Corticobulbar Tract and Cranial Nerve Motor Nuclei

Author(s):  
Jonathan Leo
Author(s):  
Hendrik Jan ten Donkelaar ◽  
Gesineke C. Bangma ◽  
Heleen A. Barbas-Henry ◽  
Roelie de Boer-van Huizen ◽  
Jan G. Wolters
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eleanor V. Thomas ◽  
Maria Nagy ◽  
Hongyu Zhao ◽  
Wayne A. Fenton ◽  
Arthur L. Horwich

SummaryThe eye muscles of humans with either inherited or sporadic forms of ALS are relatively unaffected during disease progression, a function of sparing of the cranial nerve motor neurons supplying them. Here we observe that cranial nerve nuclei are also spared in a mouse model of inherited SOD1-linked ALS. We examined the cranial nerve motor nuclei in a mouse strain, G85R SOD1YFP, which carries a high copy transgene encoding a mutant human SOD1-YFP fusion protein, that exhibits florid YFP-fluorescent aggregates in spinal cord motor neurons and paralyzes by 6 months of age. We observed in the cranial nerve nuclei that innervate the eye, 3N (oculomotor), 4N (trochlear), and 6N (abducens), that there was little (4N, 6N) or no (3N) aggregation, in comparison with other motor nuclei, 5N (trigeminal), 7N (facial), and 12N (hypoglossal), in the latter two of which florid aggregation was observed. Correspondingly, the number of ChAT positive motor neurons in 3N of G85R SOD1YFP relative to that in 3N of ChAT-EGFP mice showed that there was no loss of motor neurons over time, whereas in 12N there was progressive loss of motor neurons, amounting to a loss of ∼30% from G85R SOD1YFP by end-stage. Thus, the sparing of extraocular motor neurons as occurs in humans with ALS appears to be replicated in our SOD1-linked ALS mouse strain, supporting the validity of the mouse model for studying this aspect of selective motor system loss in ALS. Comparisons of extraocular motor neurons (e.g., from 3N), resistant to ALS pathology, with other cranial motor neurons (e.g., from 12N), sensitive to such pathology, may thus be of value in understanding mechanisms of protection vs. susceptibility of motor neurons.


Author(s):  
Peggy Mason

The role of the brainstem in life is detailed from both medical and legal points of view. This chapter describes how the brainstem divides up the fundamental processes of human life, with the most automatic and basic ones supported most caudally and progressively more expressive functions depending on more rostral brainstem regions. The text then steps through the internal anatomy of the brainstem with a focus on cranial nerve nuclei. The location of the three long tracts is followed for the length of the brainstem, and the course of the corticobulbar tract is presented. A primer on the anatomy of the cerebellum is capped by introducing ataxia, the classic symptom stemming from ipsilateral cerebellar damage.


Author(s):  
Patricia M. Rodier ◽  
Jennifer L. Ingram ◽  
Barbara Tisdale ◽  
Sarah Nelson ◽  
John Romano

1984 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 577-589 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Thayer Sataloff ◽  
Donald L. Myers ◽  
Frederic B. Krenter

1994 ◽  
Vol 111 (5) ◽  
pp. 561-570 ◽  
Author(s):  
A LALWANI ◽  
F BUTT ◽  
R JACKLER ◽  
L PITTS ◽  
C YINGLING

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