Peripheral and central terminations of hypoglossal afferents innervating lingual tactile mechanoreceptor complexes in Fringillidae
- 8 August 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 298 (2) , 157-171
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.902980203
Abstract
Injections of cholera toxin B subunit conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (CTB‐HRP) were made into the lingual branch of the hypoglossal nerve in four species of finch in order to identify the innervation of the mechanoreceptors of the dermal papillae of the tongue, and simultaneously to determine the pattern of central projections of lingual hypoglossal afferents. The results showed that hypoglossal fibers innervate all the Herbst corpuscles and terminal cell receptors of the elaborately organized papillae of the dorsum of the tongue, of the shorter papillae in the ventral tongue, and the loose collection of Herbst corpuscles in the subpapillary region. Labelled fibers were also observed in the intralingual glands, in the intrinsic tongue muscles, and in the posterodorsal epithelium where they formed budlike structures.Retrogradely labelled cell bodies were located in the jugular ganglion and their central processes ascended and descended throughout the brainstem within the descending trigeminal tract (TTD). Terminal fields were observed within the dorsolateral part of the nucleus caudalis of TTD, predominantly ipsilaterally, and within the medial part of the dorsal horn of the first 4–6 cervical segments bilaterally. There were dense patches of termination over a dorsolateral subnucleus of the interpolated nucleus of TTD, and within two regions of the principal sensory trigeminal nucleus: a large one laterally and a small one medially.Terminal fields were also observed within the nucleus ventralis lateralis anterior of the rostral solitary complex, and within adjacent nuclei, which are probably equivalent to the dorsal sensory nuclei of the facial and glossopharyngeal nerves of other avian species.The results are interpreted in the light of the role of the tongue in species‐specific patterns of feeding in finches, and the possible requirement for the central integration of touch and taste.Keywords
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