» Articles » PMID: 2329189

Cytological and Quantitative Characteristics of Four Cerebral Commissures in the Rhesus Monkey

Overview
Journal J Comp Neurol
Specialty Neurology
Date 1990 Jan 22
PMID 2329189
Citations 125
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The number, types, and distribution of distinct classes of axons and glia in four cerebral commissures of the adult rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) were determined using electron microscopic and immunocytochemical methods. The two neocortical commissures, the corpus callosum, and the anterior commissure contain small but cytologically distinct archicortical components: the hippocampal commissure, which lies ventral to the splenium of the corpus callosum, and the basal telencephalic commissure, which forms a small crescent at the anterior margin of the anterior commissure. Each archicortical pathway is delineated from the adjacent neocortical commissure by a glial capsule. The glia cells that form this border are immunoreactive with antisera directed against glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and issue long processes that form numerous desmosomal junctions with one another. Braids of these glial processes envelop axonal fascicles within the archicortical commissures. In contrast, the GFAP-positive cells of the corpus callosum and anterior commissure are randomly distributed cells with relatively short stellate processes that do not form boundaries around axon fascicles. Quantitative electron microscopic analysis reveals that approximately 60 million axons connect the two cerebral hemispheres: the corpus callosum contains 56.0 million +/- 3.8 million axons (n = 8), the anterior commissure contains 3.15 million +/- 0.24 million axons (n = 8), the hippocampal commissure has 237,000 axons +/- 31,000 (n = 6), and the basal telencephalic commissure has 193,000 axons +/- 28,000 (n = 5). The number of axons is not directly proportional to the cross-sectional area in any of the commissures because of variation in axonal composition. On the basis of an estimate of approximately 3 billion neurons in the monkey cortex (Shariff, '53), we estimate that between 2 and 3% of all cortical neurons project to the opposite cerebral hemisphere. Subregions of the corpus callosum as well as each of the other commissures consist of characteristic subsets of five classes of axons and contain different proportions of myelinated to unmyelinated fibers. The largest myelinated axons and the smallest proportion of unmyelinated axons (approximately 6%) are found in regions of the corpus callosum that carry projections from primary sensory cortices, whereas the smallest myelinated axons and largest proportion of unmyelinated axons (approximately 30%) are found in regions of the corpus callosum that carry projections from association cortices. Axon composition in the anterior commissure is uniform and resembles that of callosal sectors that contain association projections.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

Citing Articles

Intrinsic organization of the corpus callosum.

Barbaresi P, Fabri M, Lorenzi T, Sagrati A, Morroni M Front Physiol. 2024; 15:1393000.

PMID: 39035452 PMC: 11259024. DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2024.1393000.


Dendritic Spines: Synaptogenesis and Synaptic Pruning for the Developmental Organization of Brain Circuits.

Petanjek Z, Banovac I, Sedmak D, Hladnik A Adv Neurobiol. 2023; 34:143-221.

PMID: 37962796 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-36159-3_4.


Estimating axon radius using diffusion-relaxation MRI: calibrating a surface-based relaxation model with histology.

Barakovic M, Pizzolato M, Tax C, Rudrapatna U, Magon S, Dyrby T Front Neurosci. 2023; 17:1209521.

PMID: 37638307 PMC: 10457121. DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2023.1209521.


In vivo evidence of microstructural hypo-connectivity of brain white matter in 22q11.2 deletion syndrome.

Raven E, Veraart J, Kievit R, Genc S, Ward I, Hall J Mol Psychiatry. 2023; 28(10):4342-4352.

PMID: 37495890 PMC: 7615578. DOI: 10.1038/s41380-023-02178-w.


A Proposed Human Structural Brain Connectivity Matrix in the Center for Morphometric Analysis Harvard-Oxford Atlas Framework: A Historical Perspective and Future Direction for Enhancing the Precision of Human Structural Connectivity with a Novel....

Makris N, Rushmore R, Kaiser J, Albaugh M, Kubicki M, Rathi Y Dev Neurosci. 2023; 45(4):161-180.

PMID: 36977393 PMC: 10526721. DOI: 10.1159/000530358.