Organization of motor pools supplying the cervical musculature in a cryptodyran turtle, Pseudemys scripta elegans. I. Dorsal and ventral motor nuclei of the cervical spinal cord and muscles supplied by a single motor nucleus
- 8 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 243 (2) , 145-165
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.902430202
Abstract
In this and the accompanying paper (Yeow and Peterson, '86) we characterize motor nuclei of the cervical spinal cord in Pseudemys scripta and the motor pools of eight cervical muscles. We have identified three motor nuclei that supply the cervical musculature by using serial reconstructions of Nissl‐stained spinal cords cut in three cardinal planes, and in experimental cases in which horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was applied to individual neck muscles. These nuclei are named according to their position as visualized in the transverse plane: (1) dorsal, (2) ventral, and (3) medial. A fourth (ventrolateral) motor nucleus was never labelled following application of HRP to the cervical musculature and presumably innervates the forelimbs. The dorsal motor nucleus occupies the mid‐dorsal to dorsolateral ventral horn of C1 and C2. It is composed of at least two morphological groups of motor neurons; one of these is a population of very large, fusiform profiles with transversely oriented dendrites that is found primarily in C1. The ventral motor nucleus occupies the tip of the ventral horn from C1 to C8. Its cells are significantly smaller and more numerous in rostral than in caudal cervical segments. In Nissl material, ventral nuclear, profiles show little tendency to cluster into subgroups, but experimental cases suggest that there is some spatial dissociation of different motor pools within the ventral nucleus. The medial motor nucleus is described in the accompanying paper together with the motor pools of three cervical muscles that it supplies. Having identified the cervical motor nuclei we then used retrograde transport of HRP to characterize the motor pools of individual cervical muscles. Two superficial ventral muscles (mm. coracohyoideus and plastrosquamosus) are supplied by dorsal nuclear cells. M. coracohyoideus motor neurons are significantly larger than those of m. plastrosquamosus and the very large, fusiform cell type is relatively more numerous in the m. coracohyoideus motor pool. Dorsal and lateral muscles (mm. cervicocapitis, testocapitis, and transversalis cervicis) are supplied by ventral nuclear motor neurons. These cells are smaller, on average, than motor neurons supplying ventral musculature. The m. cervicocapitis motor pool lies dorsomedially in the tip of the ventral horn of C1 and C2; motor neurons supplying the more laterally placed mm. testocapitis and transversalis cervicis occur more ventrolaterally, in C2–C3 and C3–C5, respectively. Thus each of the five cervical muscles is supplied by a single motor nucleus, and their motor pools are organized into a musculotopic pattern.Keywords
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