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Volume 16, Number 17,
Issue of September 1, 1996
pp. 5510-5522
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Anatomical Demonstration of Ocular Dominance Columns in Striate
Cortex of the Squirrel Monkey
Jonathan C. Horton and
Davina R. Hocking
Beckman Vision Center, University of California at San Francisco,
San Francisco, California 94143-0730
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
The squirrel monkey is the only primate reported to lack ocular
dominance columns. Nothing anomalous about the visual capacity of
squirrel monkeys has been found to explain their missing columns,
leading to the suggestion that ocular dominance columns might be ``an
epiphenomenon, not serving any purpose'' (Livingstone et al., 1995 ).
Puzzled by the apparent lack of ocular dominance columns in squirrel
monkeys, we made eye injections with transneuronal tracers in four
normal squirrel monkeys. An irregular mosaic of columns, averaging 225 µm in width, was found throughout striate cortex. They were
double-labeled by placing wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase
into the left eye and [3H]proline into the right eye. The
tracers labeled opposite sets of interdigitating columns, proving they
represent ocular dominance columns. The columns were much clearer in
layer IVc (magno-receiving) than IVc (parvo-receiving). In the
lateral geniculate body, the parvo laminae showed extensive mixing of
ocular inputs, suggesting that increased label spillover contributes to
the blurred columns in layer IVc . The cytochrome oxidase (CO)
patches were organized into distinct rows, but they bore no consistent
relationship to the ocular dominance columns. These experiments
indicate that ocular dominance columns are less well segregated in
squirrel monkeys than macaques, but they are present. This fact is
pertinent to a recent study reporting that ocular dominance columns are
absent in normal squirrel monkeys, but induced to form by strabismus
(Livingstone, 1996 ).
Key words:
ocular dominance columns;
squirrel monkey;
striate
cortex;
cytochrome oxidase patches;
strabismus;
stereopsis
INTRODUCTION
In layer IVc of striate cortex (primary visual
cortex, V1), the afferents from the lateral geniculate body serving
each eye are segregated into an elaborate mosaic of alternating inputs
called ocular dominance columns (Hubel and Wiesel, 1965 , 1969 ). Despite
more than three decades of intensive research, the function of these
columns has remained an enigma. The presence or absence of ocular
dominance columns has been studied in a wide variety of species,
searching for a clue to their role in visual processing. The data from
this comparative anatomical approach are summarized in Table
1. It has been suggested that ocular dominance columns
are part of the neural mechanism for stereoscopy (LeVay and Nelson,
1991 ). This notion is compatible with the grouping of species reflected
in Table 1. In general, the species listed with ocular dominance
columns are thought to have better stereovision than those without,
although not all species have been tested.
Table 1.
Ocular dominance columns in striate
cortex
|
|
|
| Macaque |
Talapoin
monkey |
Rat |
(Hubel and Wiesel, 1969 ) |
(Florence
and Kaas, 1992 ) |
(Hubel and Wiesel,
1977 ) |
| Human |
Capuchin monkey |
Mouse |
(Hitchcock and
Hickey, 1980 ) |
(Hess and Edwards,
1987 ) |
(Dräger, 1974 ) |
(Horton and
Hedley-Whyte, 1984 ) |
(Rosa et al., 1988 ) |
Tree shrew |
| Owl
monkey |
White-faced saki |
(Casagrande and Harting,
1975 ) |
(Rowe et al., 1978 ) |
(Florence and Kaas,
1992 ) |
(Hubel, 1975 ) |
(Diamond et al.,
1985 ) |
Chimpanzee |
Gray squirrel |
| Marmoset |
(Tigges
and Tigges, 1979 ) |
(Weber et al., 1977 ) |
(DeBruyn
and Casagrande, 1981 ) |
Cat |
Brushtailed possum |
(Spatz,
1989 ) |
(Shatz and Wiesel, 1977) |
(Sanderson et al.,
1980 ) |
| Green vervet |
Ferret |
Rabbit |
(Hendrickson et
al., 1978 ) |
(Law et al., 1988 ) |
(Holländer
and Hälbig, 1980 ) |
| Red
monkey |
Mink |
Sheep |
(Hendrickson et al.,
1978 ) |
(McConnell and LeVay, 1986 ) |
(Pettigrew et
al., 1984 ) |
| Baboon |
Bushbaby |
Goat |
(Hendrickson et
al., 1978 ) |
(Glendenning et al., 1976 ) |
(Pettigrew
et al., 1984 ) |
| Spider monkey |
(Hubel and Wiesel,
1977 ) |
(Florence et al., 1986 ) |
(Diamond et al.,
1985 ) |
|
|
|
|
The squirrel monkey is a conspicuous exception to the dichotomy
reflected in Table 1. It is the only primate reported to lack ocular
dominance columns. Hubel et al. (1976) found no hint of ocular
dominance columns in either hemisphere after injection of tritiated
amino acids into one eye. Their absence was confirmed subsequently by
numerous investigators with axon tracing methods and deoxyglucose
autoradiography (Tigges et al., 1977 ; Hendrickson et al., 1978 ; Rowe et
al., 1978 ; Hendrickson and Wilson, 1979 ; Humphrey and Hendrickson,
1983 ; Tigges et al., 1984 ; Hendrickson and Tigges, 1985 ).
