Biology:Reticular formation
Reticular formation | |
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Traverse section of the medulla oblongata at about the middle of the olive. (Formatio reticularis grisea and formatio reticularis alba labeled at left.) | |
Details | |
Location | Brainstem |
Identifiers | |
Latin | formatio reticularis |
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy |
The reticular formation is a set of interconnected nuclei that are located throughout the brainstem. It is not anatomically well defined, because it includes neurons located in different parts of the brain. The neurons of the reticular formation make up a complex set of networks in the core of the brainstem that extend from the upper part of the midbrain to the lower part of the medulla oblongata.[2] The reticular formation includes ascending pathways to the cortex in the ascending reticular activating system (ARAS) and descending pathways to the spinal cord via the reticulospinal tracts.[3][4][5][6]
Neurons of the reticular formation, particularly those of the ascending reticular activating system, play a crucial role in maintaining behavioral arousal and consciousness. The overall functions of the reticular formation are modulatory and premotor,[upper-alpha 1] involving somatic motor control, cardiovascular control, pain modulation, sleep and consciousness, and habituation.[7] The modulatory functions are primarily found in the rostral sector of the reticular formation and the premotor functions are localized in the neurons in more caudal regions.
The reticular formation is divided into three columns: raphe nuclei (median), gigantocellular reticular nuclei (medial zone), and parvocellular reticular nuclei (lateral zone). The raphe nuclei are the place of synthesis of the neurotransmitter serotonin, which plays an important role in mood regulation. The gigantocellular nuclei are involved in motor coordination. The parvocellular nuclei regulate exhalation.[8]
The reticular formation is essential for governing some of the basic functions of higher organisms and is one of the phylogenetically oldest portions of the brain.[citation needed]
Structure
The human reticular formation is composed of almost 100 brain nuclei and contains many projections into the forebrain, brainstem, and cerebellum, among other regions.[3] It includes the reticular nuclei,[upper-alpha 2] reticulothalamic projection fibers, diffuse thalamocortical projections, ascending cholinergic projections, descending non-cholinergic projections, and descending reticulospinal projections.[4] The reticular formation also contains two major neural subsystems, the ascending reticular activating system and descending reticulospinal tracts, which mediate distinct cognitive and physiological processes.[3][4] It has been functionally cleaved both sagittally and coronally.
Traditionally the reticular nuclei are divided into three columns:
- In the median column – the raphe nuclei
- In the medial column – gigantocellular nuclei (because of larger size of the cells)
- In the lateral column – parvocellular nuclei (because of smaller size of the cells)
The original functional differentiation was a division of caudal and rostral. This was based upon the observation that the lesioning of the rostral reticular formation induces a hypersomnia in the cat brain. In contrast, lesioning of the more caudal portion of the reticular formation produces insomnia in cats. This study has led to the idea that the caudal portion inhibits the rostral portion of the reticular formation.
Sagittal division reveals more morphological distinctions. The raphe nuclei form a ridge in the middle of the reticular formation, and, directly to its periphery, there is a division called the medial reticular formation. The medial RF is large and has long ascending and descending fibers, and is surrounded by the lateral reticular formation. The lateral RF is close to the motor nuclei of the cranial nerves, and mostly mediates their function.
Medial and lateral reticular formation
The medial reticular formation and lateral reticular formation are two columns of nuclei with ill-defined boundaries that send projections through the medulla and into the midbrain. The nuclei can be differentiated by function, cell type, and projections of efferent or afferent nerves. Moving caudally from the rostral midbrain, at the site of the rostral pons and the midbrain, the medial RF becomes less prominent, and the lateral RF becomes more prominent.[citation needed]
Existing on the sides of the medial reticular formation is its lateral cousin, which is particularly pronounced in the rostral medulla and caudal pons. Out from this area spring the cranial nerves, including the very important vagus nerve.[clarification needed] The lateral RF is known for its ganglions and areas of interneurons around the cranial nerves, which serve to mediate their characteristic reflexes and functions.
Function
The reticular formation consists of more than 100 small neural networks, with varied functions including the following:
- Somatic motor control – Some motor neurons send their axons to the reticular formation nuclei, giving rise to the reticulospinal tracts of the spinal cord. These tracts function in maintaining tone, balance, and posture – especially during body movements. The reticular formation also relays eye and ear signals to the cerebellum so that the cerebellum can integrate visual, auditory, and vestibular stimuli in motor coordination. Other motor nuclei include gaze centers, which enable the eyes to track and fixate objects, and central pattern generators, which produce rhythmic signals of breathing and swallowing.
- Cardiovascular control – The reticular formation includes the cardiac and vasomotor centers of the medulla oblongata.
- Pain modulation – The reticular formation is one means by which pain signals from the lower body reach the cerebral cortex. It is also the origin of the descending analgesic pathways. The nerve fibers in these pathways act in the spinal cord to block the transmission of some pain signals to the brain.
