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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 15, 1998, 18(14):5433-5455
Monocular Core Zones and Binocular Border Strips in Primate Striate
Cortex Revealed by the Contrasting Effects of Enucleation, Eyelid
Suture, and Retinal Laser Lesions on Cytochrome Oxidase
Activity
Jonathan C.
Horton and
Davina R.
Hocking
Beckman Vision Center, University of California San Francisco, San
Francisco, California 94143-0730
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ABSTRACT |
In primate striate cortex, geniculocortical afferents in layer IVc
terminate in parallel stripes called ocular dominance columns. We
propose that this segregation of ocular inputs generates a related but
distinct columnar system of monocular core zones alternating with
binocular border strips. Evidence for this functional parcellation was
obtained by comparing the effects of enucleation, eyelid suture, and
retinal laser lesions on cytochrome oxidase (CO) activity in eight
macaques. Enucleation produced a high-contrast pattern of dark and
light columns in layer IVc, corresponding precisely to the ocular
dominance columns, whereas eyelid suture produced a low-contrast
pattern of thin dark columns alternating with wide pale columns.
[3H]Proline eye injection showed that the thin
dark columns corresponded to the core zones of the open eye's ocular
dominance columns. The wide pale columns resulted from loss of CO
activity in the sutured eye's core zones and within both eyes' border
strips. Loss of CO activity within both eyes' border strips suggested that these regions are binocular. To confirm our findings, we compared
different CO patterns in the same cortex by making retinal laser
lesions in four animals. They produced a CO pattern tantamount to
"focal" enucleation, although contrast was low when laser damage was confined to the outer retina. CO levels in cortical scotomas remained severely depressed for months after retinal lesions, even when
the other eye was enucleated. This observation provided little
anatomical support for the notion of topographic plasticity after
visual deafferentation. In a single human subject with macular degeneration, CO revealed a low-contrast pattern of ocular dominance columns, resembling the pattern in monkeys with laser-induced photoreceptor damage.
Key words:
cytochrome oxidase; ocular dominance column; striate
cortex; core zone; border strip; binocularity; stereopsis; deprivation; laser lesion; zif268; scotoma; macular degeneration
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INTRODUCTION |
Although the function of ocular
dominance columns remains unknown, they must play an important role in
fusion and stereopsis. These processes require integration of visual
signals emanating from each eye. In primate striate cortex,
geniculocortical afferents serving the eyes remain segregated in layer
IVc, forming a pattern of alternating stripes. Binocular integration is
thought to occur by subsequent convergence of projections from
monocular cells in layer IVc, via one or more synapses, onto cells in
other layers. As suggested by Hubel and Wiesel (1977 , see their Fig.
12), cells outside layer IVc near the boundaries between ocular
dominance columns are likely to be influenced equally by both eyes. By
contrast, cells located in the middle of ocular dominance columns are
apt to be dominated strongly by one eye. According to this model, ocular dominance will swing back and forth in a gradual manner as an
electrode is advanced tangentially through striate cortex, except in
layer IVc. Hubel and Wiesel (1977) did not contemplate the segregation
of cells outside layer IVc into discrete monocular and binocular
zones.
Wong-Riley's (1979) introduction of cytochrome oxidase (CO)
histochemistry for the mapping of functional brain activity revealed a
regular array of patches (also known as "puffs" or "blobs") in
all layers except IVc and IVa (Hendrickson et al., 1981 ; Horton and
Hubel, 1981 ; Wong-Riley and Carroll, 1984 ). The patches are organized
like strands of pearls, with each strand running down the middle of an
ocular dominance column. Because patches are centered within ocular
dominance columns, one would expect their cells to have a strong
monocular bias. This expectation has been borne out by four independent
lines of evidence. First, enucleation causes loss of CO activity in
every other row of patches, in register with pale columns in layer IVc
(Horton and Hubel, 1981 ; Horton, 1984 ). Second, microelectrode
recordings have shown that cells within patches tend to be monocular,
whereas cells between patches are usually binocular (Livingstone and
Hubel, 1984 ). Third, after transneuronal labeling with
[3H]proline, radioactive tracer is confined
largely to the injected eye's CO patches (Horton and Hocking, 1996a ).
Therefore, in macaques the direct koniocellular geniculate input to the
CO patches (Casagrande, 1994 ; Hendry and Yoshioka, 1994 ; Ding and
Casagrande, 1997 ) is segregated by eye. Fourth, optical imaging has
shown that patches represent highly monocular centers within ocular
dominance columns (T'so et al., 1990 ).
Rows of CO patches span the cortex from white matter to pia, creating a
central "core zone" within each ocular dominance column, which is
predominately monocular. A sliver of tissue exists between the actual
border of an ocular dominance column and its core zone, which we call a
"border strip." Although CO patches are invisible in IVc, there is
anatomical evidence for border strips and core zones in this layer.
