Evolution and development of extraocular motor neurons, nerves and muscles in vertebrates.

Ann Anat

Department of Neurological Sciences, University of Nebraska Medical Center, NE, USA. Electronic address:

Published: April 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - This review examines how ocular motor neurons develop, detailing how they connect to the six extraocular eye muscles and the specific cranial nerves (CNIII, CNIV, CNVI) responsible for their innervation.
  • - It highlights that the oculomotor neurons primarily originate in the midbrain, while trochlear and abducens neurons have distinct origins and function in moving different eye muscles.
  • - The review also addresses how genetic factors can lead to congenital disorders that affect the development of these neurons and their connections to extraocular muscles, as well as the relationship between ocular motor neurons and vestibular pathways.

Article Abstract

The purpose of this review is to analyze the origin of ocular motor neurons, define the pattern of innervation of nerve fibers that project to the extraocular eye muscles (EOMs), describe congenital disorders that alter the development of ocular motor neurons, and provide an overview of vestibular pathway inputs to ocular motor nuclei. Six eye muscles are innervated by axons of three ocular motor neurons, the oculomotor (CNIII), trochlear (CNIV), and abducens (CNVI) neurons. Ocular motor neurons (CNIII) originate in the midbrain and innervate the ipsilateral orbit, except for the superior rectus and the levator palpebrae, which are contralaterally innervated. Trochlear motor neurons (CNIV) originate at the midbrain-hindbrain junction and innervate the contralateral superior oblique muscle. Abducens motor neurons (CNVI) originate variously in the hindbrain of rhombomeres r4-6 that innervate the posterior (or lateral) rectus muscle and innervate the retractor bulbi. Genes allow a distinction between special somatic (CNIII, IV) and somatic (CNVI) ocular motor neurons. Development of ocular motor neurons and their axonal projections to the EOMs may be derailed by various genetic causes, resulting in the congenital cranial dysinnervation disorders. The ocular motor neurons innervate EOMs while the vestibular nuclei connect with the midbrain-brainstem motor neurons.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aanat.2024.152225DOI Listing

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