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Mouse Extraocular Muscles and the Musculotopic Organization of Their Innervation.

Authors :
Bohlen MO
Bui K
Stahl JS
May PJ
Warren S
Source :
Anatomical record (Hoboken, N.J. : 2007) [Anat Rec (Hoboken)] 2019 Oct; Vol. 302 (10), pp. 1865-1885. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 May 07.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The organization of extraocular muscles (EOMs) and their motor nuclei was investigated in the mouse due to the increased importance of this model for oculomotor research. Mice showed a standard EOM organization pattern, although their eyes are set at the side of the head. They do have more prominent oblique muscles, whose insertion points differ from those of frontal-eyed species. Retrograde tracers revealed that the motoneuron layout aligns with the general vertebrate plan with respect to nuclei and laterality. The mouse departed in some significant respects from previously studied species. First, more overlap between the distributions of muscle-specific motoneuronal pools was present in the oculomotor nucleus (III). Furthermore, motoneuron dendrites for each pool filled the entire III and extended beyond the edge of the abducens nucleus (VI). This suggests mouse extraocular motoneuron afferents must target specific pools based on features other than dendritic distribution and nuclear borders. Second, abducens internuclear neurons are located outside the VI. We concluded this because no unlabeled abducens internuclear neurons were observed following lateral rectus muscle injections and because retrograde tracer injections into the III labeled cells immediately ventral and ventrolateral to the VI, not within it. This may provide an anatomical substrate for differential input to motoneurons and internuclear neurons that allows rodents to move their eyes more independently. Finally, while soma size measurements suggested motoneuron subpopulations supplying multiply and singly innervated muscle fibers are present, markers for neurofilaments and perineuronal nets indicated overlap in the size distributions of the two populations. Anat Rec, 302:1865-1885, 2019. © 2019 American Association for Anatomy.<br /> (© 2019 American Association for Anatomy.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1932-8494
Volume :
302
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Anatomical record (Hoboken, N.J. : 2007)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30993879
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.24141