABA-IR and glycine-IR terminals which make synaptic contacts with the dendrites of glycine-IR neurons may provide a putative means for disinhibition or facilitation to maintain the baseline neuronal activity in the rat cuneate nucleus. The results of quantitative analysis suggest that glutamate act as the primary excitatory neurotransmitter, while GABA, when compared with glycine, may serve as a more powerful inhibitory neurotransmitter on glycine-IR neurons in the rat cuneate nucleus..  

This study was aimed to investigate the possible involvement of neurons in the cuneate nucleus (CN) in the processing of A beta afferent inputs evoked by electrical stimulation of constricted median nerve in rats with behavioral signs of neuropathic pain.  

Moderate levels of Y1 immunoreactivity were found the in the main olfactory bulb, dorsomedial part of suprachiasmatic nucleus, paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus, ventral nucleus of lateral lemniscus, pontine nuclei, mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus, external cuneate nucleus, area postrema, and nucleus tractus solitarius.  

In the brainstem, dense terminal fields were seen in deep layers of the medullary dorsal horn, in the external cuneate nucleus, and in group x.  

Moderate staining was observed in the hypoglossal nucleus, cuneate nucleus, inferior olive, prepositus hypoglossi, rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM), and locus coeruleus. In marmoset, prominent P2X receptor-like immunoreactivity occurred in the NTS, medial cuneate nucleus, prepositus hypoglossi, and medial vestibular nucleus.  

A 55-year-old man with a history of accidental arm amputation showed well-developed NAD in the cuneate nucleus only on the transected side.  

This study was aimed to localize and characterize the somatostatin-immunoreactive (SOM-IR) neurons in the rat cuneate nucleus (CN).  

Neuropathological examinations revealed neuronal loss and associated gliosis in the lower motor neurons, except for ocular motor nuclei, Clark's column, and accessory cuneate nucleus, and tract degeneration was observed in the middle root zone of the posterior column and spinocerebellar tract. Gallyaspositive argyrophilic filamentous inclusions were found in the lower motor neurons and in nerve cells of the Clark's column, intermediate zone, posterior horn and accessory cuneate nucleus.  

Comparison with animal studies and direct recording studies in humans leads the authors to conclude that N18 is most likely generated at the cuneate nucleus by primary afferent depolarization. Namely, dorsal column afferents send collaterals to interneurons within the cuneate nucleus, which in turn synapse on presynaptic terminals of dorsal column fibers and depolarize them as a mechanism of presynaptic inhibition. Origins of other somatosensory evoked potential components related to the cuneate nucleus are also discussed..  

This study was aimed to clarify whether the cuneothalamic relay neurons (CTNs) in the rat cuneate nucleus contained glycine or whether the neurons were modulated directly by presynaptic glycine-IR terminals.  

When compared with the opposite, unaffected, side, the ipsilateral cuneate nucleus (CN), external cuneate nucleus (ECN), and contralateral VPL showed reductions in volume: 44-51% in CN, 37-48% in ECN, and 32-38% in VPL.  

Immunoreactive fibres were observed in the following; the inferior central nucleus; the pontine gray nuclei; the Kölliker-Fuse nucleus; the motor trigeminal nucleus, the anteroventral cochlear nucleus; the abducens nucleus; the retrofacial nucleus; the superior, lateral, inferior, and medial vestibular nuclei; the lateral nucleus of the superior olive; the external cuneate nucleus; the nucleus of the trapezoid body; the postpyramidal nucleus of the raphe; the medial accessory inferior olive; the dorsal accessory nucleus of the inferior olive; the nucleus ambiguus; the principal nucleus of the inferior olive; the preolivary nucleus; the nucleus ruber; the substantia nigra; and in the area postrema.  

Here we show that the face afferents from the trigeminal nucleus of the brainstem sprout and grow into the cuneate nucleus in adult monkeys after lesions of the dorsal columns of the spinal cord or therapeutic amputation of an arm.  

The N13b (dorsal column near the foramen magnum or cuneate nucleus) was observed in all children and in 16 adults, P14 (medial lemniscus) in 52 children and 17 adults.  

Extracellular and intracellular recordings were obtained from the cuneate nucleus of chloralose-anesthetized cats. Electrolytic lesion of the pyramidal tract abolished the cortically induced effects on the contralateral cuneate nucleus, as well as on the ipsilateral medial lemniscus. The results demonstrate that the sensorimotor cortex imposes its rhythmic patterns on the cuneate nucleus through the pyramidal tract, and that the corticocuneate network can generate normal and abnormal patterns of synchronized activity, such as delta waves, spindles and spike-and-wave complexes.  

The projections from the midthoracic or lumbosacral level of the medial spinal cord are found: 1) ascending ipsilaterally in the dorsal column near the dorsal intermediate septum or the midline of the gracile fasciculus, respectively; 2) terminating primarily in the dorsal, lateral rim of the gracile nucleus and the medial rim of the cuneate nucleus or the dorsomedial rim of the gracile nucleus, respectively; and 3) ascending bilaterally with slight contralateral predominance in the ventrolateral quadrant of the spinal cord and terminating in the ventral and medial medullary reticular formation.  

Histologic changes consisted of chromatolysis of neurons of autonomic ganglia, enteric plexi, and the accessory cuneate nucleus, consistent with lesions associated with dysautonomia in other domestic animals..  