With the Liesegang silver stain, LeVay et al. (1975) discovered a
pattern of thin pale bands alternating with wide dark bands in layer
IVc, as well as in layers V, IVb, and IVa. Yoshioka (1997) has recently
shown a similar pattern by immunostaining for neurofilament triplet
proteins. The thin pale bands straddle the borders between ocular
dominance columns and correspond precisely to our proposed border
strips. The wide dark Liesegang bands, which contain the rows of CO
patches (Horton and Hocking, 1997a ), match the core zones inside ocular
dominance columns.
There is also functional evidence for the presence of monocular core
zones and binocular border strips in layer IVc. In adult macaques, no
CO pattern is visible in tangential sections through layer IVc, because
enzyme levels are equal in border strips and core zones. In newborn
macaques, however, CO activity is lower within border strips, resulting
in a pattern resembling the Liesegang stain (Horton and Hocking,
1996a ). The reduced level of CO activity in border strips may reflect
the relative immaturity of binocular function at birth (Chino et al.,
1997 ). Weak CO staining along border strips, producing a baby-like
pattern in layer IVc, has also been observed in a single adult macaque
with naturally occurring amblyopia (Horton et al., 1997 ). Loss of
binocular function as a result of amblyopia may have reduced CO
activity in this animal's border strips. Finally, we have observed
thin pale CO stripes in layer IVc along the borders between ocular
dominance columns in macaques with alternating exotropia induced by
disinsertion of the medial recti (J. C. Horton and D. R. Hocking, unpublished observations). Presumably, disruption of
binocularity has affected CO activity within border strips.
The goal of this study is to explore further the subdivision of striate
cortex into monocular core zones and binocular border strips by
comparing patterns of CO activity produced by monocular enucleation and
eyelid suture. The CO method suffers from the drawback that variability
in staining from animal to animal can obscure real differences in the
patterns produced by various experimental manipulations. To overcome
this problem, in some animals we combined enucleation or eyelid suture
with a focal retinal laser lesion. By flat-mounting striate cortex to
expose a broad expanse of tissue, CO patterns resulting from different
manipulations could then be compared in the same tissue section. This
approach has provided new evidence in support of our proposed
subdivision of striate cortex into monocular and binocular
compartments. It has also shed new light on the phenomenon of
"fill-in" of "cortical scotomas" reported after focal retinal
laser lesions (Gilbert et al., 1990 ; Kaas et al., 1990 ; Heinen and
Skavenski, 1991 ). In these studies, microelectrode recordings have
suggested a remarkable recovery of responsiveness within regions of
cortex initially silenced by retinal lesions. However, our present
experiments show that weak CO staining persists within these cortical
scotomas, casting some doubt on the notion that substantial recovery of
function occurs after retinal lesions.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Experimental animals. Experiments were performed on
five unrelated Macaca mulatta bred at the California
Regional Primate Research Center (Davis, CA) and three M. fascicularis from Mauritius obtained commercially. Before use each
animal underwent a complete examination, including cycloplegic
refraction and indirect ophthalmoscopy, to exclude any pre-existing eye
disease. All procedures adhered to protocols approved by the Committees
on Animal Research at University of California Davis and University of
California San Francisco. Table 1
summarizes the sequence of experimental steps in each animal. Often,
more than one procedure was performed in the same animal to compare
directly the effects of enucleation, eyelid suture, or retinal laser
lesions. Three animals were used in previous experiments, in the
context of other projects performed by our laboratory (Horton and
Hocking, 1996b , 1997b ). Specific details are given in the appropriate
figure legends.
Monocular enucleation was performed in three animals (Table 1) under
general anesthesia with ketamine HCl (20 mg/kg, i.m.) combined with
retrobulbar injection of 2 ml of 0.75% bupivicaine HCl plus
epinephrine (1:100,000). After surgery, buprenorphine HCl (0.02 mg/kg,
i.m.) was administered every 8 hr for 2 d to ensure analgesia.
Monocular eyelid suture was performed in five animals under general
anesthesia with ketamine HCl (10 mg/kg, i.m.) combined with local
infiltration of the eyelids using 0.5% lidocaine plus epinephrine
(1:200,000). The eyelid margins were trimmed, and the tarsal plates
were fused with 6-0 Vicryl interrupted horizontal mattress sutures.
Afterward, the animals were examined daily for 1 week to verify that
the eyelids had sealed without a pinhole.
Focal retinal lesions were made in the left eye of four animals (Table
1) under general anesthesia with ketamine HCl (10 mg/kg, i.m.). The
pupil was dilated with 1% tropicamide and 10% phenylephrine HCl. The
animal was placed at a slit lamp to view the ocular fundus through a
plano-concave contact lens. Lesions were made with a Coherent Novus
2000 blue-green (488-515 nm) argon laser using a spot size of 500 µm applied for a duration of 0.2 sec. The energy level and number of
spots were varied to produce lesions of varying severity. Afterward,
pictures were taken with a Topcon (Tokyo, Japan) fundus camera.
