Studies of lateral, median, and ventral eyes of the chelicerate arthropod Limulus polyphemus (the common American horseshoe crab) are providing important basic information about mechanisms for information processing in the peripheral visual system and for the modulation of visual responses by light and circadian rhythms. The processing of visual information in Limulus brain is less well understood in part because the specific central projections of the various classes of visual neurons are not known. This study describes a mouse monoclonal antibody, 3C6A3, which binds to Limulus photoreceptor cell bodies, their axons, and terminals, but not to any other cell type in the central nervous system. This antibody, and intracellular injection of biocytin, are used to demonstrate the central projections of each type of photoreceptor. Our main conclusions are that: 1) the photoreceptors (retinular cells) of the lateral eye project only to the lamina; 2) the photoreceptors of the lateral rudimentary eye project to both the lamina and medulla; 3) the photoreceptors of the median ocellus project only to the ocellar ganglion; and 4) the photoreceptors of the rudimentary median (endoparietal) eye project to the ocellar ganglion and also into the optic tract. These results, along with previous studies, allow us to infer the projections of the secondary cells. The eccentric cells of the lateral eye project to the lamina, medulla, optic tract, and ocellar ganglion. The arhabdomeral cells of the median ocellus project through the ocellar ganglion and to optic tract to the medulla.
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