Conglomerate inclusions (CIs) were observed in the remaining neurons in various areas, including the spinal anterior horn, posterior horn, Clark's column, accessory cuneate nucleus, tegmental reticular formation, motor nucleus of the trigeminal nerve, nucleus of the facial nerve, hypoglossal nucleus, medial nucleus of the thalamus, dentate nucleus, and motor cortex (Betz cells).  

In this study, the immunohistochemical localization of c-fos was studied in the neurons of the hypoglossal nucleus (XII), the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagal nerve (X), the nucleus solitarius (Sol), the accessory cuneate nucleus (Cun), the spinal trigeminal nucleus (V) and the inferior olive (Oli) of the human medulla oblongata from forensic autopsy cases.  

Using anesthetized adult rats, we studied the relationships between the activity of cells belonging to the external cuneate nucleus (ECN) and passive forelimb positions.  

The sensorimotor cortical synchronized activity spread down to subcortical structures receiving direct cortical input, including neuronal populations that originate descending rubrospinal, tectospinal and reticulospinal motor axons, and to a somatosensory relay station, the cuneate nucleus. Lesion of the pyramidal tract abolished the cortically induced synchronization of the activity of contralateral cuneate nucleus neurons..  

The present study used neurophysiological approaches in adult monkeys to evaluate how brainstem organization of tactile inputs in the cuneate nucleus (CN) changes after acute injury of hand nerves. The findings provide evidence that rapid reorganization in area 3b, in part, reflects mechanisms that operate from a distance in the cuneate nucleus and, in part, reflects supracuneate mechanisms that modify brainstem changes..  

The present experiments examined the capacity of external cuneate nucleus (ECN) neurones in the anaesthetized cat to respond to static and vibrotactile stretch of forearm extensor muscles.  

CONCLUSIONS: The N18 potential is generated by the cuneate nucleus in the medulla oblongata in the preceding studies.  

Synaphin 1 (complexin II) was predominantly expressed in neurons of the central nervous system regions such as cerebral cortex (the II, III and VI cortical layers), claustrum, hippocampus, entorhinal cortex, amygdaloid nuclei, substantia nigra pars compacta, superior colliculus, pontine reticulotegmental nucleus and inferior olive, whereas synaphin 2 (complexin I) was in the cerebral cortex (the IV cortical layer), thalamus, locus coeruleus, gigantocellular reticular field, cuneate nucleus and cerebellar basket and stellate cells.  

The distribution and organization of cortical projections to the subnucleus reticularis dorsalis (SRD), the neighboring cuneate nucleus (Cu), and trigeminal nucleus caudalis (Sp5C) were studied in the rat using microinjections of wheat germ agglutinin-apo horseradish peroxidase-gold and Biotin-Dextran.  

Central processing of tactile inputs from the hand begins in the main cuneate nucleus and continues in the thalamus and area 3b cortex. In this study, neurophysiologic approaches were used to evaluate how tactile inputs from the hand and adjacent body are organized in the cuneate nucleus of squirrel monkeys.  

Extracellular recordings were made of peripherally evoked responses by single cells in the cuneate nucleus, ventroposterolateral nucleus of the thalamus and laminae IV-VI of the primary somatosensory cortex.  

Using anterograde transport of WGA-HRP, we examined the laterality of terminations from the muscimol-infused (i.e., silenced) and active sides in the spinal cord, as well as in the cuneate nucleus and red nucleus.  

Neurons belonging to the dorsal column nuclei (main cuneate nucleus and gracile nucleus), or to the ventral posterolateral nucleus, were sampled for their response to stimulation of the peripheral cutaneous fields, as well as the antidromic response to stimulation of the contralateral medial lemniscus and ipsilateral somatosensory cortex, respectively.  

Previously this laboratory demonstrated that forelimb removal at birth in rats results in the invasion of the cuneate nucleus by sciatic nerve axons and the development of cuneothalamic cells with receptive fields that include both the forelimb-stump and the hindlimb.  

In particular, besides the external cuneate nucleus, thick-calibre neck muscle afferents project directly, to the vestibular nuclear complex.  

One was in the external cuneate nucleus, and the other was in the ventralmost part of the ophthalmic division of the TBNC.  

Immunocytochemical methods were used to determine the distribution of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and neuropeptide Y (NPY) in the middle region of the adult raccoon cuneate nucleus. Extensive CGRP-immunoreactive fibers and darkly stained punctate structures, thought to be terminals, were concentrated in the dorsal cap and basal region of the middle cuneate nucleus. The NPY-immunoreactive fibers and terminals were also found within the dorsal cap of the cuneate nucleus, but were less abundant than CGRP. However, most of the NPY-immunostained fibers and terminals were found in the cluster region of the cuneate nucleus, which receives input from glabrous skin. No CGRP- or NPY-immunoreactive cell bodies were found in the raccoon middle cuneate nucleus. This description of the distribution of CGRP and NPY in the normal animal provides a baseline for future investigations into injury-induced neuropeptide plasticity in the raccoon middle cuneate nucleus..  

Nov-positive neurons were detected at G28W in the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal and cuneate nucleus, and at G38W in the abducens nucleus of pons, the red nucleus and the substantia nigra of the midbrain, the ventral posterolateral and the mediodorsal thalamic nucleus.  