In three animals (Table 1) the ocular dominance columns were labeled by
[3H]proline transneuronal autoradiography. The
tracer was prepared by reconstituting 2 mCi of
L-[2,3,4,5-3H]proline, specific activity,
102-106 Ci/mmol (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL), in 20 µl of
sterile balanced salt solution. It was injected into the mid-vitreous
of the left eye under anesthesia with ketamine HCl (10 mg/kg, i.m.) and
topical proparacaine HCl. Immediately afterward, the fundus was checked
with an indirect ophthalmoscope to ensure that no injury had occurred.
The survival time for transport of the label was 7-10 d.
Histological procedures. After receiving a lethal injection
of sodium pentobarbital into the peritoneal cavity, each monkey was
perfused through the left ventricle with 1 l of normal saline followed by 1 l of 2% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M
phosphate buffer. Striate cortex from each occipital lobe was unfolded,
removed from the white matter, and sandwiched overnight under gentle
pressure between a glass slide and a sheet of soft foam in a solution
of 1% paraformaldehyde plus 30% sucrose (Horton and Hocking, 1996b ). Flat-mounts of striate cortex were cut at 30 µm with a freezing microtome, mounted on slides, and air-dried. In two animals, alternate sections were placed into 0.1 M phosphate buffer and
processed free-floating for Zif268 (also known as EGR-1 or Krox24)
immunohistochemistry using an antibody provided by Bravo (Herdegen et
al., 1990 ). Control sections, which omitted the primary antibody, were
also examined.
In each animal, every other section of visual cortex was reacted for CO
activity (Wong-Riley, 1979 ). To ensure identical processing, sections
from any given hemisphere were loaded into the same boat of slides,
incubated together, and removed from the CO bath simultaneously. The
reaction was terminated after 8-12 hr, when sections were judged by
eye to have achieved the best separation of optical densities.
Alternate sections were processed for a variety of techniques, listed
in Table 1. For Nissl substance, defatted sections were stained with
0.5% cresyl violet. For autoradiography, sections were coated with
NTB-2 emulsion (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY), exposed for 10 weeks,
and developed with D19 developer (Eastman Kodak) (Wiesel et al., 1974 ).
For myelin staining, defatted sections were reacted using the Luxol
fast blue method of Klüver-Barrera (Luna, 1968 ).
Eyes with laser lesions were examined by cutting serial horizontal
paraffin sections at 10 µm through each retinal lesion site. Sections
stained with hematoxylin and eosin were examined in the light
microscope. The extent of destruction from each laser lesion was
reconstructed with the aid of a camera lucida. The lateral geniculate
bodies were sectioned at 50 µm with a freezing microtome, and
alternate sections were reacted for CO or Nissl substance. In some
animals (Table 1), every third section was dipped in autoradiographic
emulsion and exposed for 2 weeks.
Data analysis. Two methods were used to analyze CO data. The
first approach was used to obtain quantitative optical density measurements of CO reaction product. Each CO section was imaged at 300 dots per inch (dpi) on an Agfa Arcus II flatbed scanner fitted with a
transparency adapter. The gamma curve value was set to 1.0. This
setting results in equal input and output densities. A series of
neutral density filters (Fig. 1) (Lee
Filters, Andover, England) was placed on the scanner and imaged
concurrently with each CO section. Images were then transferred to
Scion ImagePC (Scion Corp., Frederick, MD) for measurements of optical
density. Accurate optical density readings were ensured by using the
neutral density filters to calibrate Scion ImagePC for each section.
This method of processing the data guaranteed that settings for
brightness and contrast remained constant from one CO section to the
next. It also allowed comparison of the absolute intensity and contrast of CO reaction product between animals. All images analyzed in this
manner display a series of neutral density filters as a calibration bar
in the top right corner of the figure. Scion ImagePC was also used to
measure column widths.

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Figure 1.
This series of neutral density filters was scanned
with each tissue section and used in Scion ImagePC to calibrate optical
density (OD) measurements of CO activity. The percent transmittance
(T) was derived from the relationship
OD = log 1/T. Using the flatbed scanner to digitize
images from CO sections allowed easy, direct measurement of optical
density. The calibration bar guaranteed that optical density
measurements remained accurate from one CO section to the next. All CO
images processed in this manner display a calibration bar.
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For some animals, complete montages were prepared of layer IVc from
tangential CO sections using Photoshop 4.0 (Adobe Systems, San Jose,
CA), as described previously (Horton and Hocking, 1996b , 1997b ). Images
were not retouched to hide seams or blemishes, nor were any adjustments
made in brightness or contrast. They were printed on a Fujix 3000 Pictography printer (Fuji Corp., Tokyo, Japan).