- Sleep and consciousness – The reticular formation has projections to the thalamus and cerebral cortex that allow it to exert some control over which sensory signals reach the cerebrum and come to our conscious attention. It plays a central role in states of consciousness like alertness and sleep. Injury to the reticular formation can result in irreversible coma.
- Habituation – This is a process in which the brain learns to ignore repetitive, meaningless stimuli while remaining sensitive to others. A good example of this is a person who can sleep through loud traffic in a large city, but is awakened promptly due to the sound of an alarm or crying baby. Reticular formation nuclei that modulate activity of the cerebral cortex are part of the ascending reticular activating system.[9][7]
Major subsystems
Ascending reticular activating system
The ascending reticular activating system (ARAS), also known as the extrathalamic control modulatory system or simply the reticular activating system (RAS), is a set of connected nuclei in the brains of vertebrates that is responsible for regulating wakefulness and sleep-wake transitions. The ARAS is a part of the reticular formation and is mostly composed of various nuclei in the thalamus and a number of dopaminergic, noradrenergic, serotonergic, histaminergic, cholinergic, and glutamatergic brain nuclei.[3][10][11][12]
Structure of the ARAS
The ARAS is composed of several neural circuits connecting the dorsal part of the posterior midbrain and anterior pons to the cerebral cortex via distinct pathways that project through the thalamus and hypothalamus.[3][11][12] The ARAS is a collection of different nuclei – more than 20 on each side in the upper brainstem, the pons, medulla, and posterior hypothalamus. The neurotransmitters that these neurons release include dopamine, norepinephrine, serotonin, histamine, acetylcholine, and glutamate.[3][10][11][12] They exert cortical influence through direct axonal projections and indirect projections through thalamic relays.[11][12][13]
The thalamic pathway consists primarily of cholinergic neurons in the pontine tegmentum, whereas the hypothalamic pathway is composed primarily of neurons that release monoamine neurotransmitters, namely dopamine, norepinephrine, serotonin, and histamine.[3][10] The glutamate-releasing neurons in the ARAS were identified much more recently relative to the monoaminergic and cholinergic nuclei;[14] the glutamatergic component of the ARAS includes one nucleus in the hypothalamus and various brainstem nuclei.[11][14][15] The orexin neurons of the lateral hypothalamus innervate every component of the ascending reticular activating system and coordinate activity within the entire system.[12][16][17]
Nucleus type | Corresponding nuclei that mediate arousal | Sources |
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Dopaminergic nuclei |
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[3][10][11][12] |
Noradrenergic nuclei |
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[3][10][12] |
Serotonergic nuclei |
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[3][10][12] |
Histaminergic nuclei |
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[3][10][18] |
Cholinergic nuclei |
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[3][11][12][14] |
Glutamatergic nuclei |
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[11][12][14][15][18][19] |
Thalamic nuclei |
|
[3][11][20] |
The ARAS consists of evolutionarily ancient areas of the brain, which are crucial to the animal's survival and protected during adverse periods, such as during inhibitory periods of Totsellreflex, aka, "animal hypnosis".[upper-alpha 3][22] The ascending reticular activating system which sends neuromodulatory projections to the cortex - mainly connects to the prefrontal cortex.[23] There seems to be low connectivity to the motor areas of the cortex.[23]
Functions of the ARAS
Consciousness
The ascending reticular activating system is an important enabling factor for the state of consciousness.[13] The ascending system is seen to contribute to wakefulness as characterised by cortical and behavioural arousal.[6]
Regulating sleep-wake transitions
The main function of the ARAS is to modify and potentiate thalamic and cortical function such that electroencephalogram (EEG) desynchronization ensues.[upper-alpha 4][25][26] There are distinct differences in the brain's electrical activity during periods of wakefulness and sleep: Low voltage fast burst brain waves (EEG desynchronization) are associated with wakefulness and REM sleep (which are electrophysiologically similar); high voltage slow waves are found during non-REM sleep. Generally speaking, when thalamic relay neurons are in burst mode the EEG is synchronized and when they are in tonic mode it is desynchronized.[26] Stimulation of the ARAS produces EEG desynchronization by suppressing slow cortical waves (0.3–1 Hz), delta waves (1–4 Hz), and spindle wave oscillations (11–14 Hz) and by promoting gamma band (20–40 Hz) oscillations.[16]
The physiological change from a state of deep sleep to wakefulness is reversible and mediated by the ARAS.[27] The ventrolateral preoptic nucleus (VLPO) of the hypothalamus inhibits the neural circuits responsible for the awake state, and VLPO activation contributes to the sleep onset.[28] During sleep, neurons in the ARAS will have a much lower firing rate; conversely, they will have a higher activity level during the waking state.[29] In order that the brain may sleep, there must be a reduction in ascending afferent activity reaching the cortex by suppression of the ARAS.[27]
Attention
The ARAS also helps mediate transitions from relaxed wakefulness to periods of high attention.[20] There is increased regional blood flow (presumably indicating an increased measure of neuronal activity) in the midbrain reticular formation (MRF) and thalamic intralaminar nuclei during tasks requiring increased alertness and attention.