Neurons in the dorsal motor nucleus of vagal nerve expressed statistically significantly less NSE immunoreactivity in the cytoplasm than in the hypoglossal nucleus (XII), solitary nucleus, spinal trigeminal nucleus, and lateral cuneate nucleus.  

Moderate densities of binding were found in caudate-putamen, cerebellar granular layer, nucleus tractus solitarius, cuneate nucleus and area postrema.  

This injection resulted in anterograde labeling in the nucleus of the tractus solitarius (NTS), area postrema (AP) and external cuneate nucleus (ECu) with slightly ipsilateral predominance.  

The medial aspect of the NIA receives afferents from the lateral reticular nucleus, external cuneate nucleus, perihypoglossal nucleus, medial vestibular nucleus and inferior central raphe nucleus. Additional afferents to more lateral aspects of the NIA are derived from the lateral reticular nucleus, external cuneate nucleus, and the magnocellular, lateral and gigantocellular tegmental areas.  

Results of this study showed that cardiopulmonary input was transmitted in dorsal pathways to cuneate nucleus and then to VPL thalamus and confirmed that STT neurons transmit nociceptive cardiopulmonary input to VPL thalamus.  

The activity of identified somatosensory neurons in the thalamic ventrobasal complex, layer IV of the somatosensory cortex, or the cuneate nucleus was recorded extracellularly during and following chemoreceptor activation. In contrast, neurons within the cuneate nucleus showed a slight increase in latency to onset and a decrease in the probability of firing following the same stimulus.  

The findings suggest that sensory amplification begins at the P14 generator source near the cuneate nucleus. There was no statistically significant difference in sensory amplification between P14 and cortical N20/P25, indicating that the cuneate nucleus is the main site of the central amplifying process. When TENS was applied to the palm distal to the median nerve stimulation used for SSEP, cortical N20/P25 amplification disappeared, evidence that TENS suppresses the central amplification phenomenon, most probably at the level of the cuneate nucleus..  

One consists of cells in the caudal cuneate nucleus and lamina VI of the rostral two cervical segments, the other consists of cells in the rostral cuneate nucleus. The cells in the caudal cuneate nucleus and the rostral cervical segments are large, multipolar neurons that form a single column of rDAO input cells. The projection from the rostral cuneate nucleus arises from small neurons that project bilaterally to rDAO, and the input from the rostral cuneate nucleus lacks a clear topography.  

The present study describes the ultrastructural synaptic relationships between corticocuneate terminals (CCTs) and glycine-immunoreactive (glycine-IR) neurons in the cuneate nucleus of rats using anterograde tract-tracing of wheatgerm agglutinin conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) and anti-glycine immunoperoxidase labeling methods. The HRP-labeled CCTs made axodendritic synapses preferentially in the ventral part of the cuneate nucleus near the obex. The present results suggest that cortical modulation on the sensory transmission of cuneate nucleus may be mediated through glycine-IR neurons..  

The distribution and organization of diencephalic projections from the subnucleus reticularis dorsalis (SRD) and the neighbouring cuneate nucleus (Cu) were studied in the rat by using microinjections of Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin in SRD and Cu and wheat germ agglutinin-apo horseradish peroxidase-gold in some selected thalamic areas.  

The effects of peripheral nerve transection on the cuneate nucleus were studied in anesthetized raccoons using extracellular, single-unit recordings. The somatotopic organization of the cuneate nucleus first was examined in intact, control animals. The cuneate nucleus in the raccoon is organized with the digits represented in separate cell clusters. The dorsal cap region of the cuneate nucleus contains a representation of the claws and hairy skin of the digits. A total of 44 were in the intact regions of the cuneate nucleus.  

The present results show that injury of nerves to the hands of adult monkeys triggers rapid (minutes-hours) changes in maps of the hand in the brainstem main cuneate nucleus.  

The distribution of glycine-immunoreactive (glycine-IR) neurons and their associated axon terminals in the rat cuneate nucleus was studied using antiglycine postembedding immunoperoxidase labelling and immunogold staining, respectively. It is suggested from this study that glycine is one of the major neurotransmitters involved in the depression of synaptic transmission in the cuneate nucleus..  

Subcutaneous hindpaw injections of horseradish peroxidase conjugated to either wheat germ agglutinin or cholera toxin subunit B revealed aberrant expansions of gracile projections into the cuneate and, in one case, external cuneate nucleus within three months of the deafferentation.  

After 6-21 months the nerve investigated was exposed to an intra-axonal nerve tracer (horseradish peroxidase conjugate) in order to label the primary afferent terminals within the cuneate nucleus of the brainstem. Terminal labelling was seen throughout the cuneate nucleus, mainly in the middle of its rostro-caudal extension, and in this part it showed a patchy appearance superimposed on cell clusters within the pars rotunda.  

Interactions were investigated between loreclezole, chlormethiazole and pentobarbitone as potentiators of depolarization responses mediated by gamma-aminobutyric acid(A) (GABA(A)) receptors on afferent nerve terminals in the rat cuneate nucleus in vitro. In rat cuneate nucleus slices, the drugs shifted muscimol log dose response lines to the left in an approximately parallel fashion with the result that 200 microM chlormethiazole potentiated muscimol responses by 0.567 +/- 0.037 log unit (mean +/- s.e.mean, n = 4) while loreclezole gave a maximal potentiation at 10 microM of only 0.121 +/- 0.037 (n=6) log unit and 0.071 +/- 0.039 (n=22) at 50 microM.  