The second method of analyzing CO sections used traditional
photographic methods. This approach was used for comparison of CO
patterns at high power, when resolution was more important than
absolute brightness or contrast. Sections were photographed through a
Zeiss Axioskop microscope using Plus-X pan film (Eastman Kodak) and
processed with Microdol-X developer (Eastman Kodak). Pictures were
printed on grade 4 Agfa Rapitone paper using a conventional darkroom
enlarger.
Autoradiographs were photographed in dark-field using Technical Pan
film (Eastman Kodak) and developed with Technidol developer (Eastman
Kodak). Negatives were scanned into the computer with a Microtek
(Redondo Beach, CA) Scanmaker 35t scanner. Montages of the ocular
dominance columns in layer IVc were prepared from autoradiographs of
alternate sections using Photoshop 4.0. Nissl, Luxol fast blue, and
Zif268 sections were photographed with Plus-X pan film and developed
with Microdol-X.
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RESULTS |
Monkey 1 (adult monocular enucleation)
This normal adult M. fascicularis was chosen to
illustrate the effect of monocular enucleation on CO activity in
striate cortex. The right eye was removed 15 weeks before perfusion.
This manipulation produced a pattern of light and dark columns in layer
IVc (Fig. 2). The light CO columns
correspond precisely to the ocular dominance colums of the missing eye,
as shown previously by combining [3H]proline
autoradiography with monocular enucleation in the same animal (Horton,
1984 ). In the opercular cortex, representing the central 8° of the
visual hemifield, the ocular dominance columns serving each eye are
nearly equal in width (Hubel and Wiesel, 1977 ; LeVay et al., 1985 ).
This was verified in Monkey 1 by measuring the width of 50 light
columns and 50 dark columns, selected arbitrarily from the opercular
cortex. The average widths were 409 µm for the dark columns and 412 µm for the light columns. One-dimensional plots of optical density
sampled at high resolution (2400 dpi) confirmed that the light and dark
columns were equal in width. An example graphed across five sets of
ocular dominance columns is shown in Figure 2. The peaks of the light
columns and the troughs of the dark columns were spaced evenly. Note
that the optical density of the tissue oscillated up and down in a
gradual manner. In drawings, ocular dominance columns are often
depicted as black-and-white stripes, implying a square-wave step in
optical density across column boundaries. In fact, the transition
between columns measured by optical density is quite gradual.

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Figure 2.
Monkey 1 (adult monocular enucleation).
Single CO section of a flat-mount showing the ocular dominance columns
in layer IVc 15 weeks after removal of the right eye. Measurements
showed that the pale columns (right eye) and dark columns (left eye) in
opercular cortex (left half of the tissue section) were
virtually equal in width (see table). This was confirmed
by a linear density profile, sampled across five sets of ocular
dominance columns from X to O, which
showed equal spacing in the peaks of optical density. For this plot the
section was imaged at 2400 dpi to achieve a resolution of 10.58 µm/pixel. The mean optical density of the dark and light columns
differed by 0.093. The complete montage of the ocular dominance columns
in this animal has been published (Horton and Hocking 1996b , Monkey 2).
*Blind spot representation of the right eye; MC,
monocular crescent.
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The contrast of the ocular dominance columns labeled by CO was highest
in layer IVc . To quantify their contrast in this layer, we measured
the mean optical density of the tissue within a 3 × 3 pixel box
(254 × 254 µm), situated in the middle of either a light column
or a dark column. Boxes were placed in 50 light columns and 50 dark
columns, chosen randomly. The light columns had a mean optical density
of 0.257, and the dark columns had a mean optical density of 0.350. These values corresponded approximately to a 10% difference in
transmittance (Fig. 1).
Monkey 2 (adult monocular suture)
To compare the effects of monocular lid suture with those induced
by enucleation, this normal adult M. mulatta underwent
closure of the right eyelids at age 15 years. Flat-mounts of striate
cortex were prepared 38 weeks later (a laser lesion was also made, to be discussed later). In layer IVc, a faint pattern of thin dark columns
alternating with wide pale columns was present (Fig.
3). Outside layer IV, alternating rows of
dark and light patches were visible. Each dark row of patches fit in
perfect register with a thin dark column in layer IVc. This match could
be appreciated best by observing how each beaded row of patches merged
with a thin dark column of identical width at the layer V-layer IVc
boundary (Fig. 3).

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Figure 3.
Monkey 2 (adult monocular suture). Single CO
section showing a faint pattern of dark columns alternating with pale
columns in layer IVc, induced by suture of the right eye for 9 months.
The dark columns were thinner than the pale columns (see
table). Note that the thin dark columns in layer IVc
were continuous with the nearly confluent rows of dark patches in layer
V (arrows). The light rows of patches were too faint to
be seen clearly in layer V. The graph shows a linear
plot, sampling at 10.58 µm/pixel, of optical density from
X to O. It confirms that the dark columns
(arrows) are thinner than the pale columns. The columns
seen after suture are much lower in contrast than those induced by
enucleation, accounting for the expanded scale of the
y-axis compared with the graph in Figure 2.
