Afferent activity has an important role in the formation of connections in the developing mammalian visual system. But the extent to which the activity of target neurons shapes patterns of afferent termination and synaptic contact is not known. In the ferret's visual pathway, retinal ganglion cell axons from each eye segregate early in development into eye-specific laminae in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN). The dorsal laminae (termed laminae A and A1) then segregate further into inner and outer sublaminae that retain input from on-centre and off-centre retinal axons, respectively. Thus, individual retinogeniculate axons form terminal arbors within laminae A and A1 that are restricted to one inner or outer sublamina. We report here that blockade of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors on LGN cells with specific antagonists during the period of sublamina formation prevents retinal afferents from segregating into 'On' and 'Off' sublaminae. Retinogeniculate axons have arbors that are not restricted appropriately, or are restricted in size but inappropriately positioned within the eye-specific laminae. NMDA receptor antagonists may specifically disrupt a mechanism by which LGN neurons detect correlated afferent and target activity, and have been shown to reduce retinogeniculate transmission more generally, causing LGN cells to have markedly reduced levels of activity. These results therefore indicate that the activity of postsynaptic cells can significantly influence the patterning of inputs and the structure of presynaptic afferents during development.
The ferret retinogeniculate projection segregates into eyespecific layers during the first postnatal week and into ON/OFF sublaminae, which receive inputs from either on-center or offcenter retinal ganglion cells, during the third and fourth postnatal weeks. The restriction of retinogeniculate axon arbors into eye-specific layers appears to depend on action potential activity (Shatz and Stryker, 1988) but does not require activation of NMDA receptors (Smetters et al., 1994). The formation of ON/OFF sublaminae is also activity-dependent and is disrupted by in vivo blockade of NMDA receptors (Hahm et al., 1991). To investigate a possible mechanism whereby blockade of postsynaptic NMDA receptors in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) results in changes in the size and position of presynaptic axon arbors, we tested the role of the diffusible messenger nitric oxide (NO) in the development of the retinogeniculate pathway. We found previously that NO synthase (NOS) is transiently expressed in LGN cells during the refinement of retinogeniculate projections . In this study, treatment with N G -nitro-L-arginine (L-NoArg), an arginine analog that inhibits NOS, during the third and fourth postnatal weeks resulted in an overall pattern of sublamination that was significantly reduced compared with normal and control animals. Single retinogeniculate axon arbors were located in the middle of eye-specific layers rather than toward the inner or outer half as in normal or control animals. The effect of NOS inhibition was not a consequence of the hypertensive effect of L-NoArg. In contrast to the effect of L-NoArg on the formation of ON/OFF sublaminae, treatment with L-NoArg during the first postnatal week did not disrupt the formation of eye-specific layers. Biochemical assays indicated significant inhibition of NOS during both treatment periods. These data suggest that NO acts together with NMDA receptors in activity-dependent refinement of connections during a specific phase of retinogeniculate development. Key words: diffusible messenger; visual system; lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN); pattern formation; eye-specific layers; ON/ OFF sublaminae; neuronal activityThe precise pattern of connections underlying adult visual processing in mammals arises from the refinement of less specific connectivity present early in development. The mechanisms by which diffuse connections are refined rely at least in part on neuronal activity. In the ferret, retinogeniculate connections are refined in two distinct phases. During the first postnatal week, retinal axons within the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) segregate into eye-specific layers (Linden et al., 1981). During the third and fourth postnatal weeks, afferents to the A and A1 layers, which receive input from the contralateral and ipsilateral eye, respectively, further segregate into sublaminae. The inner sublamina receives inputs from on-center retinal ganglion cells, whereas the outer sublamina receives inputs from off-center retinal ganglion cells (Stryker and Zahs, 1983;Hahm and S...