Recently, Livingstone et al. (1995) published the first data pertaining
to stereoscopic depth perception in the squirrel monkey. They recorded
robust evoked potentials to patterns generated by dynamic random-dot
stereograms. From this finding, they concluded that the squirrel monkey
can detect stereosopic depth, which ``casts some doubt on the
assumption that ocular dominance columns bear an important relation to
stereopsis'' (Livingstone et al., 1995 ).
In view of the findings by Livingstone and colleagues (1995), if ocular
dominance columns are absent in squirrel monkeys, they obviously cannot
be critical for stereovision. Although the weight of evidence cited
above denying their existence seemed persuasive, anatomical methods
have improved with the introduction of radioactive tracers of greater
specific activity and the development of better techniques to
flat-mount the visual cortex (Horton, 1984 ; Olavarria and Van Sluyters,
1985 ; Tootell and Silverman, 1985 ). For example, Murphy et al. (1995)
recently have found a pattern of cytochrome oxidase (CO) staining in
flat-mounted striate cortex of cats that was missed by previous
observers (Wong-Riley, 1979 ; Horton and Hubel, 1981 ; Horton, 1984 ;
Price, 1985 ). Their discovery illustrates the value of re-examining the
cortex for subtle columnar patterns that might have eluded earlier
efforts. Consequently, before consigning squirrel monkeys to the
category of goats, rabbits, and other species bereft of ocular
dominance columns, we decided to look again for ocular dominance
columns in squirrel monkeys.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Eye injection of tracer. These experiments were
conducted in four unrelated male squirrel monkeys (Saimiri
sciureus) from the California Regional Primate Research Center.
Their vital statistics are provided in Table 2. Before
use, each animal received a complete neurovisual examination by a
board-certified ophthalmologist (J.C.H.). The pupils, eye movements,
eye alignment, ocular media, cycloplegic retinoscopy, and dilated fundi
were normal. Specifically, no evidence for media opacity, abnormal or
unequal refractive error, or strabismus was found in any animal.
Table 2.
Measurements of squirrel monkey
V1
|
Monkey
2 |
Monkey 3 |
Monkey 4 |
Mean |
|
| Body weight
(gm) |
1080 |
1320 |
740 |
|
| Age |
11
yr 2 months
|
7 yr 3 months
|
11 yr 7 months
|
|
| Hemisphere |
Left |
Right |
Left |
Right |
Left |
Right |
|
| Area
V1
(mm2) |
582 |
631 |
716 |
719 |
772 |
774 |
699 |
| Area
V1 on operculum
(mm2) |
147 |
126 |
153 |
168 |
165 |
200 |
160 |
| Area
operculum/area
V1 |
25% |
20% |
21% |
23% |
21% |
26% |
23% |
| Perimeter
V1 (mm) |
101 |
106 |
109 |
111 |
112 |
109 |
108 |
| Major axis
(mm) |
30.6 |
31.4 |
34.2 |
33.4 |
33.4 |
33.7 |
32.8 |
| Minor
axis
(mm) |
26.0 |
25.4 |
28.9 |
29.0 |
29.3 |
30.4 |
28.2 |
| Major/minor
axis |
1.18 |
1.24 |
1.18 |
1.15 |
1.13 |
1.11 |
1.17 |
| Patch
density
(patches/mm2) |
4.64 |
4.34 |
3.54 |
3.89 |
3.97 |
3.81 |
4.03 |
| Number
of patches
counted |
501 |
473 |
382 |
420 |
429 |
412 |
|
|
|
a
Monkey 1 was an 18 month old, 900 gm
male. The tissue tore during flat-mounting so no area measurements were
included in this table.
|
|
Monkey 1 received an injection of wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish
peroxidase (WGA-HRP) in the right eye to label the
retino-thalamo-cortical projection by anterograde transneuronal
transport (Itaya et al., 1984 ). The animal was anesthetized with
ketamine HCl (10 mg/kg, i.m.) and with one drop of topical 4%
tetracaine HCl. A drop of scopolamine HBr 0.25% was applied topically
for mydriasis. The right eye was then massaged for several minutes to
lower the intraocular pressure below 10 mmHg. This procedure
prevented reflux of tracer after injection into the eye. One milligram
of WGA-HRP (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) dissolved in 20 µl of balanced salt
solution (Alcon Labs, Fort Worth, TX) was injected through the sclera
3.5 mm from the superotemporal limbus with a 29 gauge needle. The
tracer was placed accurately into the mid-vitreous by putting a guard
on the needle shank 7 mm from the tip and by watching the position of
the needle in the eye with an indirect ophthalmoscope during injection.
After tracer delivery, a retrobulbar injection of 1 mg dexamethasone
phosphate was made to minimize intraocular inflammation from the
WGA-HRP. The animal was perfused 4 d later.
