| Literature DB >> 30833890 |
Joshua Weininger1, Elena Roman1, Paul Tierney2, Denis Barry2, Hugh Gallagher3, Paul Murphy3, Kirk J Levins3, Veronica O'Keane1, Erik O'Hanlon1, Darren W Roddy1,4.
Abstract
The thalamocingulate tract is a key component of the Papez circuit that connects the anterior thalamic nucleus (ATN) to the cingulum bundle. While the other white matter connections, consisting of the fornix, cingulum bundle and mammillothalamic tract, were well defined in Papez's original 1937 paper, the anatomy of the thalamocingulate pathway was mentioned only in passing. Subsequent research has been unable to clarify the precise anatomical trajectory of this tract. In particular, the site of thalamocingulate tract interactions with the cingulum bundle have been inconsistently reported. This review aims to synthesize research on this least studied component of the Papez circuit. A systemic approach to reviewing historical anatomical dissection and neuronal tracing studies as well as contemporary diffusion magnetic resonance imaging studies of the thalamocingulate tract was undertaken across species. We found that although inconsistent, prior research broadly encompasses two differing descriptions of how the ATN interfaces with the cingulum after passing laterally through the anterior limb of the internal capsule. The first group of studies show that the pathway turns medially and rostrally and passes to the anterior cingulate region (Brodmann areas 24, 33, and 32) only. A second group suggests that the thalamocingulate tract interfaces with both the anterior and posterior cingulate (Brodmann areas 23 and 31) and retrosplenial region (Brodmann area 29). We discuss potential reasons for these discrepancies such as altering methodologies and species differences. We also discuss how these inconsistencies may be resolved in further research with refinements of terminology for the cingulate cortex and the thalamocingulate tract. Understanding the precise anatomical course of the last remaining unresolved final white matter tract in the Papez circuit may facilitate accurate investigation of the role of the complete Papez circuit in emotion and memory.Entities:
Keywords: Papez circuit; anterior thalamic nuclei; anterior thalamic radiation; cingulate cortex; cingulum; thalamocingulate tract; thalamus
Year: 2019 PMID: 30833890 PMCID: PMC6388660 DOI: 10.3389/fnana.2019.00014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroanat ISSN: 1662-5129 Impact factor: 3.856
FIGURE 1The Papez Circuit. The thalamocingulate tract connects the anterior thalamic nuclei through the cingulate cortex in the cingulum, then travels in a circuit through the parahippocampal gyrus and hippocampus, fornix, mammillary bodies, and mammillothalamic tract back to the anterior cingulate gyrus. Brodmann areas (BA) 32, 33, and 24 correspond to the anterior cingulate cortex. BA 23 and 31 correspond to the posterior cingulate cortex. BA 29 corresponds to the restrosplenial cortex.
The literature review findings are shown.
| Author(s) | Year | Method | Subjects | Cingular Entry | Cingular Termination | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clark and Boggon | 1933 | Lesion-induced degradation tracing, cat and rat | 4 rats, 3 cats | ACC | PCC/RSC | Rostral projection from the ATN to the level of the rostral corpus callosum, then curving medially to join into the dorsal cingulate gyrus. |
| Domesick et al. | 1970 | Lesion-induced axon degradation tracing | 15 rats | ACC | ATN fibers project rostrally and dorsally to the ACC. Once enclosed in the cingulum the fibers pass caudally. | |
| Niimi et al. | 1978 | Electrolytic lesion-induced degeneration tracing | 13 cats | ACC and PCC/RSC | AD terminates at BA 29 AV terminates at BA 23 and 29 AM terminates at BA 24 | |
| Baleydier and Mauguiere | 1980 | Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) axonal tracing | 13 monkeys, multiple species | ACC and PCC/RSC | ||
| Finch et al. | 1984 | HRP axonal tracing | 75 rats | ACC and PSC/RSC | AD terminates in BA 23 AV terminates in BA 29 AM had a lack of significant cingular termination | |
| Mufson and Pandya | 1984 | Radiolabelled amino acids | 16 Rhesus monkeys | ACC and PCC/RSC | ACC and PCC/RSC | ATN projects rostrally beneath caudate nucleus, through anterior limb of internal capsule, spreads in a laminar fan-like projection to the ventral sector of cingulum, spanning all areas (BA 24, 25, 32, 23, 29, 30). |
| Matsuoka | 1986 | HRP axonal tracing | 8 cats | ACC and PCC/RSC | Rostral cingulate gyrus receives fibers from the AM and part of the AV. Caudal part of cingulate gyrus receives fibers from the AM and AV. Intermediate cingulate gyrus receives fibers from parts of AM and AV. None from AD. | |
| Vogt et al. | 1987 | HRP axonal tracing | 15 rhesus monkeys | ACC and RSC/RSC | AM nucleus sends fibers into posterior cingulate cortex while AV, AD, LD sends fibers BA 29 (RSC). | |
| Horikawa et al. | 1988 | Fast blue (FB) and Rhodamine microspheres (RH) retrograde tracing | 51 Mole rats | ACC and PCC/RSC | ACC and PCC/RSC | AD, AV, LD to adjacent posterior cingulum (A29/P29). AM primarily to anterior cingulum (A24). Rats only have BA 24 and 29, lack other cingulate areas. |
| Shibata and Naito | 2005 | PHA-L anterograde and retrograde tracing | 37 rats | ACC | ACC | Rostral AM sends fibers to rostral ACC, caudal AM sends fibers to caudal ACC, laminar distribution. |
| Shah et al. | 2012 | Dissection | 10 humans | ACC | Fibers are seen projecting primarily to BA 24, however, it is not possible to disaggregate the thalamocingulate tract from the remainder of the anterior thalamic radiation and rule out connection with ventral cingular areas close to or including BA 23. | |
| Jang and Yeo | 2013 | Probabilistic fiber tracking using diffusion tensor tractography (DTT) | 26 humans | ACC | ACC | Thalamocingulate tract traverses anterior limb of internal capsule to BA 24 to terminate posteriorly through cingulum. |
| Wei et al. | 2017 | Seed based diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) tractography | 8 humans, 2 tracts failed reconstruction | ACC | PCC/RSC | BA 24 of the ACC set as the region of interest. Alternative hypotheses excluded. |
FIGURE 2Thalamocingulate tract entry into cingulum. Diagrammatic overview of the quantity of studies showing thalamic connections to each cingular region. Brodmann area 24, 33, and 32 (shown in blue) correspond to the anterior cingulate cortex. Brodmann area 23 and 29 (shown in red) correspond to the posterior cingulate cortex and retrosplenial cortex. ATN, anterior thalamic nucleus.
FIGURE 3Thalamocingulate tract termination in cingulum. Diagrammatic overview of the quantity of studies showing regions of thalamic termination once enclosed within the cingulum bundle. Brodmann area 24, 33, and 32 (shown in blue) correspond to the anterior cingulate cortex. Brodmann area 23 and 29 (shown in red) correspond to the posterior cingulate cortex and retrosplenial cortex. ATN, anterior thalamic nucleus.
FIGURE 4Cingular connectivity of individual thalamic nuclei. Represented is an overview of the quantity of studies tracking the terminations of individual thalamic nuclei once enclose within the cingulate cortex. Brodmann area (BA) 24, 33, and 32 (shown in blue) correspond to the anterior cingulate cortex. Brodmann area (23 and 29 (shown in red) correspond to the posterior cingulate cortex and retrosplenial cortex. AD, anterodorsal nucleus; AM, anteromedial nucleus; ATN, anterior thalamic nucleus; AV, anteroventral nucleus.