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Measurement of 50 dark columns and 50 light columns in layer IVc
yielded mean widths of 287 and 433 µm, respectively. Linear plots of
optical density confirmed that the dark columns were thinner than the
light columns (Fig. 3). Comparing Figures 2 and 3, it is evident that
monocular suture produces a completely different CO pattern in layer
IVc than monocular enucleation. The latter manipulation results in
columns, equal in width, that correspond precisely to the distribution
of geniculocortical afferents in layer IVc. Monocular suture, on the
other hand, produces a system of columns that cannot be congruent with
the ocular dominance columns, because they are so unequal in width. We
propose that the thin dark columns induced by suture represent the core
zones of the open eye's ocular dominance columns. The wide pale
columns comprise the core zones of the sutured eye's ocular dominance columns plus the border strips on either side. Given the column dimensions reported above, in this animal the core zones measured 287 µm, and a pair of border strips measured 73 µm (yielding, for a
single wide pale column, 73 + 287 + 73 µm = 433 µm). These dimensions are likely to vary from animal to animal, because there is
considerable intrinsic variability in the periodicity of ocular dominance columns (Horton and Hocking, 1996b ).
Comparing Figures 2 and 3, it is also apparent that the columns
produced by lid suture are much lower in contrast than the columns
induced by enucleation. The optical density of the section in Figure 3
was sampled by placing 3 × 3 pixel boxes in the middle of 50 light columns and 50 dark columns. The mean optical density was 0.587 for the dark columns and 0.546 for the light columns, corresponding to
only a 2-3% difference in transmittance.
Monkey 3 (12 week monocular suture)
In the preceding experiment, the assignment of the thin dark
columns to the open eye's core zones was inferred by their alignment with dark rows of CO patches. Obviously, it would be preferable to
establish this relationship by using a second anatomical label. To
accomplish this objective, the right eye of Monkey 3 was sutured at 12 weeks, an age coinciding with the end of the critical period for
plasticity of ocular dominance columns (LeVay et al., 1980 ; Horton and
Hocking, 1997b ). A year later the left eye was injected with
[3H]proline. The ocular dominance columns were
visible in autoradiographs passing through layer IVc (Fig.
4A). Because suture was
done after the critical period, labeled and unlabeled columns were
approximately equal in width, at least on the operculum. In an adjacent
section (Fig. 4B), the CO stain showed the same
pattern of thin dark columns alternating with wide pale columns seen in
the previous animal. Comparison at high power demonstrated that the
thin dark CO columns, as expected, matched the labeled ocular dominance
columns of the normal left eye (Figs. 4C-E). However, the
thin dark CO columns were slightly narrower than the proline columns.
This difference was subtle, because it amounted only to the slender
border strips within each proline column. A border strip the tissue
between a core zone and the actual boundary of an ocular dominance
column is only ~30-45 µm wide. Our interpretation of this
experiment is summarized in Figure 4F.

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Figure 4.
Monkey 3 (12 week monocular suture).
A, Autoradiograph through the left operculum showing the
ocular dominance columns in layer IVc after injection of the left eye
at age 15 months. Labeled and unlabeled columns are equal in width.
B, Adjacent CO section showing faint columns in layer
IVc. Note that the dark columns are much thinner than the pale columns.
C, Box in A, showing the
ocular dominance columns (arrows) at higher power.
D, Box in B, showing
matching CO columns (arrows) at higher power.
Arrowheads mark blood vessels used for section
alignment. E, Drawing comparing the CO section with the
autoradiograph. The unlabeled proline columns in C are
black. The dark CO columns in D are
gray. Note that the dark CO columns fit in register with
the proline columns labeled from the open left eye. However, they are
slightly narrower, resulting in a white gap between the
gray and black columns in this diagram.
F, Diagram summarizing the findings in this animal. The
white gap between each gray and
black column in E corresponds to the
border strip of the open eye's (proline-labeled) ocular dominance
columns. It measures only ~30-45 µm. The complete montage of
ocular dominance columns in this monkey has been published (Horton and
Hocking, 1997b , monkey 8).
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Monkey 4 (5 week monocular suture)
In the previous two experiments, we showed that eyelid
suture after the critical period induces a CO pattern of thin dark columns alternating with wide pale columns. Next, we inquired what CO
pattern develops when eyelid suture is performed during the critical
period. Figure 5A shows an
autoradiograph grazing layer IVc from a macaque that underwent
suture of the right eye at age 5 weeks. The left eye received an
injection of [3H]proline 25 months later. As
expected, the unlabeled ocular dominance columns of the deprived right
eye were shrunken. An adjacent CO section showed a pattern of thin dark
columns alternating with wide pale columns (Fig. 5B). It
resembled the pattern induced by eyelid suture after the critical
period. The thin dark CO columns were centered within the expanded,
labeled ocular dominance columns of the normal left eye but much
narrower. Expansion of the left eye's columns exaggerated the
discrepancy noted in Monkey 3 between the width of the ocular dominance
columns (defined by proline labeling) and the width of the thin dark CO
columns.

