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Auditory forebrain organization of an australian marsupial, the northern native cat (Dasyurus hallucatus)

 

作者: Motoi Kudo,   Lindsay M. Aitkin,   John E. Nelson,  

 

期刊: Journal of Comparative Neurology  (WILEY Available online 1989)
卷期: Volume 279, issue 1  

页码: 28-42

 

ISSN:0092-7317

 

年代: 1989

 

DOI:10.1002/cne.902790104

 

出版商: Alan R. Liss, Inc.

 

关键词: medial geniculate body;auditory cortex;lateral amygdala;putamen;dorsal ventricular ridge

 

数据来源: WILEY

 

摘要:

AbstractStructures and connections of auditory forebrain regions of the Northern native cat, a member of one of the most primitive families among Australian marsupials, have been examined anatomically by using anterograde and retrograde tracing techniques with wheat germ agglutinin‐conjugated horseradish peroxidase (WGA‐HRP) after defining the acoustically responsive neocortical area physiologically.The structure of the medial geniculate body (MG) was similar to that described in other species. The results obtained from a case with a WGA‐HRP injection into the MG showed that the MG strongly projects to the lateral amygdaloid nucleus (LAmy) and the putamen as well as the auditory neocortex (ACx). Results obtained from other cases with WGA‐HRP injections into the physiologically defined ACx show also that the ACx is connected not only with the ipsilateral MG and the contralateral ACx but also with the LAmy both bilaterally and reciprocally. The regions within the LAmy in which the MG‐LAmy projection fibers terminate largely overlap with those in which the ACx‐LAmy fibers terminate and the LAmy‐ACx pathway originates.The connectional relationships revealed in the present study‐that the LAmy receives auditory information from the MG and reciprocates auditory information with the ACx bilaterally‐strongly suggest that, in some primitive mammals with small neocortical areas, a specific portion of noncortical telencephalon functions as an auditory center and occupies a relatively large volume of space in the forebrain. It is possible that the auditory sector of noncortical telencephalon in some primitive mammals such as the American Didelphidae and the Australian Dasyuridae is homologous with part of the auditory sector of the dorsal ventricular ridge (DVR) in reptiles and birds and also may have functions shared with the auditory primary and association neocortex in advanced mammals such as the domestic cat and the monkey (K

 

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