Bradykinin microinjections in different sites surrounding the Pa5 compromising the external cuneate nucleus, the trigeminal nucleus, the lateral and ventral spinal trigeminal tract and the dorsal trigeminal tract rostral and caudal to the Pa5 did not elicit significant pressor responses.  

These fibers ascended or descended into the dorsal portion of the spinal trigeminal tract and were distributed to the principal sensory nucleus of the trigeminal nerve, marginal layer of the interpolar part of the spinal trigeminal nucleus, nucleus of the solitary tract and ventrolateral portion of the cuneate nucleus.  

A previous study from this laboratory demonstrated that forelimb removal at birth results in invasion of the cuneate nucleus (CN) by sciatic nerve axons and the development of CN cells including thalamic projection neurons with receptive fields that include both the forelimb stump and the hindlimb.  

or i.c.v.), abdominal surgery (laparotomy with cecal manipulation) performed under 7-8 min of enflurane anesthesia induced Fos staining in neurons of the spinal trigeminal, C1/A1 group, ventrolateral medulla, central amygdala, parabrachial nucleus, cuneate nucleus, nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS), paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN) and supraoptic nucleus (SON).  

Using anterograde transport of WGA-HRP and the experimental degeneration method for identification of corticocuneate (CCT) and primary afferent (PAT) terminals in conjunction with gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA) and glutamate immunocytochemistry, this study has demonstrated that the GABA-immunoreactive (GABA-IR) neurons in the rat cuneate nucleus were post-synaptic to PATs (some of them being glutamate-IR), GABA-IR and GABA-negative terminals.  

These were primarily in or near the medullary reticular nucleus, nucleus ambiguus, lateral reticular nucleus, parvocellular reticular nucleus, gigantocellular reticular nucleus, cuneate nucleus, and the nucleus of the solitary tract.  

The longer period of suppression of scalp P13/P14 suggests it to be of polysynaptic origin and to arise at least rostral to the cuneate nucleus..  

The result supported our previous opinion that the principal part of N18, the broad negativity lasting around 20 ms, originates from the cuneate nucleus at the medullary level. Less steep onset of N18 on the affected side suggested that some structures rostral to the cuneate nucleus, possibly the termination of the overall ascending volley, may contribute to the earliest part of N18.  

For control purposes some stimulating points were placed in the external cuneate nucleus and restiform body. For six cells there was some possibility of current spread to the external cuneate nucleus or to the underlying reticular formation.  

This study reports the reactivities of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) in some of the nonneuronal elements in the external cuneate nucleus (ECN) of gerbils.  

The inhibitory circuitry of the ventroposterolateral nucleus (VPL) of the macaque somatosensory thalamus was analyzed in normal animals and in those surviving for a few days or several weeks following a unilateral lesion of the cuneate nucleus, the source of medial lemniscal (ML) axons carrying information from the contralateral upper extremity.  

The consequences on the cuneate nucleus of the transection of the major nerves of the forelimb in adult cats were studied quantitatively with stereological procedures on celloidin-embedded material. These findings demonstrate that peripheral deafferentation causes a substantial and persistent decrease of cytoplasmic mass in the cuneate nucleus, involving both neuropil and neuronal cell bodies, but does not lead to neuron loss, at least up to 36 weeks after injury. These effects suggest that the altered synaptic input and trophic support subsequent to deafferentation leave the cuneate nucleus in a permanently compromised, albeit seemingly stable, state..  

Morphological and histochemical changes were studied in the ipsilateral cuneate nucleus between one and 52 weeks after forelimb denervation in adult cats. Parvalbumin immunostaining was also altered by the nerve transections; on the deafferented side, the neuropil staining in the cuneate nucleus and fasciculus decreased, but the number of parvalbumin-positive cells was consistently greater than in the contralateral side.  

Extratrigeminal projections were mainly to the external cuneate nucleus by way of a lateral descending trigeminal tract (lTTD; Dubbeldam and Karten [ 1978] J.  

The distribution and organization of projections from the spinal cervical enlargement to subnucleus reticularis dorsalis (SRD) and the neighbouring cuneate nucleus (Cu) area was studied in the rat by using microinjections of Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) into different laminae around the C7 level.  

The present study examined the synaptic organization of external cuneothalamic neurons and their relationships with primary afferents in the gerbil external cuneate nucleus (ECN) following an injection of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) into the anterodorsal cap of the ventrobasal thalamus in conjunction with a simultaneous injection of HRP into the contralateral brachial and cervical nerve plexuses.  

The present study examined the existence of catecholamine-, corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF)- and neurotensin (NT)-containing neurons in the external cuneate nucleus (ECN) of the gerbil using single label pre-embedding immunocytochemistry in an attempt to shed light on the increasing evidence for autonomic involvement of the ECN.  

We also recorded from neurons near the vestibular nuclei, mainly in the external cuneate nucleus.  

To determine whether activity in unmyelinated or thinly myelinated primary afferents affects the organization of cutaneous receptive fields (RFs) in the cuneate nucleus, subcutaneous injections of capsaicin were made into the RFs of cuneate neurons in anesthetized cats.  