Clinical significance of the ARAS
Mass lesions in brainstem ARAS nuclei can cause severe alterations in level of consciousness (e.g., coma).[30] Bilateral damage to the reticular formation of the midbrain may lead to coma or death.[31]
Direct electrical stimulation of the ARAS produces pain responses in cats and elicits verbal reports of pain in humans.[citation needed] Ascending reticular activation in cats can produce mydriasis,[32] which can result from prolonged pain. These results suggest some relationship between ARAS circuits and physiological pain pathways.[32]
Pathologies
Some pathologies of the ARAS may be attributed to age, as there appears to be a general decline in reactivity of the ARAS with advancing years.[33] Changes in electrical coupling[upper-alpha 5] have been suggested to account for some changes in ARAS activity: if coupling were down-regulated, there would be a corresponding decrease in higher-frequency synchronization (gamma band). Conversely, up-regulated electrical coupling would increase synchronization of fast rhythms that could lead to increased arousal and REM sleep drive.[35] Specifically, disruption of the ARAS has been implicated in the following disorders:
- Narcolepsy: Lesions along the pedunculopontine (PPT/PPN) / laterodorsal tegmental (LDT) nuclei are associated with narcolepsy.[36] There is a significant down-regulation of PPN output and a loss of orexin peptides, promoting the excessive daytime sleepiness that is characteristic of this disorder.[16]
- Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) : Dysfunction of nitrous oxide signaling has been implicated in the development of PSP.[37]
- Parkinson's disease: REM sleep disturbances are common in Parkinson's. It is mainly a dopaminergic disease, but cholinergic nuclei are depleted as well. Degeneration in the ARAS begins early in the disease process.[36]
Developmental influences
There are several potential factors that may adversely influence the development of the ascending reticular activating system:
- Preterm birth:[38] Regardless of birth weight or weeks of gestation, premature birth induces persistent deleterious effects on pre-attentional (arousal and sleep-wake abnormalities), attentional (reaction time and sensory gating), and cortical mechanisms throughout development.
- Smoking during pregnancy:[39] Prenatal exposure to cigarette smoke is known to produce lasting arousal, attentional and cognitive deficits in humans. This exposure can induce up-regulation of α4β2 nicotinic receptors on cells of the pedunculopontine nucleus (PPN), resulting in increased tonic activity, resting membrane potential, and hyperpolarization-activated cation current. These major disturbances of the intrinsic membrane properties of PPN neurons result in increased levels of arousal and sensory gating, deficits (demonstrated by a diminished amount of habituation to repeated auditory stimuli). It is hypothesized that these physiological changes may intensify attentional dysregulation later in life.
Descending reticulospinal tracts
The reticulospinal tracts, also known as the descending or anterior reticulospinal tracts, are extrapyramidal motor tracts that descend from the reticular formation[40] in two tracts to act on the motor neurons supplying the trunk and proximal limb flexors and extensors. The reticulospinal tracts are involved mainly in locomotion and postural control, although they do have other functions as well.[41] The descending reticulospinal tracts are one of four major cortical pathways to the spinal cord for musculoskeletal activity. The reticulospinal tracts work with the other three pathways to give a coordinated control of movement, including delicate manipulations.[40] The four pathways can be grouped into two main system pathways – a medial system and a lateral system. The medial system includes the reticulospinal pathway and the vestibulospinal pathway, and this system provides control of posture. The corticospinal and the rubrospinal tract pathways belong to the lateral system which provides fine control of movement.[40]
Medial and lateral tracts
This descending tract is divided into two parts, the medial (or pontine) and lateral (or medullary) reticulospinal tracts (MRST and LRST).
- The medial reticulospinal tract is responsible for exciting anti-gravity, extensor muscles. The fibers of this tract arise from the caudal pontine reticular nucleus and the oral pontine reticular nucleus and project to lamina VII and lamina VIII of the spinal cord.
- The lateral reticulospinal tract is responsible for inhibiting excitatory axial extensor muscles of movement. It is also responsible for automatic breathing. The fibers of this tract arise from the medullary reticular formation, mostly from the gigantocellular nucleus, and descend the length of the spinal cord in the anterior part of the lateral column. The tract terminates in lamina VII mostly with some fibers terminating in lamina IX of the spinal cord.
The ascending sensory tract conveying information in the opposite direction is known as the spinoreticular tract.