In monkeys 2, 3, and 4, the retino-thalamo-cortical projection was
double-labeled by injecting [3H]proline into the right
eye and WGA-HRP into the left eye. Two milliCurie of
L-[2,3,4,5-3H]proline, specific activity
102-106 Ci/mmol (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL), were dried under
N2 gas, reconstituted in 20 µl of balanced salt solution,
and injected into the right eye using the same technique described
above for WGA-HRP injection in monkey 1. Four days later, 1 mg of
WGA-HRP was injected into the left eye. Again, 1 mg of dexamethasone
was injected in the retrobulbar space to reduce eye inflammation from
the WGA-HRP.
Histological procedures. After allowing 9 d for
[3H]proline transport and 5 d for WGA-HRP transport
(except monkey 1, which received only WGA-HRP and 4 d for
transport), the monkeys were given a lethal injection of 500 mg of
pentobarbital sodium into the peritoneal cavity. They were perfused
through the left ventricle with 1 l of normal saline followed by
1 l of 2% paraformaldehyde. The lateral geniculate bodies and
occipital lobes were placed immediately into 0.1 M PBS.
Visual cortex was dissected from the white matter of the occipital
lobe, unfolded, flattened with gentle pressure (~8
gm/cm2), and cryoprotected overnight with 30% sucrose. It
was then frozen flat by placing the pial surface on a plastic-coated
slide while pressing against the white matter with a bag of powdered
dry ice (Horton, 1984 ). Sections were cut at 35 µm on a freezing
microtome. For monkey 1, alternating sections were mounted and
processed for CO activity (Wong-Riley, 1979 ) or reacted free-floating
to visualize WGA-HRP using tetramethylbenzidine (Mesulam, 1978 ). For
monkeys 2, 3, and 4, every third section was coated for autoradiography
with Kodak NTB2 emulsion, reacted for CO, or processed free-floating
for WGA-HRP. The lateral geniculate bodies were cut at 50 µm, and
alternating sections were processed for either WGA-HRP or
autoradiography. Selected sections of the cortex and the lateral
geniculate body were counterstained for Nissl substance.
Image analysis. Single WGA-HRP sections were photographed
under dark-field illumination through crossed polaroid filters with
Plus-X-Pan film (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY). The film was developed
with Microdol-X (Eastman Kodak) and scanned directly into a computer
using a Microtek 35t ScanMaster (Redondo Beach, CA). Photoshop 3.0 (Adobe Systems) software was used to prepare photomontages from
individual serial images. To montage a given cortical layer, a single
section containing the largest portion of that layer was selected as
the ``base section.'' An adjacent section was then inspected, and the
``lasso'' tool was used to encircle any portion of the section
containing the layer of interest. This area was rendered
semitransparent to align it with the underlying base section by
matching large blood vessels. The floating section fragment was then
merged with the base section. This process was repeated with subsequent
images until the montage was complete. The brightness and contrast of
individual sections were adjusted to blend fragments evenly and to
increase the visibility of columns. This procedure was equivalent to
altering the exposure or contrast grade of photographic paper in the
darkroom. Apart from these adjustments in brightness and contrast, the
images were not retouched or adulterated in any way with the computer
to erase seams between photomontage fragments or to enhance column
patterns.
The cortical autoradiographs were developed with D-19 (Eastman Kodak)
after an exposure of 10 weeks. Images were photographed in dark-field
illumination using Technical Pan film (Eastman Kodak) and processed
with Technidol (Eastman Kodak) developer. Negatives were then scanned
into the computer and processed as described above for WGA-HRP
images.
Sections stained for CO or Nissl substance were photographed
using 4 × 5 inch Ektapan (Eastman Kodak) film, developed with
HC110 (Eastman Kodak), and printed onto grade 4 Rapitone (Agfa) paper.
Quantitative measurements of the autoradiographs, CO, and WGA-HRP
sections were made using Mocha software (Jandel Scientific, San Rafael,
CA).
RESULTS
Columns in layer IVc
The surface of striate cortex in the living squirrel monkey is
covered by a dense vascular network, making it easy to see the V1/V2
boundary on the exposed cerebrum with the naked eye (Cowey, 1964 ). Even
after perfusion, this boundary remains obvious because striate cortex
is slightly darker than surrounding extrastriate cortex (Fig.
1). The exposed portion of striate cortex on the lateral
convexity of the hemisphere is called the ``operculum.'' This region,
the only portion of squirrel monkey striate cortex mapped in detail,
represents the central 3-4° of the visual hemifield (Cowey, 1964 ).
The remainder of striate cortex is situated along the medial face of
the hemisphere and within the calcarine fissure. The task of unfolding
and flattening striate cortex in a single piece is aided greatly by the
visibility of the V1/V2 border during dissection.
Fig. 1.
Brain of squirrel monkey 4 viewed from the rear
after perfusion. The V1/V2 boundary (arrowheads) is
visible to the naked eye because V1 is slightly darker. The portion of
V1 exposed posteriorly on the brain surface is called the operculum
(see shaded region in Fig. 3C). Most of
V1 is hidden from view, located along the medial surface of the
occipital lobe or folded within the calcarine fissure.
[View Larger Version of this Image (105K GIF file)]
A portion of a single section from the flattened left striate cortex of
monkey 1 processed for WGA-HRP is shown in Figure
2A. This region was located in the far
periphery of V1, buried in the anterior end of the calcarine fissure.
