Premotor neurons for trigeminal motor nucleus neurons innervating the jaw‐closing and jaw‐opening muscles: Differential differential in the lower brainstem of the rat

Abstract
The distribution of premotor neurons for trigeminal motor nucleus neurons innervating the jaw‐closing and jaw‐opening muscles was examined in the lower brainstem of the rat by using retrograde and anterograde labeling techniques. First, Fluorogold, a fluorescent retrograde tracer, was injected into the dorsolateral or ventromedial division of the trigeminal motor nucleus, each of which contains motoneurons innervating the jaw‐closing or jaw‐opening muscles, respectively. Second, Phaseolus vulgaris‐leucoagglutinin, an anterograde tracer, was injected into each of the lower brainstem sites, where clusters of retrogradely labeled premotor neurons had been seen in the first set of experiments. Third, after injection of the anterograde tracer into a lower brainstem site, followed by injection of the retrograde tracer cholera toxin B subunit into a masticatory muscle, termination of anterogradely labeled axons onto retrogradely labeled motoneurons was confirmed with the aid of a confocal laser‐scanning microscope. It was found that the premotor neurons distributed in the mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus, medial part of the parabrachial region, supratrigeminal region, and dorsal parts of the principal sensory, oral spinal and interpolar spinal trigeminal nuclei project preferentially to the dorsolateral division of the trigeminal motor nucleus, whereas those in the lateral part of the parabrachial region, intermediate parts of the principal sensory, oral spinal and interpolar spinal trigeminal nuclei, and alpha part of the gigantocellular reticular nucleus project preferentially to the ventromedial division of the trigeminal motor nucleus. The dorsal and lateral parts of the medullary reticular formation and the medullary raphe nuclei contain premotor neurons of both types. Group k motoneurons, a cluster of trigeminal motoneurons that innervate the tensor tympani muscle, receive projection fibers predominantly from the dorsolateral part of the oral pontine reticular formation.