Functions of the reticulospinal tracts
- Integrates information from the motor systems to coordinate automatic movements of locomotion and posture
- Facilitates and inhibits voluntary movement; influences muscle tone
- Mediates autonomic functions
- Modulates pain impulses
- Influences blood flow to lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus.[42]
Clinical significance of the reticulospinal tracts
The reticulospinal tracts provide a pathway by which the hypothalamus can control sympathetic thoracolumbar outflow and parasympathetic sacral outflow.[citation needed]
Two major descending systems carrying signals from the brainstem and cerebellum to the spinal cord can trigger automatic postural response for balance and orientation: vestibulospinal tracts from the vestibular nuclei and reticulospinal tracts from the pons and medulla. Lesions of these tracts result in profound ataxia and postural instability.[43]
Physical or vascular damage to the brainstem disconnecting the red nucleus (midbrain) and the vestibular nuclei (pons) may cause decerebrate rigidity, which has the neurological sign of increased muscle tone and hyperactive stretch reflexes. Responding to a startling or painful stimulus, both arms and legs extend and turn internally. The cause is the tonic activity of lateral vestibulospinal and reticulospinal tracts stimulating extensor motoneurons without the inhibitions from rubrospinal tract.[44]
Brainstem damage above the red nucleus level may cause decorticate rigidity. Responding to a startling or painful stimulus, the arms flex and the legs extend. The cause is the red nucleus, via the rubrospinal tract, counteracting the extensor motorneuron's excitation from the lateral vestibulospinal and reticulospinal tracts. Because the rubrospinal tract only extends to the cervical spinal cord, it mostly acts on the arms by exciting the flexor muscles and inhibiting the extensors, rather than the legs.[44]
Damage to the medulla below the vestibular nuclei may cause flaccid paralysis, hypotonia, loss of respiratory drive, and quadriplegia. There are no reflexes resembling early stages of spinal shock because of complete loss of activity in the motorneurons, as there is no longer any tonic activity arising from the lateral vestibulospinal and reticulospinal tracts.[44]
History
The term "reticular formation" was coined in the late 19th century by Otto Deiters, coinciding with Ramon y Cajal's neuron doctrine. Allan Hobson states in his book The Reticular Formation Revisited that the name is an etymological vestige from the fallen era of the aggregate field theory in the neural sciences. The term "reticulum" means "netlike structure", which is what the reticular formation resembles at first glance. It has been described as being either too complex to study or an undifferentiated part of the brain with no organization at all. Eric Kandel describes the reticular formation as being organized in a similar manner to the intermediate gray matter of the spinal cord. This chaotic, loose, and intricate form of organization is what has turned off many researchers from looking farther into this particular area of the brain.[citation needed] The cells lack clear ganglionic boundaries, but do have clear functional organization and distinct cell types. The term "reticular formation" is seldom used anymore except to speak in generalities. Modern scientists usually refer to the individual nuclei that compose the reticular formation.[citation needed]
Moruzzi and Magoun first investigated the neural components regulating the brain's sleep-wake mechanisms in 1949. Physiologists had proposed that some structure deep within the brain controlled mental wakefulness and alertness.[25] It had been thought that wakefulness depended only on the direct reception of afferent (sensory) stimuli at the cerebral cortex.
As direct electrical stimulation of the brain could simulate electrocortical relays, Magoun used this principle to demonstrate, on two separate areas of the brainstem of a cat, how to produce wakefulness from sleep. He first stimulated the ascending somatic and auditory paths; second, a series of "ascending relays from the reticular formation of the lower brain stem through the midbrain tegmentum, subthalamus and hypothalamus to the internal capsule."[45] The latter was of particular interest, as this series of relays did not correspond to any known anatomical pathways for the wakefulness signal transduction and was coined the ascending reticular activating system (ARAS).
Next, the significance of this newly identified relay system was evaluated by placing lesions in the medial and lateral portions of the front of the midbrain. Cats with mesencephalic interruptions to the ARAS entered into a deep sleep and displayed corresponding brain waves. In alternative fashion, cats with similarly placed interruptions to ascending auditory and somatic pathways exhibited normal sleeping and wakefulness, and could be awakened with physical stimuli. Because these external stimuli would be blocked on their way to the cortex by the interruptions, this indicated that the ascending transmission must travel through the newly discovered ARAS.