The bright WGA-HRP reaction product was not distributed in a uniform
manner. Instead, it formed a complex mosaic of light and dark columns
with indistinct borders. By later counterstaining for Nissl substance,
we determined that these columns were located in layer IVc . A
similar distribution of label was found in the right striate cortex.
The pattern was reminiscent of the ocular dominance columns in the cat,
which appear patchy (Shatz et al., 1977 ; Anderson et al., 1988 )
compared with the tidy ``zebra stripes'' of the macaque (LeVay et
al., 1985 ). The columns in Figure 2A were irregular and
blurred, making quantitative measurements difficult. An estimate of the
average column diameter was obtained by measuring the widths of 20 arbitrarily selected column pairs. The mean column diameter was 440 µm/pair (±90 µm SD).
Fig. 2.
A, Section from the peripheral left
striate cortex of monkey 1 through layer IVc showing the
distribution of WGA-HRP after injection into the right eye. The tracer
is organized into a complex mosaic of columns, interrupted by unlabeled
gaps. Arrowheads show key blood vessels used for section
alignment in panels A-D. B, CO-stained
section cut 210 µm more superficially from the same block, showing
the array of patches in layer III. C, Adjacent section
cut 35 µm deeper than B, showing distinct patches of
WGA-HRP, except in the center where the label becomes more confluent as
the section grazes the ``honeycomb'' in layer IVa. All the patches
are labeled equally after tracer injection into just one eye, and each
labeled patch superimposes on a CO patch in C.
D, Comparison between the labeled columns in
A, which have been reinforced in white,
and the patches in C, which have been outlined in
black. Overall, there is no consistent alignment between
the columns and patches, although occasionally they coincide. The mean
column width is 220 µm, whereas the patches are spaced ~500-700
µm apart.
[View Larger Version of this Image (153K GIF file)]
In layer IVc , the distribution of WGA-HRP label was dense and nearly
homogeneous, rendering the pattern of columns seen in layer IVc
almost invisible (not illustrated). Adjacent sections through layer
IVc and IVc stained for CO showed dark, uniform enzyme activity
(not illustrated). There was nothing in the CO stain to explain the
columns of WGA-HRP label discovered in layer IVc .
Figure 2B shows distinct patches (also known as puffs
or blobs) of CO activity in layers II,III from the same region of
cortex (Hendrickson et al., 1981 ; Horton and Hubel, 1981 ; Horton,
1984 ). An adjacent section, cut 35 µm deeper, revealed the
distribution of WGA-HRP label from the right eye (Fig. 2C).
There was a perfect match between each puff of WGA-HRP label and each
CO patch, confirming previous studies (Livingstone and Hubel, 1982 ;
Fitzpatrick et al., 1983 ; Weber et al., 1983 ; Horton, 1984 ; Itaya et
al., 1984 ). In the macaque, the CO patches are organized into long
rows, with each row fitting in register with an ocular dominance column
in layer IVc (Horton and Hubel, 1981 ; Horton, 1984 ). After tracer
injection into one eye, transneuronal label appears only in every other
row of CO patches, overlaying the labeled set of ocular dominance
columns (Horton and Hocking, 1996 ). In the squirrel monkey, on the
other hand, every CO patch was labeled equally by injection of tracer
into just one eye. This finding means that patches in the squirrel
monkey get direct binocular geniculate input, whereas in the macaque
this input is monocular.
The puffs of WGA-HRP label in layers II,III were similar in size
to the gaps in WGA-HRP label visible in layer IVc . To test the idea
that the gaps in layer IVc might correspond to the puffs in layers
II,III, we drew the labeled columns in Figure 2A by
eye. The puffs in Figure 2C were outlined in a similar
manner. The two patterns were then superimposed on the computer screen
and aligned by matching prominent blood vessels (Fig. 2D).
In some regions, the puffs of label in the upper layers seemed to fall
into the unlabeled gaps in layer IVc . However, in other areas, the
puffs of label in layers II,III coincided with the label in layer
IVc , or straddled the border between labeled and unlabeled columns.
Overall, we could detect no consistent relationship between the pattern
of label in layer IVc and the puffs of label corresponding to the CO
patches.
Double-label evidence for ocular dominance columns
We next sought to clarify whether the columns of label shown in
Figure 2A truly represent ocular dominance columns. To
qualify as ocular dominance columns, which are defined as
alternating inputs in layer IVc, the unlabeled gaps must be
supplied by the other eye. In a different scheme of cortical
organization, one might imagine geniculate afferents serving each eye
projecting to the same regions of layer IVc, leaving uninnervated gaps
within a mosaic of intermingled binocular input. To distinguish between
these two possibilities, a different transneuronal tracer was injected
into each eye to double-label striate cortex.
Monkeys 2, 3, and 4 received [3H]proline in the right eye
and WGA-HRP in the left eye. In all six hemispheres, the
[3H]proline label showed columns in layer IVc . The
WGA-HRP label failed in monkey 3, yielding diffuse label and no columns
in layer IVc. For this reason, comparison between WGA-HRP and
[3H]proline was possible only in monkeys 2 and 4. We
illustrate monkey 4, but the results we describe were confirmed in
monkey 2.
