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Fibre organization of the monkey's optic tract: I. Segregation of functionally distinct optic axons.

Abstract:
The fibre organization of the monkey's optic tract was examined by implanting pellets of horseradish peroxidase into different locations within the tract, or into the superior colliculus and pretectum. Retinae were examined for the distribution, size, and morphological types of retrogradely labelled ganglion cells; optic tracts were examined for the distribution of anterogradely and retrogradely labelled axonal profiles; and lateral geniculate nuclei were examined for the distribution of anterogradely labelled processes within distinct geniculate laminae. Localized implants in the optic tract produced retrograde labelling of ganglion cells across wide regions of the retinal surface. The maximum density of labelled cells was always substantially less than the total ganglion cell density known to be present at those retinal loci. Distinct retinal ganglion cell types were labelled from differing regions within the optic tract: implants into the deep (dorsal) portion of the tract, far removed from the outer, pial, surface, retrogradely labelled predominantly P beta retinal ganglion cells, whereas implants into the superficial (ventral), subpial, part of the tract retrogradely labelled primarily the other retinal ganglion cell types, i.e., the P alpha, P gamma, and P epsilon cells. Within any given class of axon, there is a mapping of the centroperipheral retinal axis across the deep-to-superficial dimension of the tract, but this retinotopy is extremely coarse. Anterograde labelling of axonal terminations within the lateral geniculate nucleus showed a corresponding specificity for distinct geniculate laminae, the deep implants labelling the parvocellular laminae, superficial implants labelling the magnocellular laminae. Implants into the visual centres of the midbrain produced retrograde axonal labelling rostral to the lateral geniculate nucleus only in the superficial part of the optic tract. These results demonstrate that the monkey's optic tract is not a simple topographic mapping of retinal eccentricity. Rather, the primary organizational principle is that of a segregation of functionally distinct optic axon classes. As fibre order in the mammalian optic tract is also a chronological index of axonal arrival during development, the present results provide specific predictions about the temporal order of ganglion call genesis and axonal addition within the visual pathway. They also provide an anatomical basis for the functionally selective visual impairments that may arise following local damage to the optic tract in humans.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1002/cne.902950304

Authors


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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Experimental Psychology
Role:
Author


Journal:
Journal of comparative neurology More from this journal
Volume:
295
Issue:
3
Pages:
385-400
Publication date:
1990-05-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1096-9861
ISSN:
0021-9967


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:24960
UUID:
uuid:8f02fc39-e730-48f1-8296-c7eb9048a28a
Local pid:
pubs:24960
Source identifiers:
24960
Deposit date:
2012-12-19

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