Finally, Magoun recorded potentials within the medial portion of the brain stem and discovered that auditory stimuli directly fired portions of the reticular activating system. Furthermore, single-shock stimulation of the sciatic nerve also activated the medial reticular formation, hypothalamus, and thalamus. Excitation of the ARAS did not depend on further signal propagation through the cerebellar circuits, as the same results were obtained following decerebellation and decortication. The researchers proposed that a column of cells surrounding the midbrain reticular formation received input from all the ascending tracts of the brain stem and relayed these afferents to the cortex and therefore regulated wakefulness.[45][27]
See also
- Locus coeruleus
- Pedunculopontine nucleus
- Medial pontine reticular formation
- Midbrain reticular formation
Footnotes
- ↑ premotor function as in integrating feedback sensory signals with commands from upper motor neurons and deep cerebellar nuclei, and organizing the efferent activities of lower visceral motor and some somatic motor neurons in the brainstem and spinal cord.[2]
- ↑ reticular nuclei including structures in the medulla, pons, and midbrain,[4]
- ↑ Animal hypnosis is a state in nonhuman animals in which there is no motor response. The state may occur because of stroking, salient stimuli, or physical restraint. The name comes from its claimed resemblance to human hypnosis and trance.[21]
- ↑ An EEG's electrode on the scalp measures the activity of a very large number of pyramidal neurons in the underlying brain region. Each neuron generates a small electrical field that changes over time. In the sleep state, the neurons activate at approximately the same time, and the EEG wave, representing the summation of the neurons' electrical fields, tend to be in phase and has higher amplitude, and hence it is "synchronized." In the waking state, they do not activate at the same time because of irregular or out-of-phase inputs, the EEG wave, representing the algebraic sum, will have a smaller amplitude, and hence "dysynchronized."[24]
- ↑ Electrical coupling is the passive flow of electric current from one cell into an adjacent cell through gap junctions, such as the cells in the heart muscle or the neurons with electrical synapses. Electrically coupled cells fire synchronously because generated currents in one cell rapidly spread to the other cells.[34]
References
- ↑ Gray, Henry. "Fig. 701: Henry Gray (1825–1861). Anatomy of the Human Body. 1918.". Bartleby.com. https://www.bartleby.com/107/illus701.html.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Purves, Dale (2011). Neuroscience (5. ed.). Sunderland, Mass.: Sinauer. pp. 390–395. ISBN 978-0878936953.
- ↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 "Neurophysiological foundations of sleep, arousal, awareness and consciousness phenomena. Part 1". Anaesthesiol Intensive Ther 47 (2): 162–167. 2015. doi:10.5603/AIT.2015.0015. PMID 25940332. "The ascending reticular activating system (ARAS) is responsible for a sustained wakefulness state. It receives information from sensory receptors of various modalities, transmitted through spinoreticular pathways and cranial nerves (trigeminal nerve – polymodal pathways, olfactory nerve, optic nerve and vestibulocochlear nerve – monomodal pathways). These pathways reach the thalamus directly or indirectly via the medial column of reticular formation nuclei (magnocellular nuclei and reticular nuclei of pontine tegmentum). The reticular activating system begins in the dorsal part of the posterior midbrain and anterior pons, continues into the diencephalon, and then divides into two parts reaching the thalamus and hypothalamus, which then project into the cerebral cortex (Fig. 1). The thalamic projection is dominated by cholinergic neurons originating from the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus of pons and midbrain (PPT) and laterodorsal tegmental nucleus of pons and midbrain (LDT) nuclei [17, 18]. The hypothalamic projection involves noradrenergic neurons of the locus coeruleus (LC) and serotoninergic neurons of the dorsal and median raphe nuclei (DR), which pass through the lateral hypothalamus and reach axons of the histaminergic tubero-mamillary nucleus (TMN), together forming a pathway extending into the forebrain, cortex and hippocampus. Cortical arousal also takes advantage of dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra (SN), ventral tegmenti area (VTA) and the periaqueductal grey area (PAG). Fewer cholinergic neurons of the pons and midbrain send projections to the forebrain along the ventral pathway, bypassing the thalamus [19, 20].".
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 "Chapter 9: The Reticular Formation". Human Neuroanatomy (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. 2016. pp. 141–153. ISBN 978-1119073994. https://books.google.com/books?id=5lvEDQAAQBAJ&q=%22descending%20reticular%20formation%22%20reticulospinal&pg=PT426. Retrieved 4 September 2017.
- ↑ "the definition of reticular activating system". http://www.dictionary.com/browse/reticular-activating-system.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Jones, BE (2008). "Modulation of cortical activation and behavioral arousal by cholinergic and orexinergic systems". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1129 (1): 26–34. doi:10.1196/annals.1417.026. PMID 18591466. Bibcode: 2008NYASA1129...26J.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Saladin, KS (2018). "Chapter 14 – The Brain and Cranial Nerves". Anatomy and Physiology: The Unity of Form and Function (8th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. The Reticular Formation, pp. 518–519. ISBN 978-1259277726.
- ↑ "The Brain From Top To Bottom". Thebrain.mcgill.ca. http://thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/a/a_11/a_11_cr/a_11_cr_cyc/a_11_cr_cyc.html.
- ↑ "Anatomy of the Brain – Reticular Formation". Biology.about.com. 2015-07-07. http://biology.about.com/library/organs/brain/blreticular.htm.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 10.6 "Chapter 12: Sleep and Arousal". Molecular Neuropharmacology: A Foundation for Clinical Neuroscience (2nd ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill Medical. 2009. p. 295. ISBN 978-0071481274. "The RAS is a complex structure consisting of several different circuits including the four monoaminergic pathways ... The norepinephrine pathway originates from the locus ceruleus (LC) and related brainstem nuclei; the serotonergic neurons originate from the raphe nuclei within the brainstem as well; the dopaminergic neurons originate in ventral tegmental area (VTA); and the histaminergic pathway originates from neurons in the tuberomammillary nucleus (TMN) of the posterior hypothalamus. As discussed in Chapter 6, these neurons project widely throughout the brain from restricted collections of cell bodies. Norepinephrine, serotonin, dopamine, and histamine have complex modulatory functions and, in general, promote wakefulness. The PT in the brain stem is also an important component of the ARAS. Activity of PT cholinergic neurons (REM-on cells) promotes REM sleep. During waking, REM-on cells are inhibited by a subset of ARAS norepinephrine and serotonin neurons called REM-off cells."