Figure 3A shows a photomontage of WGA-HRP
label in layer IVc of the flat-mounted right cortex of monkey 4. The
montage was constructed almost entirely from just three sections. In
the squirrel monkey, layer IVc receives input from the magnocellular
laminae of the lateral geniculate body (Fitzpatrick et al., 1983 ; Weber
et al., 1983 ). Looking closely, one can see an extensive mosaic of
fine, irregular columns throughout most of the montage. The columns are
difficult to appreciate because their contrast is low and their borders
are indistinct. Layer IVc , the parvo-receiving cortical layer,
showed even less distinct columns. We could not find a break in the
WGA-HRP label corresponding to the blind spot representation in layer
IVc or layer IVc . In fact, we found no evidence for a label-free
zone that might correspond to the blind spot in any animal with either
proline or WGA-HRP. The same was true for the monocular crescent: no
animal had a distinct zone at the anterior end of striate cortex with
label from only the contralateral eye. We do not understand why these
monocular landmarks were not seen.
Fig. 3.
A, Montage of WGA-HRP label from
the left eye in layer IVc of the right cortex of monkey 4. Faint
columns are visible throughout most of the montage. The
rectangle delineates the portion of the flat-mount shown
at higher power in Figure 4. B, Montage of
autoradiographs through layer IVc showing columns of
[3H]proline label from the right eye. C,
Sketch of the columns labeled in V1, prepared by combining the WGA-HRP
data in A and the proline data in B. The
contrast of the columns in B was reversed so that the
black columns throughout the figure represent the ocular
dominance columns of the right eye. They form an irregular array of
short stripes and islands, with a mean diameter of 225 µm. The
shaded area corresponds to the operculum, grossly
visible in Figure 1, representing the central 3-4°. Figure 3
continues.
[View Larger Versions of these Images (197K GIF file)]
Figure 3B shows a montage of [3H]proline in
layer IVc from the same flat-mount. The label was organized into a
pattern of indistinct columns, just like the WGA-HRP in adjacent
sections. The columns were more visible in the anterior half of striate
cortex, representing visual field beyond the central 10°. This effect
resulted from several technical artifacts. The ocular dominance columns
are known to label more crisply and strongly in peripheral cortex than
central cortex after proline eye injection (LeVay et al., 1978 ). In
addition, layer IVc was only ~80 µm thick after fixation,
flattening, and freezing of the cortex. As a result, cutting alternate
tangential sections at 35 µm left barely enough tissue to obtain a
piece of layer IVc for processing with each label: WGA-HRP,
[3H]proline, and CO. For any local portion of the
photomontage, the pattern of columns looked most distinct in either
WGA-HRP or [3H]proline, depending on which labeled
section happened to capture the heart of layer IVc . This is apparent
when comparing Figure 3, A and B. In areas where
the columns were seen best with proline, they were less visible with
WGA-HRP, and vice versa. The WGA-HRP and proline labels were
coextensive, together yielding columns that could be sketched with
reasonable accuracy throughout much of striate cortex (Fig.
3C). The columns formed an irregular lattice of short
stripes and patches, looking nothing like mosaics reconstructed in the
macaque and human. Their average periodicity, measured across 50 arbitrarily chosen sets of columns, was 450 µm/pair (±50 µm
SD).
The montages in Figure 3, A and B, could not be
compared directly, because blood vessels required for aligning the
montages were difficult to match at low power. Therefore, we analyzed
local portions of single, adjacent WGA-HRP sections and autoradiographs
at higher power. This allowed us to achieve reliable alignment of
column patterns by matching constellations of prominent fiduciary blood
vessels. An example is shown in Figure 4. The sections
of WGA-HRP label (Fig. 4A) and [3H]proline
label (Fig. 4B) are from the region of the flat-mount
enclosed by the box in Figure 3A. For each section, we drew
the columns independently and then superimposed them using matching
blood vessels as the sole criteria for alignment (Fig. 4D).
The columns of proline and WGA-HRP dovetailed into an alternating
pattern, indicating that they truly represent ocular dominance columns,
serving the right eye and the left eye, respectively.
Fig. 4.
A, Single section outlined by the
rectangle in Figure 3A passing mostly
through layer IVc showing columns of yellow WGA-HRP reaction product
from the left eye. At this magnification, the blood vessels used in
each panel for section alignment are visible
(arrowheads). B, Single autoradiograph
from an adjacent section showing columns of [3H]proline
label from the right eye. C, Single section cut 245 µm
more superficially from the same block showing the CO patches in layer
III. A glimpse of the V1/V2 border is seen at the top
left (arrow). D, Schematic
diagram showing columns of WGA-HRP label (A) in
yellow and columns of [3H]proline
(B) in blue. The two patterns dovetail,
indicating that they represent alternating inputs from the left and
right eyes, respectively. The blobs drawn in
brownish-orange represent the CO patches in
C. We found no correspondence between patches and ocular
dominance columns.
[View Larger Version of this Image (96K GIF file)]
We drew the CO patches in a section through layer III (Fig.