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Figure 5.
Monkey 4 (5 week monocular suture).
A, Autoradiograph through the left operculum after
injection of the left eye with [3H]proline at age
26 months, showing expanded ocular dominance columns (white
arrows). The shrunken dark gaps correspond to the columns of
the right eye, which was sutured at age 5 weeks. B,
Adjacent section showing the characteristic CO suture pattern of thin
dark columns alternating with wide pale columns. The thin dark columns
(black arrows) are centered within the labeled ocular
dominance columns in A but are much narrower. Their
difference in width is made obvious by the fact that in
A the proline-labeled columns are wider than the
unlabeled columns, whereas in
B the dark CO columns are narrower than the
pale CO columns. C, Adjacent Luxol fast blue section
showing dark columns (arrows), slightly wider than the
corresponding columns in B. The presence of these
columns suggests that cortical myelin content is altered by early
visual deprivation. The complete column mosaic in this animal has been
published (Horton and Hocking, 1997b , monkey 5).
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It is worth pointing out that if in Figure 5 A and
B were inadvertently misaligned, by half a column cycle, one
might conclude: (1) that the thin CO columns match perfectly the
shrunken, unlabeled ocular dominance columns; and (2) that CO activity
increases in the deprived eye's ocular dominance columns. In fact,
neither conclusion would be correct. After lid suture (at any age), the resulting CO pattern does not reflect faithfully the actual boundaries of the ocular dominance columns, and CO activity decreases in the
deprived eye's columns. To visualize the ocular dominance columns with
CO in lid-sutured animals, one eye must be silenced by subsequent
enucleation (Horton and Stryker, 1993 ).
An adjacent section processed for myelin using the Luxol fast
blue stain showed columns in layer IVc (Fig. 5C). The pale
Luxol columns fit in register with the pale CO columns. This finding suggests that early monocular suture reduces myelin content within deprived ocular dominance columns. However, patterns of Luxol fast blue
staining produced by visual deprivation should be interpreted cautiously, because they may not reflect myelin content accurately (Horton and Hocking, 1997a ). Finally, sections through layer IVc were processed for Nissl substance. They showed columns that
were too faint to illustrate satisfactorily. The dark Nissl
columns matched the deprived eye's ocular dominance columns. This
finding has been reported after monocular enucleation in adults and may reflect denser packing of neurons induced by cortical atrophy within
deprived columns (Haseltine et al., 1979 ; Horton, 1984 ).
Monkey 5 (3 week monocular suture)
This monkey was raised with monocular deprivation by suturing the
lids of the right eye at age 3 weeks. At age 25 months the left eye was
injected with [3H]proline. The findings are not
illustrated, because they were similar to those in Monkey 4. Thin dark
CO columns fit inside expanded proline columns serving the left
eye.
We have shown previously that CO staining appears completely
homogeneous in layer IVc after eyelid suture at age 1 week (Horton and Stryker, 1993 ; Horton and Hocking, 1997b ). It is unknown why suture
at 1 week produces no CO pattern in layer IVc . We now show that
later suture at ages 3, 5, and 12 weeks, or even 15 years produces a
stereotypic CO pattern of thin dark columns alternating with wide pale
columns, which is not congruent with the boundaries of ocular dominance
columns. This pattern develops regardless of whether the underlying
ocular dominance columns are shrunken or normal.
Monkey 2, revisited (laser vs suture)
The brightness and contrast of CO staining fluctuates from animal
to animal for a host of reasons. Tissue fixation, section thickness,
and incubation time can all vary, confounding the comparison of data
from different experiments. For example, CO staining in Monkey 2 was
darker than in Monkey 1 (compare Figs. 2 and 3). A skeptic might wonder
whether the columns in Monkey 2 appeared thinner and fainter because
the sections were reacted longer, rather than because of any real
difference in the effects of suture and enucleation. Admittedly, if
sections are over-reacted, their contrast is poor and patterns appear
murky.
To circumvent the limitation imposed by interanimal variation, we made
a full-thickness retinal laser lesion in the open left eye of Monkey 2. The goal was to create a focal lesion tantamount to a "local
enucleation," so that we could compare the effects of eyelid suture
(right eye) and "enucleation" (left eye) in the same cortex. The
lesion was made along the horizontal fiber raphe in the temporal retina
by applying 12 laser spots at 450 mW (Fig. 6A,B). This site was
chosen to avoid damage to fibers sweeping across the inner retinal
surface from more peripheral fundus (Hoyt and Luis, 1962 ).
