Functional Organization of Extraocular Motoneurons and Eye Muscles

Annu Rev Vis Sci. 2021 Sep 15:7:793-825. doi: 10.1146/annurev-vision-100119-125043.

Abstract

Eye movements are indispensable for visual image stabilization during self-generated and passive head and body motion and for visual orientation. Eye muscles and neuronal control elements are evolutionarily conserved, with novel behavioral repertoires emerging during the evolution of frontal eyes and foveae. The precise execution of eye movements with different dynamics is ensured by morphologically diverse yet complementary sets of extraocular muscle fibers and associated motoneurons. Singly and multiply innervated muscle fibers are controlled by motoneuronal subpopulations with largely selective premotor inputs from task-specific ocular motor control centers. The morphological duality of the neuromuscular interface is matched by complementary biochemical and molecular features that collectively assign different physiological properties to the motor entities. In contrast, the functionality represents a continuum where most motor elements contribute to any type of eye movement, although within preferential dynamic ranges, suggesting that signal transmission and muscle contractions occur within bands of frequency-selective pathways.

Keywords: abducens nucleus; eye movement; multiply innervated fibers; oculomotor nucleus; singly innervated fibers; trochlear nucleus.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Eye Movements
  • Motor Neurons* / physiology
  • Oculomotor Muscles* / physiology