4C) to test their relationship to the ocular dominance
columns. The sketch of the patches was superimposed on the drawing of
ocular dominance columns, again relying on blood vessels for alignment
(Fig. 4D). There appeared to be no regular correlation
between the CO patches and the ocular dominance columns, confirming the
result illustrated in Figure 2D for monkey 1.
Scrambled parvocellular inputs in the lateral geniculate body
The ocular dominance columns we found in the squirrel monkey were
quite indistinct. Moreover, the columns were more blurred in layer
IVc than in layer IVc , whereas the reverse is true in the
macaque. We looked at the pattern of WGA-HRP and
[3H]proline label in the lateral geniculate body to see
whether excessive tracer spillover (LeVay et al., 1978 ) might account
for these differences.
In Nissl sections, the two magnocellular laminae were separated
by a narrow interlaminar fibrous zone (Fig.
5A,B). The [3H]proline label
was clearly segregated into distinct laminae (Fig. 5C,D).
The situation was different for the parvocellular laminae: in Nissl
sections, they fused into a single dorsal cell mass without fibrous
interlaminar zones to isolate left eye and right eye inputs (Le Gros
Clark, 1941 ). Previous investigators have identified four distinct
parvocellular laminae in squirrel monkeys by monocular visual
deprivation or by tracer injection into one eye (Doty et al., 1966 ;
Kaas et al., 1978 ; Fitzpatrick et al., 1983 ; Tigges et al., 1984 ).
Although we could recognize segregated inputs to laminae 5 and 6, the
inputs to laminae 3 and 4 were scrambled. Throughout the region
occupied by laminae 3 and 4 on each side, the [3H]proline
label was distributed in a mosaic of small patches, separated by
unlabeled gaps (Fig. 5C,D). Adjacent sections reacted for
WGA-HRP showed that the gaps were innervated by the other eye (not
illustrated). The intermingling of projections was so extensive that
laminae 3 and 4 hardly could be regarded as distinct laminae. The lack
of fibrous interlaminar zones to separate the parvo laminae and the
jumbling of inputs in laminae 3 and 4 probably explains why ocular
dominance columns were nearly invisible in layer IVc (parvo input)
compared with layer IVc (magno input).
Fig. 5.
Nissl sections of the left (A) and
right (B) lateral geniculate bodies showing a single
fused dorsal parvocellular mass, without fibrous interlaminar zones to
limit spillover of label. The two ventral magnocellular laminae are
separated by a fibrous interlaminar zone (arrows).
Autoradiographs of these sections are shown in C and
D. Laminae 3 and 4 on each side are comprised of an
archipelago of labeled and unlabeled islands, partly merging these
laminae and increasing the opportunity for label spillover. The
autoradiographs were stripped of their emulsion and stained with cresyl
violet to prepare the Nissl sections. Scale bar, 1 mm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (148K GIF file)]
In late fetal life, intermingled retinal inputs segregate into distinct
monocular laminae in the lateral geniculate body (Rakic, 1977 ) in a
process not unlike the formation of ocular dominance columns in the
cortex. What function do these laminae serve, and why are they so
poorly defined in the squirrel monkey? These questions, often posed
about the ocular dominance columns, are just as relevant for the
laminae of the lateral geniculate body.
Functional architecture of squirrel monkey striate cortex
Flat-mounting the occipital lobe provided a first look at the
overall shape of V1 in the squirrel monkey (Fig.
6). It appeared nearly circular, in
striking contrast to the elliptical form seen in macaques, humans, and
other primates with sharply defined ocular dominance columns oriented
perpendicular to the V1/V2 border. To measure the major axis, we
bisected V1 with a line drawn through the foveal representation where
V2 becomes thinnest. The minor axis was defined as the broadest
dimension perpendicular to the major axis. The mean ratio of
major/minor axis was 1.17/1. The equivalent ratio is 2.0-1.5/1 in the
macaque (Van Essen et al., 1984 ) and about 2/1 in the human (Horton and
Hoyt, 1991 ).
Fig. 6.
A, Single CO section from the right
cortex of monkey 4, the same flat-mount illustrated in Figure 3,
showing the patches in the upper layers. The CO stripes in V2 are also
visible. B, Sketch of the patches in V1 and the stripes
in V2. There are 2857 patches organized into rows, perpendicular to the
V1/V2 border (arrows). The density of patches is uniform
throughout V1. In V2, the thin stripes are darker than the thick
stripes.
[View Larger Version of this Image (122K GIF file)]
The mean area of V1 in six hemispheres was 699 mm2, close
to Cowey's original figure of 722 mm2 estimated from
serial sections cut through seven specimens. In each flat-mount, there
was a crease or gap in the cortical sheet along the hinge where it
folds around onto the operculum (Fig. 1). This artifact enabled us to
measure the operculum, which represents the central 3-4°. It
averaged 160 mm2, equivalent to 23% of the total striate
surface area. In macaques and humans, the central 3-4° accounts for
~35% of V1 (Van Essen et al., 1984 ; Horton and Hoyt, 1991 ). This
difference suggests that central vision is relatively less magnified in
squirrel monkeys.