Maps of sensory surfaces are a fundamental feature of sensory cortical areas of the brain. The relative roles of afferents and targets in forming neocortical maps in higher mammals can be examined in ferrets in which retinal inputs are directed into the auditory pathway. In these animals, the primary auditory cortex contains a systematic representation of the retina (and of visual space) rather than a representation of the cochlea (and of sound frequency). A representation of a two-dimensional sensory epithelium, the retina, in cortex that normally represents a one-dimensional epithelium, the cochlea, suggests that the same cortical area can support different types of maps. Topography in the visual map arises both from thalamocortical projections that are characteristic of the auditory pathway and from patterns of retinal activity that provide the input to the map.
The influence of cortical feedback on receptive field organization in the thalamus was assessed in the primate somatosensory system. Chronic and acute suppression of neuronal activity in primary somatosensory cortex resulted in a striking enlargement of receptive fields in the ventroposterior thalamus. This finding demonstrates a dramatic 'top-down' influence of cortex on receptive field size in the somatosensory thalamus. In addition, this result has important implications for studies of adult neuronal plasticity because it indicates that changes in 'higher-order' areas of the brain can trigger extensive changes in the receptive field characteristics of neurons located earlier in the processing pathway.
The projection from the retina to the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) in ferrets segregates during development into eye‐specific layers and ON/OFF sublayers. The projection pattern and the morphology of single axons was examined at several postnatal ages. The axons progress from a simple, sparsely branched morphology at birth to crude arbors at postnatal day 7 (P7). At P14–P15, axons have terminal arbors that span one eye‐specific layer. By P19–P21, retinal afferents in the A layers have segregated into inner and outer sublaminae that correspond to ON‐ and OFF‐center cells. Sublaminae form mainly by directed growth of terminal arbors in appropriately positioned regions of the LGN, along with elimination of extraneous branches in inappropriate regions. From P28 to P35, the LGN assumes an adult‐like shape, and retinogeniculate axons form terminal boutons on branch endings. During the period between P14 and P21, when retinogeniculate axons segregate into ON/OFF sublaminae, N‐methyl‐D‐aspartate (NMDA) receptors were blocked with chronic infusion of specific antagonists into the LGN. NMDA receptor blockade prevents the retinal afferent segregation into ON/OFF sublaminae. Some individual retinogeniculate axons have arbors that are not restricted appropriately, and most are restricted in size but are located inappropriately within the eye‐specific laminae. Thus, NMDA receptor blockade prevents the positioning of retinogeniculate arbors that lead to the formation of ON/OFF sublaminae in the LGN. These results indicate that the activity of postsynaptic cells, and the activation of NMDA receptors in particular, can influence significantly the patterning of inputs and the structure of presynaptic afferents during development. J. Comp. Neurol. 411:327–345, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Ferret retinal axons can be induced to innervate the medial geniculate nucleus (MGN) by a combination of brain lesions early in development. Our previous work suggests that the retinal ganglion cells responsible for this plasticity are W cells. The present study continues this work with a morphological investigation of normal retinal ganglion-cell axons and retinal ganglion-cell axons induced to arborize in the MGN. Retinal axons were bulk filled with horseradish peroxidase placed in the optic tract, and individual axons were serially reconstructed from sagittal sections. The control population consisted of fine-caliber axons arborizing in the superior colliculus (SC) and in the ventral C laminae of the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) of normal ferrets. We also compared the axons in the MGN of lesioned ferrets to intracellularly filled X and Y axons from normal ferrets as reported by Roe et al. ([1989] J. Comp. Neurol. 288:208). We have found that the retino-MGN axons in the lesioned ferrets do not resemble X or Y axons in normal ferrets in axon diameter, arbor volume, bouton number, or bouton density. However, they do resemble the fine-caliber, presumed W axons arborizing in the C laminae of the LGN and in the SC of normal ferrets. Thus, this study, in combination with previous studies, suggests strongly that W retinal ganglion cells are responsible for the retinal input to the MGN in lesioned animals. In addition, we find that the retino-MGN axons are of two types, branched and unbranched, which may correspond to different subtypes of retinal W cells.
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