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 11.6 11.7 11.8 "The ascending mesolimbic cholinergic system – a specific division of the reticular activating system involved in the initiation of negative emotional states". Journal of Molecular Neuroscience 53 (3): 436–445. July 2014. doi:10.1007/s12031-013-0179-1. PMID 24272957. https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/070f1866276d1f1ff224384dcce6c9ed958b7063. "Understanding of arousing and wakefulness-maintaining functions of the ARAS has been further complicated by neurochemical discoveries of numerous groups of neurons with the ascending pathways originating within the brainstem reticular core, including pontomesencephalic nuclei, which synthesize different transmitters and release them in vast areas of the brain and in the entire neocortex (for review, see Jones 2003; Lin et al. 2011). They included glutamatergic, cholinergic, noradrenergic, dopaminergic, serotonergic, histaminergic, and orexinergic systems (for review, see Lin et al. 2011). ... The ARAS represented diffuse, nonspecific pathways that, working through the midline and intralaminar thalamic nuclei, could change activity of the entire neocortex, and thus, this system was suggested initially as a general arousal system to natural stimuli and the critical system underlying wakefulness (Moruzzi and Magoun 1949; Lindsley et al. 1949; Starzl et al. 1951, see stippled area in Fig. 1). ... It was found in a recent study in the rat that the state of wakefulness is mostly maintained by the ascending glutamatergic projection from the parabrachial nucleus and precoeruleus regions to the basal forebrain and then relayed to the cerebral cortex (Fuller et al. 2011). ... Anatomical studies have shown two main pathways involved in arousal and originating from the areas with cholinergic cell groups, one through the thalamus and the other, traveling ventrally through the hypothalamus and preoptic area, and reciprocally connected with the limbic system (Nauta and Kuypers 1958; Siegel 2004). ... As counted in the cholinergic connections to the thalamic reticular nucleus ...".
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 12.6 12.7 12.8 12.9 "The Neurobiology of Sleep and Wakefulness". The Psychiatric Clinics of North America 38 (4): 615–644. December 2015. doi:10.1016/j.psc.2015.07.002. PMID 26600100. "This ascending reticular activating system (ARAS) is comprised of cholinergic laterodorsal and pedunculopontine tegmentum (LDT/PPT), noradrenergic locus coeruleus (LC), serotonergic (5-HT) Raphe nuclei and dopaminergic ventral tegmental area (VTA), substantia nigra (SN) and periaqueductal gray projections that stimulate the cortex directly and indirectly via the thalamus, hypothalamus and BF.6, 12-18 These aminergic and catecholaminergic populations have numerous interconnections and parallel projections which likely impart functional redundancy and resilience to the system.6, 13, 19 ... More recently, the medullary parafacial zone (PZ) adjacent to the facial nerve was identified as a sleep-promoting center on the basis of anatomical, electrophysiological and chemo- and optogenetic studies.23, 24 GABAergic PZ neurons inhibit glutamatergic parabrachial (PB) neurons that project to the BF,25 thereby promoting NREM sleep at the expense of wakefulness and REM sleep. ... The Hcrt neurons project widely throughout the brain and spinal cord92, 96, 99, 100 including major projections to wake-promoting cell groups such as the HA cells of the TM,101 the 5-HT cells of the dorsal Raphe nuclei (DRN),101 the noradrenergic cells of the LC,102 and cholinergic cells in the LDT, PPT, and BF.101, 103 ... Hcrt directly excites cellular systems involved in waking and arousal including the LC,102, 106, 107 DRN,108, 109 TM,110-112 LDT,113, 114 cholinergic BF,115 and both dopamine (DA) and non-DA neurons in the VTA.116, 117".