In a flat-mount of the right cortex of monkey 4, we counted
2,857 patches in V1 (Fig. 6A), less than half the
total of 6000-9000 estimated for the macaque (Horton, 1984 ). The
patches were visible in all cortical layers except IVc and formed an
orderly array of rows oriented perpendicular to the V1/V2 border (Fig.
6B), just as in the macaque or human. These rows were spaced
500-700 µm apart. In the macaque, the density of patches depends on
the location in V1 (Horton, 1984 ; Livingstone and Hubel, 1984 ). To
measure the density of patches in different regions of squirrel monkey
V1, we placed a grid of 3 × 3 mm squares over each flat-mount and
counted the patches within 12 widely separated sample boxes. The
density of patches did not vary with location. The average patch
density (4.03/mm2) (Table 2) was less than the patch
density in the macaque operculum (5.14/mm2) (Horton,
1984 ).
DISCUSSION
In all eight hemispheres of four normal squirrel monkeys, we found
columns in layer IVc after eye injection with a transneuronal tracer.
In two animals, we successfully double-labeled these columns by putting
[3H]proline into one eye and WGA-HRP into the other eye.
Comparison of adjacent sections showed interdigitation of the two
cortical labels, establishing that squirrel monkeys have ocular
dominance columns. They were indistinct, indicating that ocular inputs
vary widely in their degree of cortical segregation among primates, but
their presence was unequivocal. Although the function of ocular
dominance columns remains unknown, the notion that they are important
for stereopsis is still a valid concept, albeit unproven.
In the first study of squirrel monkey after [3H]proline
eye injection, Hubel et al. (1976) found ``no hint of any columnar
organization.'' This surprising result was confirmed by other
investigators using the same methods (Tigges et al., 1977 ; Hendrickson
et al., 1978 ; Rowe et al., 1978 ). However, in an abstract, Hubel and
Wiesel (1978) later reported that ``one can see some suggestion of
mild periodic variations in density of label, especially in the upper
part of layer IVc (IVc ).'' Electrode recordings showed ``a
periodic fluctuation in dominance from one eye to the other at
intervals of about 250 µm.'' Despite this report, Livingstone and
Hubel (1982) subsequently observed that ``in squirrel monkeys ocular
dominance columns have not so far been revealed by anatomical
methods'' and Livingstone et al. (1995) stated, ``the squirrel monkey
differs from old-world macaques in that it lacks any anatomical
evidence for ocular dominance columns.'' In view of the uncertainty
reflected in the above-referenced sources, we felt that another
anatomical study searching for ocular dominance columns in the squirrel
monkey was warranted. Our present findings are in excellent agreement
with Hubel and Wiesel (1978) . It is worth mentioning that Fitzpatrick
et al. (1983) saw patches of label in layer IVc after geniculate
injection in a single squirrel monkey and suggested that they might be
ocular dominance columns.
In the cat, Shatz et al. (1977) have noted crisper columns after eye
injection in a strabismic animal. They suggested that elimination of
binocular interactions by strabismus increased the segregation of
geniculocortical afferents, making columns more visible in
autoradiographs. Tigges et al. (1984) raised squirrel monkeys with
early monocular eyelid suture and found in one animal that ``a few
irregularly spaced patches of higher grain density occurred deep in
layer IVc.'' Again, disruption of binocular fusion might have induced
ocular dominance columns in layer IVc. More recently, Livingstone
(1996) has shown ocular dominance columns in two of three squirrel
monkeys raised with strabismus. A single control monkey showed no
columns. In the normal squirrel monkey, she recorded from layer IVc and
isolated nine monocular cells. From these findings, she concluded the
following. (1) In normal squirrel monkeys, there is a
``salt-and-pepper'' segregation of inputs in layer IVc, but it occurs
on too fine a scale to visualize with ``the kinds of anatomical
experiments previously used to reveal ocular dominance columns.'' (2)
Strabismus coarsens the segregation of geniculocortical afferents by
reducing correlated activity, thereby inducing the formation of ocular
dominance columns. This phenomenon was predicted by Goodhill (1993) and
first reported in strabismic cats by Löwel (1994) .
Our present study shows that ocular dominance columns do exist in
normal squirrel monkeys, contrary to Livingstone's first conclusion.
With regard to her second conclusion, our findings appear to confirm
her observation that strabismus increases the periodicity of ocular
dominance columns. We measured 450 µm/column pair in normal squirrel
monkeys, whereas Livingstone found 1300-1600 µm/column pair in a
strabismic squirrel monkey. However, in the same report, Livingstone
(1996) found no change in the periodicity of ocular dominance columns
in owl monkeys raised with strabismus. Moreover, a recent study denies
that any change occurs in the spacing of ocular dominance in strabismic
cats (Jones et al., 1996 ).