Parenthetically, we note that if a truly full-thickness lesion is made
anywhere in the primate retina, except on the temporal fiber raphe,
damage to arcuate fibers of passage will result in a cortical scotoma
with a "comet's tail."

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Figure 6.
Monkey 2 (adult monocular suture vs laser).
A, Drawing of the left retina made right after
performing the laser lesion. A visuoscope target was projected onto the
fundus to provide the retinotopic coordinates. The lesion extended from
4 to 13° along the horizontal meridian. B, Picture of
the perfused retina, taken by cutting off the cornea, removing the
lens, and aiming a 35 mm camera at the fundus. The fovea appears as a
dark dimple between the optic disk (nasal retina) and
the laser burn (mottled scar, temporal retina). C,
Retinal section along the horizontal meridian of the retina
(arrow in A), passing through the
optic disk, fovea (arrow), and lesion
(bracket). D, Magnified view of the
lesion, showing destruction of nearly all retinal layers, although
occasional ganglion cells survived (curved arrows). Note
the sloping edge to the laser lesion (between arrows),
with more damage to the photoreceptor layer.
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Nine weeks later the retina was examined histologically (Fig.
6C). We intended to destroy all layers, but careful scrutiny revealed a few surviving ganglion cells in each serial section (Fig.
6D). The lesion had a sloping edge, giving rise to a
300-400 µm penumbra of partially damaged retina. This occurred
because the laser's energy was absorbed by the pigment epithelium
(Marshall et al., 1975 ; Apple et al., 1976 ; Smiddy et al., 1984 ),
causing wider destruction in the photoreceptor layer than in the
ganglion cell layer.
In the middle of the left cortex there was a cortical "scotoma"
containing ocular dominance columns (Fig.
7A). We consulted retinotopic
maps of striate cortex (Daniel and Whitteridge, 1961 ; Van Essen et al.,
1984 ; Tootell et al., 1988 ) to determine the size and location of the
cortical scotoma expected from the retinal lesion illustrated in Figure
6. Although these maps are not in perfect agreement, it was clear that
the boundaries of the expected scotoma and the actual scotoma coincided
within ~1°, indicating that no significant fill-in had occurred by
9 weeks after the laser lesion. The cortical scotoma included the edge
of the right eye's optic disk representation. This was helpful for two
reasons. It confirmed the precise retinotopic match between the laser
lesion and the cortical scotoma. It also allowed unambiguous assignment of the pale columns to the lesioned left eye (because the optic disk
representation appeared pale, and only the left eye projects to it).
Therefore, the dark columns belonged to the sutured right eye.

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Figure 7.
Monkey 2 (adult monocular suture vs laser).
A, CO montage showing the cortical scotoma coinciding
with the retinal lesion illustrated in Figure 6. Within the scotoma,
dark ocular dominance columns (sutured right eye) alternate with pale
ocular dominance columns (lesioned left eye). The scotoma includes the
edge of the right eye's optic disk representation
(asterisk). It has the size and location that one would
expect from the retinal lesion, suggesting that no fill-in occurred
after a survival time of 9 weeks. Surrounding the scotoma, there is a
faint pattern of thin dark columns (open left eye's core zones)
alternating with wide pale columns (sutured right eye's ocular
dominance columns plus the left eye's border strips). Between both
patterns, there is a variable transition zone of ambiguous staining
(bracket). Inset, Diagram summarizing the
pattern in layer IVc, with numbers in
parentheses referring to optical density. The
high-contrast CO pattern (bottom right) corresponds to
ocular dominance columns within the cortical scotoma. The low-contrast
CO suture pattern (top left) outside the scotoma is not
equivalent to the ocular dominance columns. It consists
of thin dark columns (core zones of the open left eye)
alternating with wide pale columns. Note that there are three densities
of CO activity in the cortex: open left eye (0.547), sutured right eye
(0.507-0.508), and lasered left eye (0.388). This experiment
establishes (1) that suture has less drastic effects on CO activity
than enucleation, and (2) that suture reduces CO activity within the
border strips of the open eye's ocular dominance columns (explaining
why the left eye's dark columns are so thin outside the scotoma).
B, Single section through the supragranular layers,
showing alternating rows of dark (open left eye) and light (sutured
right eye) patches outside the scotoma. Inside the scotoma
(dotted line), this alternating pattern was lost. The
boundaries of the ocular dominance columns in A were
projected onto B to identify patches belonging to either
the left or right eye. A sample of 50 left eye and 50 right eye patches
yielded nearly the same mean optical density (0.383 and 0.384, respectively), indicating that enucleation (actually, focal retinal
destruction) and suture have equal effects on metabolic activity in the
upper layers of striate cortex, although they have quite different
effects in layer IVc, as evinced by the striking pattern of ocular
dominance columns in A.