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Fundamental neuroscience (4th ed.). Amsterdam: Elsevier/Academic Press. 2013. p. 1095. ISBN 978-0123858702.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 "Wake-sleep circuitry: an overview". Current Opinion in Neurobiology 44: 186–192. June 2017. doi:10.1016/j.conb.2017.03.021. PMID 28577468. "Parabrachial and pedunculopontine glutamatergic arousal system
Retrograde tracers from the BF have consistently identified one brainstem site of input that is not part of the classical monoaminergic ascending arousal system: glutamatergic neurons in the parabrachial and pedunculopontine nucleus ... Juxtacellular recordings from pedunculopontine neurons have found that nearly all cholinergic neurons in this region, as well as many glutamatergic and GABAergic neurons, are most active during wake and REM sleep [25], although some of the latter neurons were maximally active during either wake or REM, but not both. ... [Parabrachial and pedunculopontine glutamatergic neurons] provide heavy innervation to the lateral hypothalamus, central nucleus of the amygdala, and BF". - ↑ 15.0 15.1 "Supramammillary glutamate neurons are a key node of the arousal system". Nature Communications 8 (1): 1405. November 2017. doi:10.1038/s41467-017-01004-6. PMID 29123082. Bibcode: 2017NatCo...8.1405P. "Basic and clinical observations suggest that the caudal hypothalamus comprises a key node of the ascending arousal system, but the cell types underlying this are not fully understood. Here we report that glutamate-releasing neurons of the supramammillary region (SuMvglut2) produce sustained behavioral and EEG arousal when chemogenetically activated.".
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 "Direct and indirect excitation of laterodorsal tegmental neurons by Hypocretin/Orexin peptides: implications for wakefulness and narcolepsy". J. Neurosci. 22 (7): 2862–2872. April 2002. doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.22-07-02862.2002. PMID 11923451.
- ↑ "Chapter 12: Sleep and Arousal". Molecular Neuropharmacology: A Foundation for Clinical Neuroscience (2nd ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill Medical. 2009. p. 295. ISBN 978-0071481274. "Orexin neurons are located in the lateral hypothalamus. They are organized in a widely projecting manner, much like the monoamines (Chapter 6), and innervate all of the components of the ARAS. They excite the REM-off monoaminergic neurons during wakefulness and the PT cholinergic neurons during REM sleep. They are inhibited by the VLPO neurons during NREM sleep."
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 "Dietary Zinc Acts as a Sleep Modulator". International Journal of Molecular Sciences 18 (11): 2334. November 2017. doi:10.3390/ijms18112334. PMID 29113075. "The regulation of sleep and wakefulness involves many regions and cellular subtypes in the brain. Indeed, the ascending arousal system promotes wakefulness through a network composed of the monaminergic neurons in the locus coeruleus (LC), histaminergic neurons in the tuberomammilary nucleus (TMN), glutamatergic neurons in the parabrachial nucleus (PB) ...".
- ↑ "Reassessment of the structural basis of the ascending arousal system". The Journal of Comparative Neurology 519 (5): 933–956. April 2011. doi:10.1002/cne.22559. PMID 21280045.
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 "Activation by attention of the human reticular formation and thalamic intralaminar nuclei". Science 271 (5248): 512–515. January 1996. doi:10.1126/science.271.5248.512. PMID 8560267. Bibcode: 1996Sci...271..512K. "This corresponds to the centro-median and centralis lateralis nuclei of the intralaminar group".
- ↑ animal hypnosis (2nd ed.). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association. 2015. p. 57. doi:10.1037/14646-000. ISBN 978-1433819445. "a state of motor nonresponsiveness in nonhuman animals, produced by stroking, salient stimuli, or physical restraint. It is called “hypnosis” because of a claimed resemblance to human hypnosis and trance"
- ↑ "Reticular activating system of brain stem and animal hypnosis". Science 125 (3239): 156. January 1957. doi:10.1126/science.125.3239.156. PMID 13390978. Bibcode: 1957Sci...125..156S.
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 "The direct pathway from the brainstem reticular formation to the cerebral cortex in the ascending reticular activating system: A diffusion tensor imaging study". Neurosci. Lett. 606: 200–203. October 2015. doi:10.1016/j.neulet.2015.09.004. PMID 26363340.
- ↑ Purves et al (2018b), Box 28A – Electroencephalography, pp. 647–649
- ↑ 25.0 25.1 Steriade, M. (1996). "Arousal: Revisiting the reticular activating system". Science 272 (5259): 225–226. doi:10.1126/science.272.5259.225. PMID 8602506. Bibcode: 1996Sci...272..225S.
- ↑ 26.0 26.1 Reiner, P. B. (1995). "Are mesopontine cholinergic neurons either necessary or sufficient components of the ascending reticular activating system?". Seminars in Neuroscience 7 (5): 355–359. doi:10.1006/smns.1995.0038.
- ↑ 27.0 27.1 27.2 Evans, B.M. (2003). "Sleep, consciousness and the spontaneous and evoked electrical activity of the brain. Is there a cortical integrating mechanism?". Neurophysiologie Clinique 33 (1): 1–10. doi:10.1016/s0987-7053(03)00002-9. PMID 12711127.
- ↑ Purves et al (2018b), The Neural Circuits Governing Sleep, pp. 655–656
- ↑ "Influence of ascending reticular activating system on preoptic neuronal activity". Exp. Neurol. 86 (1): 40–52. October 1984. doi:10.1016/0014-4886(84)90065-7. PMID 6479280.
