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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Rat medulla oblongata. III. Adrenergic (C1 and C2) neurons, nerve fibers and presumptive terminal processes.

The goal of this study was to define the cytoarchitectonic relationships between the catecholaminergic cell groups (the C1 and C2) in the rostral medulla oblongata of the rat. Immunocytochemistry was combined with Nissl staining to determine the nuclear boundaries in this region of the brain stem. In addition, the morphological characteristics of neurons in the C1 and C2 cell groups were determined and the relationship between these populations of neurons and their caudaul counterparts (A1 and A2 cell groups) was established (Kalia et al., '85a). The results indicate that the C1 and C2 cell groups are distributed over a wide region of the rostral medulla. The location of these adrenergic neurons is related to a number of nuclear groups in this region. This finding was remarkably consistent in all the animals studied in this series. In addition, adrenergic nerve fibers were found to be distributed over a large region of the medullary reticular formation. There was homogeneity in the morphology of the C1 and C2 cell groups. These rostrally located adrenergic neurons did not share morphological features in common with the recently described (Kalia et al., '85a) caudally located adrenergic neurons in the dorsal region of the nucleus of the tractus solitarius. These striking anatomical features of the adrenergic C1 and C2 cell groups support the proposal that adrenergic neurons in the rostral medulla oblongata play an important role in the integration of visceral functions (Fuxe et al., '80).[1]

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