The present study described an ultrastructural synaptic configurations between primary afferent terminals (PATs), cuneothalamic relay neurons (CTNs) and GABA-immunoreactive (GABA-IR) boutons in the cuneate nucleus of rats using cervicothoracic dorsal rhizotomies, retrograde transport of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated with horseradish peroxidase complex (WGA-HRP) and anti-GABA immunogold labelling methods.  

A reciprocal connection is known to exist between the cuneate nucleus, which is a first-order somatosensory nucleus, and the cochlear nucleus, which is a first-order auditory nucleus.  

The cuneate nucleus is an important brainstem processing center of cutaneous information. Surprisingly, there are no descriptions of functional representations of the skin in the primate cuneate nucleus; as a result, the relationships of functional representations at the brainstem level and other levels of the somatosensory neuraxis remain obscure. The present neurophysiological study indicates that the main cuneate nucleus of marmoset monkeys (Callithrix jacchus) contains organized representations of cutaneous inputs from the hand, forelimb, and adjacent body between the lateral face and proximal hindlimb. At rostrocaudal levels where the cuneate nucleus is near its largest transverse area, the map of the hand is about 2600 times smaller than the hand skin area it represents. These findings provide a starting point for understanding functional representations of the skin in the cuneate nucleus of primates.  

Single-unit recordings were obtained from 42 neurons in the cuneate nucleus of 12 anesthetized raccoons. Since this from of inhibition is not apparent in the somatosensory thalamus before denervation, the spontaneous activity of thalamic neurons must be controlled by inputs other than the cuneate nucleus. These results also indicate that the long-term reorganization seen in the thalamus and cortex is not attributable to a simple unmasking of connections from the adjacent digits within the cuneate nucleus, but may involve strengthening of the connections responsible for longer-latency responses.  

This study seeks to extend the observations of previous studies of projection of primary afferent fibres from the forelimb nerves and muscles to the external cuneate nucleus (ECN) of mammals using a neurotoxic lectin, Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA) to achieve chemical ganglionectomy of the dorsal root ganglia.  

The normal cuneate nucleus, as well as other nuclei of the ascending somatosensory pathways, had low levels of GAP-43 at birth that increased by 3 months and declined thereafter to reach adult levels between 8 and 15 months of age. Greatly increased levels of GAP-43 were observed at the time of birth in the cuneate nucleus of two macaque monkeys with prenatal (E94 and El 14) nerve repair.  

In each monkey, the distribution of labeled sensory afferent terminations from the remaining parts of the fore-limb was much more extensive than the normal distribution of inputs from the forelimb, and extended into portions of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord and the cuneate nucleus of the brainstem related to the amputated hand.  

Using acetylcholinesterase histochemical and choline acetyltransferase immunocytochemical localization methods, this study has provided conclusive evidence for the existence of cholinergic neurons in the external cuneate nucleus of gerbils. By light microscopy, both acetylcholinesterase and choline acetyltransferase labelling was confined to the rostral portion of the external cuneate nucleus. It may thus be hypothesized that most, if not all, of the external cuneate nucleus cholinergic neurons are projection cells; such cells may give rise to axonal collaterals which synapse onto their own dendrites for possible feedback control. The preferential concentration of cholinergic components in the rostral external cuneate nucleus may be significant in the light of the highly organized somatotopy in the external cuneate nucleus and its extensive efferent projections to medullary autonomic-related nuclei.  

The central projections of extraocular muscle afferent neurons were found consistently in a restricted area of the external cuneate nucleus. The presence of a lateral trigeminal tract in the pigeon, through which the afferent axons course, which terminates exclusively in the ventral portion of the external cuneate nucleus may explain this finding..  

Electrolytic lesion of the DMV as compared with sham operation and lesions of other brain areas, eg, nucleus reticular gigantocellularis and cuneate nucleus, reduced the basal gastric mucosal blood flow (GMBF) and also the blood flow after ethanol administration.  

The purpose was to investigate the labelling of nerve terminals in the cuneate nucleus, because it receives an input of primary afferents from the front leg. The nerve and the cuneate nucleus of the opposite side served as controls. Labelled terminals were distributed throughout the dorsal part of the entire rostrocaudal extent of the cuneate nucleus.  

The dorsolateral medulla, including the nucleus reticularis parvicellularis, the cuneate nucleus, and the external cuneate nucleus, is an integrative region for a variety of sensory inputs. Neurons were located in the nucleus reticularis parvicellularis (24 cells, 60%), the cuneate nucleus (10 cells, 25%), and the external cuneate nucleus (6 cells, 15%). As a group, neurons in the nucleus reticularis parvicellularis received input from the greatest number of sensory modalities, and cuneate nucleus neurons received input predominantly from somatosensory afferents. External cuneate nucleus neurons displayed response profiles intermediate between nucleus reticularis parvicellularis and cuneate nucleus.  

The synaptic organisation of the primary afferents from the brachial and cervical plexuses to the external cuneate nucleus of gerbils was compared following an intraneural injection of horseradish peroxidase into the musculocutaneous, median, ulnar and radial nerves of the brachial plexus or the main branches of the cervical plexus; 407 labelled primary afferent terminals from the brachial and 459 from the cervical plexus were studied.  

