Cerebellothalamocortical and pallidothalamocortical projections to the primary and supplementary motor cortical areas: A multiple tracing study in macaque monkeys
- 8 July 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 345 (2) , 185-213
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.903450204
Abstract
The goal of the present study was to clarify whether the primary motor cortex (Ml) and the supplementary motor cortex (SMA) both receive, via the motor thalamus, input from cerebellar and basal ganglia output nuclei. This is the first investigation that explores the problem by direct comparison, in the same animal, of thalamic zones that (1) project to M1 and SMA and (2) receive cerebellar-nuclear (CN) and pallidal (GP) afferents. These four zones were mapped in two monkeys by means of two retrograde tracers for M1 and SMA injections and of two anterograde tracers for CN and GP injections. All injections were performed under electrophysiological control (microstimulation and multiunit recordings). Injections in cortical areas were restricted to the hand/arm representation; in the SMA, the tracer deposit was within the “SMA-proper” (or “area F3”) and did not include its rostral extension (“pre-SMA” or “area F6”). It was found that zones of all four types formed a number of highly complex patches of labeling that were usually not confined to one cytoarchitectonically defined thalamic nucleus. The overlap of clusters of labeled terminals and perikarya was evaluated morphometrically (area measurements) on a number of coronal sections along the anteroposterior extent of the motor thalamus. In line with previous studies, the thalamic territories innervated by CN and GP afferents rarely overlapped. However, zones projecting to M1 and/or to SMA included thalamic regions receiving CN as well as GP projections, providing the first evidence of such overlap from individual animals. The present observations support the previous conclusion from this laboratory (based on transsynaptic labeling) that the SMA receives, apart from its strong pallidal transthalamic input, a CN transthalamic input. These present findings that both M1 and SMA are recipients of transthalamic inputs from GP and CN thus support the concept that a mixed subcortical input consisting of weighted contributions from cerebellum, basal ganglia, substantia nigra, and spinothalamic tract is directed to each functional component of the sensorimotor cortex.Keywords
This publication has 78 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cortical Connections of the Motor Thalamic Nuclei in the Japanese Monkey, Macaca fuscataStereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery, 1993
- Cerebello- and Pallido-Thalamic Pathways to Areas 6 and 4 in the MonkeyStereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery, 1993
- The Primate Motor Thalamus Analysed with Reference to Subcortical Afferent TerritoriesStereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery, 1993
- Anatomical Distinctions between the Two Basal Ganglia Afferent Territories in the Primate Motor Thalamus1Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery, 1993
- Comparison of Neural Activity in the Supplementary Motor Area and in the Primary Motor Cortex in MonkeysSomatosensory & Motor Research, 1991
- Thalamic input to inferior area 6 and area 4 in the macaque monkeyJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1989
- Afferent and efferent connections of the dorsolateral precentral gyrus (area 4, hand/arm region) in the macaque monkey, with comparisons to area 8Journal of Comparative Neurology, 1986
- Microstimulation of the supplementary motor area (SMA) in the awake monkeyExperimental Brain Research, 1982
- An autoradiographic study of efferent connections of the globus pallidus in Macaca mulattaExperimental Brain Research, 1982
- Projection of precentral motor cortex upon nucleus medialis dorsalis thalami in the monkeyNeuroscience Letters, 1979