There are two intertwined, but separate issues raised by these
strabismus experiments. The first is whether strabismus enhances the
segregation of geniculocortical afferents, thereby sharpening the
borders of ocular dominance columns in layer IVc. This notion seems
likely, and indeed, ocular dominance columns were first discovered in
strabismic cats, not normal cats, because their ocular dominance
columns were accentuated by strabismus (Hubel and Wiesel, 1965 ). It has
been difficult to show the anatomical correlate of this effect because
the sharpness and quality of tracer labeling varies from animal to
animal, even in normals. For example, in monkey 3 we saw no columns in
V1 with WGA-HRP. From this result, we might have concluded that monkey
3 lacked ocular dominance columns, except for the fact that they were
nicely labeled by [3H]proline in alternate sections. The
success of transneuronal labeling is influenced by many technical
factors, such as the quality of perfusion, amount and activity of
label, avidity of tracer uptake, spillover, background labeling, and so
on. More animals need to be studied to overcome the intrinsic
variability in column labeling that occurs from experiment to
experiment before we can be sure that columns are sharper in strabismic
animals.
The second issue is whether strabismus alters the fundamental
periodicity of ocular dominance columns. In macaques this seems
unlikely, because ocular dominance columns form in utero,
before visual experience can play a role (Horton and Hocking, 1996 ). In
the squirrel monkey, comparing our data with Livingstone's, strabismus
appears to increase the periodicity of the ocular dominance columns.
However, one must bear in mind that the periodicity of ocular dominance
columns varies enormously in normal animals. Their average width ranges
by a factor of almost 2 from one normal macaque to another (Hocking and
Horton, 1996 ). Nevertheless, Livingstone's strabismic squirrel monkeys
have more than twice the column width of our normal squirrel monkeys.
This difference strongly suggests a real effect, but it should be
confirmed in more animals given the confounding factors cited
above.
The columns in squirrel monkeys were only ~225 µm in width, the
narrowest ocular dominance columns found in any animal to date. They
were organized in a fractured, irregular mosaic, without any consistent
relationship to the V1/V2 border. In primates with an elliptical V1,
such as humans, macaques, capuchins, and talapoins, the ocular
dominance columns are arrayed in stripes perpendicular to the V1/V2
border (Horton and Hedley-Whyte, 1984 ; LeVay et al., 1985 ; Rosa et al.,
1988 ; Florence and Kaas, 1992 ). This arrangement may minimize
anisotropies created by the necessity of representing the visual field
twice in layer IVc, once for each eye (Connolly and Van Essen, 1984 ;
LeVay et al., 1985 ; Jones et al., 1991 ). The seemingly random, patchy
arrangement of ocular dominance columns in the squirrel monkey is
consistent with a rounder shape to V1 and suggests a more isotropic
cortical map (Sakitt, 1982 ).
In every primate studied so far, rows of patches in the upper layers
have been in register with ocular dominance columns in layer IVc. In
the cat, the relationship between the CO staining in the upper layers
and the ocular dominance columns is unclear (Dyck and Cynader, 1993 ;
Murphy et al., 1995 ; Boyd and Matsubara, 1996 ). In the squirrel monkey,
we found no correspondence between the patches and the ocular dominance
columns. The patches were lined up in regular rows ~500-700 µm
apart, perpendicular to the V1/V2 border. The periodicity of the ocular
dominance columns was much finer (~450 µm/pair), and they followed
an entirely different pattern. Occasionally, a patch fell in step with
an ocular dominance column, as one would expect by coincidence, but
overall the two systems were unrelated. Previously, we have suggested
that the patches provide the fundamental organizing pattern for the
columnar architecture of striate cortex, on which ocular dominance
columns become engrafted late in fetal development (Horton, 1984 ). It
is remarkable that ocular dominance columns are divorced from CO
patches in squirrel monkeys, because this relationship seems so
inviolable in other primates.
It is natural to inquire about the visual properties of squirrel
monkeys, searching to explain why they differ so much from macaques and
humans. As alluded to earlier, squirrel monkeys have good stereoscopic
depth perception (Livingstone et al., 1995 ). They also have excellent
color vision, although the males are dichromats (Jacobs and Neitz,
1987 ). Most studies have shown a comparable visual acuity for squirrel
monkeys and humans (Woodburne, 1965 ; Ordy and Samorajski, 1968 ;
Cavonius and Robbins, 1973 ). The spatial vision of squirrel monkeys and
humans is extremely similar, as measured by plotting contrast
sensitivity at different spatial frequencies (Merigan, 1976 ). These
psychophysical studies indicate that basic visual performance in
squirrel monkeys rivals that of humans. This is puzzling when one
considers that squirrel monkeys have only a fraction of the striate
surface area, weakly defined ocular dominance columns, and a system of
CO patches that bears no relationship to ocular dominance. Evidently,
the functional architecture of striate cortex tolerates wide variation
in design, without any compromise in function. This fact has made it
hard to deduce how each feature contributes to visual processing.
FOOTNOTES
Received April 22, 1996; revised May 30, 1996; accepted June 4, 1996.
This work was supported by grants from the National Eye Institute, That
Man May See, and Research to Prevent Blindness. We thank the California
Regional Primate Research Center, Davis, California, for help,
especially David Robb and Jenny Short. The Primate Center is supported
by National Institutes of Health Base Grant RR00169.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Jonathan C. Horton, Beckman
Vision Center, 10 Kirkham Street, University of California at San
Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143-0730.
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