Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 8, 395-416, Copyright © 1988 by Society for Neuroscience
The effect of altered neuronal activity on the development of layers in the lateral geniculate nucleus
VA Casagrande and GJ Condo
Department of Cell Biology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232.
The main objective of this study was to examine the role of neural activity
in the development of cell layers in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus
(LGN). We studied this relationship in postnatal tree shrews either by
completely blocking retinal ganglion cell activity with TTX or by
selectively blocking activity to the developing ON-center LGN layers (1 and
2) with 2-amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid (APB), using unilateral and
bilateral eye injections. All manipulations were carried out from birth
(P0), when no LGN cell layers are evident, to or past the point when layers
are recognizable (i.e., 1-2 weeks). Nissl-stained and cytochrome oxidase
(CO)-reacted material was examined for all cases. Our results show that in
the absence of activity produced by bilateral TTX injections, interlaminar
spaces between cell layers do begin to develop. Retinal afferents, which
are segregated at birth, remain segregated, and differential CO staining
between matched sets of LGN layers is evident. The normal pace of LGN
development, however, is slowed significantly: LGN cells are smaller and
interlaminar spaces are narrower than are seen in age-matched controls.
Unilateral TTX injections produce similar, but more dramatic and
asymmetric, effects on LGN cells, perhaps because cells are at a
competitive disadvantage relative to their normally innervated counterparts
in cortex. Combining unilateral eye enucleation at P0 with subsequent TTX
treatment of the other eye clearly demonstrates that axons from the
remaining eye are capable of producing their normal complement of LGN
layers. The development of the LGN ON-center layers, 1 and 2, and the
interlaminar space between them are more affected by TTX treatment than are
the other layers. By contrast, APB eye injections do not selectively affect
the development of the ON-center layers, but do result in some slowing of
overall LGN development. Taken together, these results suggest that
activity of retinal afferents is not essential for initiating interlaminar
space formation, but is important for the normal pace of maturation of LGN
cell layers.