The morphology of the mouse cerebellum. 1979

E Marani, and J Voogd

In this description of the morphology of the mouse cerebellum, the main landmarks for subdivision were the discontinuities of the cortical sheet. In certain cerebellar sulci in the posterior lobe, the cortex is absent. Within the paramedian sulcus the cortex is interrupted rostral and caudal to the copula pyramidis. Rostrally, this discontinuity between vermis and hemisphere occupies a position corresponding to the intercrural sulcus of the ansiform lobule of other mammals. A subdivision into the simple lobule (VI and HVI), ansiform and paramedian lobule (HVII) and vermal lobule VII is proposed for this region, which accounts for the position of this cortexless area in the intercrural sulcus. Caudal to the copula pyramidis is the cortex is interrupted at the bottom of the paramedian sulcus between lobules X, IX and caudal VIII medially, and the paraflocculus and flocculus laterally. In most mammals, this area, devoid of cortex, extends much farther in the interparafloccular sulcus between the dorsal paraflocculus and the flocculus with the ventral paraflocculus. From the medullary surface of the cerebellar peduncles an area without cortex extends in between the ansiform lobule and the paraflocculus onto the copula pyramidis and the paramedian lobule. The nomenclature of the distal, foliated part of the paraflocculus in mouse, rat and rabbit is discussed.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008815 Mice, Inbred Strains Genetically identical individuals developed from brother and sister matings which have been carried out for twenty or more generations, or by parent x offspring matings carried out with certain restrictions. All animals within an inbred strain trace back to a common ancestor in the twentieth generation. Inbred Mouse Strains,Inbred Strain of Mice,Inbred Strain of Mouse,Inbred Strains of Mice,Mouse, Inbred Strain,Inbred Mouse Strain,Mouse Inbred Strain,Mouse Inbred Strains,Mouse Strain, Inbred,Mouse Strains, Inbred,Strain, Inbred Mouse,Strains, Inbred Mouse
D002531 Cerebellum The part of brain that lies behind the BRAIN STEM in the posterior base of skull (CRANIAL FOSSA, POSTERIOR). It is also known as the "little brain" with convolutions similar to those of CEREBRAL CORTEX, inner white matter, and deep cerebellar nuclei. Its function is to coordinate voluntary movements, maintain balance, and learn motor skills. Cerebella,Corpus Cerebelli,Parencephalon,Cerebellums,Parencephalons
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D051379 Mice The common name for the genus Mus. Mice, House,Mus,Mus musculus,Mice, Laboratory,Mouse,Mouse, House,Mouse, Laboratory,Mouse, Swiss,Mus domesticus,Mus musculus domesticus,Swiss Mice,House Mice,House Mouse,Laboratory Mice,Laboratory Mouse,Mice, Swiss,Swiss Mouse,domesticus, Mus musculus

Related Publications

E Marani, and J Voogd
October 1995, The Journal of comparative neurology,
E Marani, and J Voogd
July 1903, Journal of anatomy and physiology,
E Marani, and J Voogd
June 1976, Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe C: Anatomie, Histologie, Embryologie,
E Marani, and J Voogd
January 1974, Trabajos del Instituto Cajal de investigaciones biologicas,
E Marani, and J Voogd
January 1992, European journal of morphology,
E Marani, and J Voogd
January 1955, Acta anatomica,
E Marani, and J Voogd
November 1967, Archives of neurology,
E Marani, and J Voogd
January 1978, Zhurnal nevropatologii i psikhiatrii imeni S.S. Korsakova (Moscow, Russia : 1952),
E Marani, and J Voogd
January 1978, Folia morphologica,
E Marani, and J Voogd
April 1975, Arkhiv anatomii, gistologii i embriologii,
Copied contents to your clipboard!