The present study examined the synaptic organization of cuneocerebellar neurons and their relationships with the primary afferents in the gerbil external cuneate nucleus following multiple injections of horseradish peroxidase over a widespread area in the cerebellum in conjunction with a simultaneous injection of horseradish peroxidase into the cervical or brachial nerve plexus. The external cuneate nucleus is topographically organized: the rostral portion receiving the primary afferents from the cervical plexus and the caudal portion primary afferents from the brachial plexus. This study attempted to correlate the synaptology with the topography and different cytoarchitecture in these two specific regions in the external cuneate nucleus. In the rostral external cuneate nucleus, synapses on cuneocerebellar neurons were more frequent on their primary dendrites as compared with those on the primary dendrites of the caudal cuneocerebellar neurons. This may have functional implications with regard to the afferent inputs to cuneocerebellar neurons in the rostral and caudal external cuneate nucleus..  

Our results showed the presence of HRP/ChAT double-labelled neurons in (1) the midline medulla: the periventricular gray beneath the 4th ventricle, C3 adrenergic area, raphe obscurus nucleus and medial longitudinal fasciculus, (2) the reticular formation: the medullary, lateral, intermediate, gigantocellular, lateral paragigantocellular and dorsal paragigantocellular reticular nuclei and gigantocellular reticular nucleus ventralis, and (3) sensory nuclei: the gracile nucleus, cuneate nucleus, external cuneate nucleus, spinal trigeminal nucleus interpolaris, prepositus hypoglossal nucleus and medial vestibular nucleus.  

Electrophysiological and neuroanatomical methods were used to determine the extent to which neonatal forelimb removal altered the organization of the cuneate nucleus and representations of the fore- and hindlimbs in the primary somatosensory cortex of adult rats. Neonatal forelimb removal resulted in invasion of the cuneate nucleus by sciatic nerve primary afferents and development of cuneothalamic projection neurons with split receptive fields that included both the hindlimb and forelimb stump. Mapping in the primary somatosensory cortex of the neonatally manipulated adult rats demonstrated abnormalities, but the major change observed in the cuneate nucleus was demonstrable at only a few (5%) cortical recording sites in the remaining stump representation and there were none at all in the hindlimb representation.  

We describe a network of processes in the rat cuneate nucleus that are immunopositive for nitric oxide synthase. These results suggest that nitric oxide synthase is within a specialized subpopulation of interneurons in the cuneate nucleus..  

In order to investigate the interaction of sensory electrophysiologic fields arising from the adjacent second (II) and third (III) fingers and the distant second and fifth (V) fingers, direct recordings of somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) were performed from the sensory and motor cortices, the sensory thalamic nucleus (nucleus ventralis caudalis, VC) and the cuneate nucleus in humans during neurosurgical operations. The IRs were calculated on N20 and P25 from the sensory cortex, P22 from the motor cortex, P17thal from the VC, and N16cune and P35cune from the cuneate nucleus. These results thus indicate that the interaction of somatosensory impulses occurs in several structures along the sensory pathway in CNS, including the cuneate nucleus, the sensory thalamic nucleus, as well as sensory and motor cortices, with the greatest IRs in the cerebral cortices and the weakest ones in the brain-stem..  

We suggest that the rostral N13 is probably generated close to the cuneate nucleus, which partly contributes to the genesis of P13-P14 far-field potentials..  

The morphology, synaptic contacts, and neurotransmitter enrichment of postsynaptic dorsal column terminals in the cuneate nucleus of rats were investigated and compared with those of identified primary afferents. These differences are consistent with distinct functional roles for the two main afferent systems ascending to the cuneate nucleus..  

The distribution and organization of descending spinal projections from the dorsal part of the caudal medulla were studied in the rat following injections of Phaseolus vulgaris-leucoagglutinin into small areas of the subnucleus reticularis dorsalis (SRD) and the adjacent cuneate nucleus (Cu).  

Discrete subregions of the cuneate nucleus, bearing neurochemical characteristics strikingly similar to those of the substantia gelatinosa of the trigeminal subnucleus caudalis are pointed out..  

[ 14C]2-Deoxyglucose autoradiography revealed significant reductions in glucose use in the following structures of rilmenidine-treated rats: intermediolateral cell column of the thoracic spinal cord, area postrema, ventrolateral medulla, nucleus tractus solitarius, and cuneate nucleus, B-HT 933 did not significantly influence glucose use in any neuroanatomic structure examined.  

Transmission from single, identified, slowly adapting type II (SAII) tactile fibers to their target neurons in the cuneate nucleus was examined in anesthetized cats.  

The present study revealed the efferent projections from the external cuneate nucleus (ECN) to various medullary nuclei in the gerbil as demonstrated in fresh living brainstem slices by using in vitro anterogradely tracing with the dextran-tetramethyl-rhodamine-biotin. The tracer-labelled ECN axon terminals were observed (1) in most of the vital autonomic-related nuclei: the nucleus solitary tractus, nucleus ambiguus, rostroventrolateral reticular nucleus and C2 adrenergic area, (2) in the reticular formation: the medullary, parvocellular, intermediate, gigantocellular, dorsal paragigantocellular and lateral paragigantocellular reticular nuclei and medullary linear nucleus, and (3) in sensory nuclei: the cuneate nucleus, spinal trigeminal nuclei caudalis and interpolaris, paratrigeminal nucleus, medial and spinal vestibular nuclei, inferior olive and prepositus hypoglossal nucleus.  