- ↑ Tindall SC (1990). "Chapter 57: Level of Consciousness". Clinical Methods: The History, Physical, and Laboratory Examinations. Butterworth Publishers. ISBN 978-0409900774. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK380/#A1740. Retrieved 2008-07-04.
- ↑ "chpt 11". The Human Brain: An Introduction to its Functional Anatomy (5th ed.). pp. 262–290.
- ↑ 32.0 32.1 "Tonic reticular activating system: relationship to aversive brain stimulation effects". Exp. Neurol. 57 (1): 41–56. October 1977. doi:10.1016/0014-4886(77)90043-7. PMID 196879.
- ↑ Robinson, D. (1999). "The technical, neurological and psychological significance of 'alpha', 'delta' and 'theta' waves confounded in EEG evoked potentials: a study of peak latencies". Clinical Neurophysiology 110 (8): 1427–1434. doi:10.1016/S1388-2457(99)00078-4. PMID 10454278.
- ↑ electrical coupling (13th ed.). Pearson Education Limited. 2005. pp. 195. ISBN 978-0131273849. https://archive.org/details/hendersonsdictio0000unse_q5a4/page/195.
- ↑ "Electrical coupling: novel mechanism for sleep-wake control". Sleep 30 (11): 1405–1414. 2007. doi:10.1093/sleep/30.11.1405. PMID 18041475.
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 "Neurophysiology of sleep and wakefulness: basic science and clinical implications". Curr Neuropharmacol 6 (4): 367–378. December 2008. doi:10.2174/157015908787386050. PMID 19587857.
- ↑ Vincent, S. R. (2000). "The ascending reticular activating system - from aminergic neurons to nitric oxide". Journal of Chemical Neuroanatomy 18 (1–2): 23–30. doi:10.1016/S0891-0618(99)00048-4. PMID 10708916.
- ↑ "Long-term deficits of preterm birth: evidence for arousal and attentional disturbances". Clin Neurophysiol 119 (6): 1281–1291. June 2008. doi:10.1016/j.clinph.2007.12.021. PMID 18372212.
- ↑ "Smoking during pregnancy: postnatal effects on arousal and attentional brain systems". Neurotoxicology 28 (5): 915–923. September 2007. doi:10.1016/j.neuro.2007.01.007. PMID 17368773.
- ↑ 40.0 40.1 40.2 Fundamental neuroscience (4th ed.). Amsterdam: Elsevier/Academic Press. 2013. pp. 631–632. ISBN 978-0123858702.
- ↑ Clinical Neuroanatomy and Neuroscience. Philadelphia: Saunders Elsevier. 2012. p. 192. ISBN 978-0702037382.
- ↑ Brownstone, Robert M.; Chopek, Jeremy W. (2018). "Reticulospinal Systems for Tuning Motor Commands". Frontiers in Neural Circuits 12: 30. doi:10.3389/fncir.2018.00030. ISSN 1662-5110. PMID 29720934.
- ↑ Pearson, Keir G; Gordon, James E (2013). "Chapter 41 / Posture". Principles of Neural Science (5th ed.). United States: McGraw-Hill. The Brain Stem and Cerebellum Integrate Sensory Signals for Posture, p. 954. ISBN 978-0071390118.
- ↑ 44.0 44.1 44.2 Michael-Titus et al (2010b), Box 9.5 Decorticate and decrebrate regidity, p. 172
- ↑ 45.0 45.1 "An ascending reticular activating system in the brain stem". AMA Arch Neurol Psychiatry 67 (2): 145–154; discussion 167–171. February 1952. doi:10.1001/archneurpsyc.1952.02320140013002. PMID 14893989.
Other references
- Systems of The Body (2010)
- "Chapter 6 – Cranial Nerves and the Brainstem". Systems of The Body: The Nervous System – Basic Science and Clinical Conditions (2nd ed.). Churchill Livingstone. 2010a. ISBN 978-0702033735. https://archive.org/details/nervoussystembas0002mich.
- "Chapter 9 – Descending Pathways and Cerebellum". Systems of The Body: The Nervous System – Basic Science and Clinical Conditions (2nd ed.). Churchill Livingstone. 2010b. ISBN 978-0702033735. https://archive.org/details/nervoussystembas0002mich.
- Neuroscience (2018)
- "Chapter 28 – Cortical State". Neuroscience (6th ed.). Sinauer Associates. 2018b. ISBN 978-1605353807.
- Anatomy and Physiology (2018)
- Saladin, KS (2018a). "Chapter 13 – The Spinal Cord, Spinal Nerves, and Somatic Reflexes". Anatomy and Physiology: The Unity of Form and Function (8th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-1259277726.
- Saladin, KS (2018b). "Chapter 14 – The Brain and Cranial Nerves". Anatomy and Physiology: The Unity of Form and Function (8th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. The Reticular Formation, pp. 518–519. ISBN 978-1259277726.
External links
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reticular formation.
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