Corticostriatal projections arising from the infragranular layers of the motor and second somatosensory cortices were studied in rats after labeling small pools of neurons with biocytin. Camera lucida reconstruction of 263 fibers arising from laminae V and VI revealed that all corticostriatal projections derive from collaterals of lamina V cells whose main axons descend into the cerebral peduncle. In contrast, lamina VI cells do not branch upon the striatum, but upon the thalamus. Together with the results obtained in previous tracing studies, the present data raise the possibility that no neuron is exclusively corticostriatal. We therefore propose that all corticostriatal projections are collaterals given off by the axons of two types of neurons: layer V cells whose main axon project to the brainstem and/or spinal cord, and layer III cells that project to the contralateral hemisphere.
Glutamatergic and dopaminergic systems play a primary role in frontal-subcortical circuits involved in motor and cognitive functions. Considerable evidence has emerged indicating that the complex interaction between these neurotransmitter systems within the dorsal striatum and nucleus accumbens is critically involved in the gating of information flow in these highly integrative brain regions. As a result, disruptions of the interaction between glutamate and dopamine has been proposed as a pathological basis for a number of disorders, including the pathophysiology of schizophrenia. In this chapter, we discuss recent studies that have significantly advanced our understanding of the reciprocal interactions between glutamatergic and dopaminergic systems within the striatal complex in the normal brain and in pathological states.
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