[ 14C]2-deoxyglucose autoradiography, initiated after stabilisation of the drug-induced reduction in blood pressure, revealed significant reductions (P < 0.05) in local cerebral glucose utilisation (LCGU) in the intermediolateral cell column of the spinal cord, area postrema, ventrolateral medulla, nucleus tractus solitarius and cuneate nucleus of rilmenidine-treated rats.  

The present study is concerned with the connections of the external cuneate nucleus (ECN) in the gerbil following an injection of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) into the ventralis posterior pars oralis (VPLo) or adjacent nuclei of the thalamus.  

The projection from the external cuneate nucleus (ECN) to the cerebellum was studied in the gerbil following the retrograde transport of minute injections (0.05-0.1 microliter, 30% solution) or implantations of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) in various folia of the cerebellar cortex and deep nuclei.  

A moderate density of calbindin-immunoreactive fibers was found in the retrorubral nucleus, the central linear nucleus, the locus coeruleus, the nucleus sagulum, the dorsal nucleus of the raphe, the cuneiform nucleus, the ventral and dorsal nuclei of the lateral lemniscus, the medial nucleus of the solitary tract, the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus, and the cuneate nucleus.  

The cuneate nucleus is a relay center for somatosensory information by receiving tactile and proprioceptive inputs from primary afferent fibers that ascend in the dorsal funiculus. The morphology, synaptic contacts, and neurochemical content of primary afferent terminals in the cuneate nucleus of rats were investigated by combining anterograde transport of horseradish peroxidase conjugated to wheat-germ agglutinin or to cholera toxin (injected in cervical dorsal root ganglia) with postembedding immunogold labeling for glutamate and GABA. The finding that identified primary afferent terminals are enriched in glutamate with respect to other tissue profiles strongly suggests a neurotransmitter role for glutamate in this afferent pathway to the rat cuneate nucleus..  

The reactions of 249 neurons located in the zones of gigantocellular reticular nucleus and the nucleus raphé magnus in response to electrical stimulation of areas of the cuneate nucleus of the midbrain, the medial parabrachial nucleus, and the central raphé nucleus, which inhibit movement, were analyzed in anesthetized white rats.  

In particular, thick-calibre neck muscle afferents project directly to the external cuneate nucleus and to the vestibular nuclear complex.  

Wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase was injected at three different levels in the spinal cord and in the external cuneate nucleus, and the terminal field distributions in lobules II and III of the cerebellar cortex were compared with the Purkinje cell compartmentation.  

The projection of cells in the cervical spinal cord of monkeys to the cuneate nucleus has been reported to avoid pars rotunda of that nucleus, the part that contains the somatotopic representation of the ipsilateral hand. This study indicates that the postsynaptic projection to the cuneate nucleus is widespread and includes pars rotunda.  

After regeneration, distributions of afferents to the dorsal horn of the spinal cord and the cuneate nucleus of the brainstem were determined by making injections of horseradish peroxidase conjugates into the distal phalanges of digit 1 or 2. While label from a single digit on the normal hand was confined to the appropriate locations in the median nerve territories of the dorsal horn and cuneate nucleus, label from the reinnervated digits spread out to cover most of the median nerve territories in those structures.  

In this study, the pattern of labelled mossy fiber terminals originating from the external cuneate nucleus was determined and compared with the Purkinje cell antigenic zebrin bands in the same sections.  

Cerebellar cortical afferent sources from specific subnuclei of the inferior olivary complex, cuneate nucleus, and medial vestibular nucleus, all of which were hypermetabolic following injection of ET alone, were also inhibited by MK-801.  

In normal adult rats, intense immunostaining for the 75 kDa low-affinity receptor for nerve growth factor and other neurotrophins (p75NGFR) is concentrated in the middle region of the cuneate nucleus (CN), distributed in a blotchy pattern similar to that of cytochrome oxidase (CO) activity.  

In contrast, no changes in immunoreactivity for trkA or trkB, or for GFAP were observed in the brainstem cuneate nucleus, a principal termination site for many of the severed dorsal root fibers..  

Terminal labeling was further found in a small zone immediately medial to the rostromedial border of the external cuneate nucleus.  

The synaptic linkage between single, identified slowly adapting type I (SAI) fibres and their central target neurones of the cuneate nucleus was examined in pentobarbitone-anaesthetized cats. The reliable transmission of touch dome-associated SAI input across the cuneate nucleus indicates that transmission failure at this first relay is unlikely to be responsible for the reported failure of touch dome-SAI inputs to contribute to tactile perception.  

Unilateral cervical deafferentation reduced the labeling in the cuneate nucleus; this reduction was paralleled by decreased cytochrome oxidase activity.  

In the medulla terminal fields appear in the dorsal column nuclei including the external cuneate nucleus and group x near the descending vestibular nucleus.  

This study describes the ultrastructural changes in the cuneate nucleus of the streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months post-induction. In all the time intervals studied, the somata appeared to be normal and the number of dystrophic and degenerating axonal profiles in the cuneate nucleus of diabetic rats was significantly increased in comparison with age-matched saline injected control rats..  

