“…These different neuronal subtypes were found to depend on their rhombomeric origin; in r1, the most dorsal part of the RL contributes a large migratory cell population that forms the external and internal granular layers of the cerebellum (Ben-Arie et al, 1997;Wingate and Hatten, 1999;Köster and Fraser, 2001;Machold and Fishell, 2005). In r2-r6, the same RL domain generates auditory and vestibular nuclei, through which information is processed and relayed to the upper brain and spinal cord, whereas, in r6-r8, it will give rise to multiple pre-cerebellar nuclei which relay peripheral sensation to the cerebellum through mossy fiber neurons Bayer, 1980, 1987a,b,c,d;Rubel and Parks, 1988;Cambronero and Puelles, 2000;Rodriguez and Dymecki, 2000;Bermingham et al, 2001;Díaz et al, 2003;Ryugo and Parks, 2003;Pasqualetti et al, 2007;Hoshino et al, 2013;Kratochwil et al, 2017;Díaz and Puelles, 2019;Elliott et al, 2021). Similarly, different types of respiratory and viscerosensory nuclei are suggested to be born from more ventral positions of the RL at distinct axial levels, such as the parabrachial and Kölliker-Fuse nuclei that derive from r1, the A5 and intertrigeminal region that derives from r4-r6, the PreBötzinger complex and retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) that derive from r3/r5, and the nucleus tractus solitaries that is thought to derive from more posterior rhombomeres (Qian et al, 2001;Gray, 2008).…”