Cytoarchitecture, fiber connections, and ultrastructure of nucleus isthmi in a teleost (<i>Navodon modestus</i>) with a special reference to degenerating isthmic afferents from optic tectum and nucleus pretectalis

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<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Cytoarchitecture and fiber connections of the nucleus isthmi in a teleost (<jats:italic>Navodon modestus</jats:italic>) were studied by means of Nissl, Bodian, toluidine blue, Golgi, and Fink‐Heimer methods. Synaptic terminals were classified by the ultrastructural characteristics, and their origins were determined by electron microscopic degeneration experiments.</jats:p><jats:p>The nucleus isthmi is composed of an outer cellular area or shell and an inner noncellular area or core. The shell covers anterior, dorsal, and ventral aspects of the core. The cell bodies in the shell are oval (15 × 20 μm) with an anteroposterior long axis, and have many somatic spines. Spines are also seen on the initial segment of the axon. Primary dendrites extend postermedially and branch out in the core. The core contains thin and thick myelinated fibers, which originate in the optic tectun and in the nucleus pretectalis, respectively.</jats:p><jats:p>At least two types of axons terminal were distinguished in the nucleus isthmi: S type, containing spherical vesciles, and F type, containing flattened vesicles. S terminals are derived from thin myelinated fibers and are only seen in the core where they form asymmetric synapses with dendrites. Frequently a portion of the S terminal membrane near the usual synaptic cleft is in close apposition with the membrane of an adjacent small dendrite or spine. F terminals, which derived from thick myelinated fibers, make symmetric synaptic contacts with both cell bodies in the shell and dendrites in the core. S terminals degenerate after ipsilateral ablation of the optic tectum, whereas F terminals degenerate after destruction of the nucleus pretectalis.</jats:p>

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