Premium
Ultrastructural evidence for a paucity of projections from the lumbosacral cord to the pontine micturition center or M‐region in the cat: A new concept for the organization of the micturition reflex with the periaqueductal gray as central relay
Author(s) -
Blok Bertil F. M.,
De Weerd Henk,
Holstege Gert
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
journal of comparative neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.855
H-Index - 209
eISSN - 1096-9861
pISSN - 0021-9967
DOI - 10.1002/cne.903590208
Subject(s) - urination , biology , spinal cord , neuroscience , ultrastructure , anatomy , lumbosacral joint , reflex , urinary system
Abstract Information concerning the rate of bladder filling is determined by receptors in the bladder wall and conveyed via afferent fibers in the pelvic nerve to sensory neurons in the lumbosacral cord. It was assumed that this information is relayed from the lumbosacral cord to a medial cell group in the dorsolateral pontine tegmentum, called the M‐region, the pontine micturition center, or Barrington's nucleus. The M‐region, in turn, projects via long descending pathways to the sacral parasympathetic motoneurons. In the present electron microscopic study, it was investigated in cats whether monosynaptic projections from lumbosacral neurons to the M‐region indeed exist. Wheat‐germ agglutinin‐horseradish peroxidase injections were made into the lumbosacral cord. Many retrogradely labeled dendrites and somata were found in the M‐region, but no labeled terminals were found on retrogradely labeled dendrites or somata. Only a small number of anterogradely labeled terminals, which were filled with mainly round vesicles, contacted unlabeled dendrites in the M‐region. In contrast, many more anterogradely labeled terminals, which were filled with mainly round and, to a limited extent, dense core vesicles and with asymmetrical synapses, were found on dendrites in the lateral part of the periaqueductal gray (PAG). Previously (Blok and Holstege [1994] Neurosci. Lett. 166 :93–96), it was demonstrated that the lateral part of the PAG contains neurons projecting to the M‐region. A concept for the central organization of the micturition reflex is presented in which ascending projections from the lumbosacral cord convey information on bladder filling to the PAG. When the bladder contains so much urine that voiding is necessary, the PAG, in turn, triggers the M‐region. The M‐region, however, also receives afferents from the preoptic area, which might be involved in phe final decision to start micturition. © 1995 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.