Derived states of each of the nine traits are characteristic of certain restricted groups of mammals; (1) mirroring of the complete SI body representation in isocortex (anthropoid primates); (2) loss of the accessory olfactory bulbs (sirenians, cetaceans, most bats, catarrhine primates); (3) Rindenkerne, clumps of cell bodies in layer 6 of cerebral cortex (sirenians); (4) posteriorly-pointing digits in the SI body representation (bats, both mega- and micro-); (5) equivalent tectopetal connections to the anterior colliculus of one side from both retinas, rather than predominantly from the contralateral retina (primates and megabats); (6) loss of lamination in dorsal cochlear nuclei (anthropoid primates, bats, seals, sirenians, cetaceans); (7) separation of claustrum from cerebral cortex (diprotodont marsupials, carnivores, artiodactyls, perissodactyls, hyracoids, cetaceans and primates), (8) presence of a complete secondary (SII) somatic sensory region of cerebral cortex (therians-all extant mammals other than monotremes), and (9) presence of a distinct external cuneate nucleus among the nuclei of the dorsal columns (all mammalian groups except monotremes and sirenians).  

The projections of muscle afferents from six regions (hand, forearm, arm, thorax, shoulder and neck) to the external cuneate nucleus (ECN) of gerbils were investigated using transganglionic transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP).  

On the other hand, the hypoinnervation displayed by a few regenerating serotonergic fibers was observed in the periventricular part of the prosencephalon, the ventromedial part of the hypothalamus, the dorsal hippocampus, the neocortex, the superior and inferior colliculi, the cerebellum, the dorsal tegmental nucleus of Gudden, the vestibular nuclei, the gracile nucleus and the cuneate nucleus.  

A few cells were located in the above described lateralmost portion of the ventrolateral reticular formation bilaterally and in the ventral portion of the ipsilateral cuneate nucleus.  

This study investigates the synaptic relation between gamma-aminobutyric acid-immunoreactive (GABA-IR) and cuneothalamic relay neurons (CTNs) in the rat cuneate nucleus. Our results indicate that GABA is the primary inhibitory neurotransmitter in the cuneate nucleus, thereby emphasizing the importance of postsynaptic inhibition on cuneothalamic relay neurons..  

In the hindbrain, FLI was present in the contralateral rostral ventrolateral medulla and bilaterally in the cochlear nucleus, external cuneate nucleus, locus coeruleus and lateral parabrachial nucleus.  

The present study examined the synaptic relation between the primary afferent terminals and intrinsic neuronal elements in the rat cuneate nucleus. It is speculated from this study that the incoming impulses from the forelimb area are modulated by the GABA-immunoreactive boutons in the cuneate nucleus of the rat..  

LSB were prominent in the posterior column, gracile nucleus, cuneate nucleus, and the tegmentum of the midbrain and the pons associated with neuronal loss and gliosis.  

In normal adult rats, only a few galanin-immunoreactive fibers are present in the cuneate nucleus and most are located in its caudal portion. SP-positive axons are seen throughout the cuneate nucleus. In rats that sustained forelimb removals at birth or transection of the brachial plexus in adulthood, dense galanin immunoreactivity was present throughout the cuneate nucleus at all rostrocaudal levels on the side of the brainstem ipsilateral to the lesion. Neither forelimb removal at birth nor brachial plexus lesions in adulthood had any qualitative effect upon the distribution or density of CGRP- or SP-immunoreactivity in the cuneate nucleus. Removal of a forelimb on E-16 did not increase the density of galanin-immunoreactive fibers in the cuneate nucleus. Such lesions also failed to produce any appreciable change in the density of either CGRP- or SP-positive fibers in the cuneate nucleus. The present data raise the possibility that large caliber, non-peptidergic primary afferent axons which innervate the cuneate nucleus may express galanin after damage at birth or in adulthood..  

Within a rostrocaudally limited region in the middle of the cuneate nucleus (CN) distinctive blotches of intense CO-activity were observed.  

Analysis of cytochrome oxidase-stained sections demonstrated that the cuneate nucleus ipsilateral to the lesion decreased in volume by an average of 36.7% (N = 7, p < 0.001, paired t test), but there was no corresponding increase in the volume of the gracile fasciculus and nucleus. Bilateral application of HRP to the sciatic nerves demonstrated that axons that innervate only the gracile nucleus on the intact side of the brainstem were present in the cuneate nucleus on the deafferented side. Injection of HRP into the skin overlying the point of the amputation (the stump) indicated that axons innervating this region filled most of the dorsal one-half of the shrunken cuneate nucleus and overlapped with the sciatic nerve afferents innervating the cuneate on this side. Mapping the receptive fields of multiple unit clusters demonstrated that most recording sites in the shrunken cuneate nucleus were activated by inputs from the stump and adjacent skin. Unit clusters with split receptive fields including the skin overlying the stump and the hindlimb were located throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the cuneate nucleus. These results indicate that fetal forelimb amputation results in anatomical expansion of the central projections of hindlimb afferents into the cuneate nucleus.  

Immunohistochemical staining for the 75-kDa, low-affinity nerve growth factor receptor (p75NGFR), within the cuneate nucleus (CN) of the adult rat revealed that this receptor is concentrated rostrocaudally in the middle CN (approximately 0.2-0.9 mm caudal to the obex), corresponding to that portion of the CN receiving densest projections of cutaneous primary afferent terminals.  

A dense network of serotonin-immunoreactive fibers was present in the reticular regions of DCN in cats, and in the pars triangularis of the cuneate nucleus and the peripheral and caudal regions of the gracile nucleus in owl monkeys.  


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