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Striate cortex surrounding the scotoma contained a faint CO pattern of
thin dark columns alternating with wide pale columns, matching the
pattern seen in the other hemisphere (Fig. 3). Based on the
double-label experiment in Monkey 3 (Fig. 4), we know that the thin
dark columns represent the core zones of the open left eye. The centers
of the wide pale columns (outside the cortical scotoma) and the dark
columns (inside the cortical scotoma) ought to have similar optical
densities, because both regions serve the sutured right eye. This was
confirmed by placing 3 × 3 pixel boxes at 50 random sites within
both sets of columns. Mean optical densities of 0.507 and 0.508 were
recorded, respectively. CO reaction product was densest (0.547) in the
core zones of the open left eye (outside the scotoma) and lightest
(0.388) in the ocular dominance columns of the lesioned left eye
(inside the scotoma).
In this experiment, it was not possible to pinpoint where the dark
columns switched from left eye to right eye as they crossed into the
cortical scotoma. The transition was blurred by a thin zone of
ambiguous CO staining sandwiched between the "suture" pattern and
the "laser lesion" pattern (Fig. 7A). We assume this zone reflected the combined effects of the cortical point-spread function (McIlwain, 1986 ; Grinvald et al., 1994 ) and the sloping edge
to the retinal laser lesion. At the outer edge of the transition zone,
the sutured right eye competed with damage to only photoreceptor outer
segments. At the inner edge, it competed with damage to the entire
retina.
In the upper layers, outside the cortical scotoma, dark (normal left
eye) alternating with light (sutured right eye) rows of CO patches were
visible (Fig. 7B). Within the cortical scotoma, this
alternating pattern was lost. This result was surprising, given the
striking contrast of the light and dark columns below in layer IVc.
Optical density measurements yielded a mean value of 0.383 for the
patches overlying pale columns and 0.384 for the patches over dark
columns. Evidently, CO activity in patches is reduced the same amount
by focal retinal destruction (nearly equivalent to enucleation) and
eyelid suture. There are several possible explanations for this
finding. The konio input to the patches may be more resistant to the
effects of enucleation than the parvo and magno inputs to layer IVc. It
is also possible, in view of the relative sparseness of the direct
konio projection, that activity in the patches is dominated by parvo
and magno inputs arising from layer IV (Edwards et al., 1995 ). Once
these inputs have been filtered across several synapses, from layer IVc
to layers II and III (Fitzpatrick et al., 1985 ; Lachica et al., 1992 ; Yoshioka et al., 1994), the effects of suture and
enucleation on metabolic activity may become equivalent.
To summarize this rather complicated experiment, we captured the suture
pattern and the enucleation pattern in the same cortex by closing the
right eye and lesioning the left eye focally with a laser. This
strategy eliminated the problem of interanimal variation in CO
reactivity and allowed us to establish firmly that suture and
enucleation produce different CO patterns in layer IVc of striate
cortex. Unexpectedly, outside layer IV these manipulations had
equivalent effects on CO activity.
Monkey 6 (laser vs suture)
We followed the same procedures in this experiment to confirm the
findings in Monkey 2 (Table 1). The results are not illustrated, because they were similar. The experiment differed in only one respect:
we double-labeled the ocular dominance columns by reacting alternate
sections for the transcription factor Zif268 (Herdegen et al., 1990 ).
Outside the cortical scotoma, Zif268 immunostaining was homogenous in
layer IVc, despite suture of the right eye for 9 months. Within the
cortical scotoma, Zif268 revealed ocular dominance columns clearly. The
pale Zif268 columns matched the pale CO columns of the lesioned left
eye.
Chaudhuri et al. (1995) have reported Zif268 columns after 3 d of
monocular suture. Our finding of no Zif268 columns after 9 months
suggests that such columns eventually fade after prolonged suture. By
contrast, we observed persistence of nice Zif268 columns many weeks
after focal retinal destruction (despite suture of the intact eye).
These results highlight another difference between the effects of lid
suture and enucleation (actually, focal retinal laser ablation).
Monkey 7 (laser vs normal)
In the two previous animals we showed that a focal laser lesion,
causing nearly complete destruction of all retinal layers, produced a
CO pattern resembling "local" enucleation. We asked next whether a
milder retinal burn, damaging photoreceptors but not ganglion cells,
would produce a CO pattern resembling enucleation or eyelid suture. A
lesion was made in the left eye of a normal adult macaque, in the
temporal retina along the horizontal meridian, with half the energy
used to create a full-thickness retinal burn (Fig.
8A,B). After a survival
time of 7 weeks, we used CO and Zif268 immunohistochemistry to
double-label the ocular dominance columns. The monkey was dark-adapted
for 10 hr to enhance anti-Zif268 staining. The right eye was then
enucleated under ketamine anesthesia in complete darkness using night
vision goggles (Horton and Hocking, 1996a ). To ensure the animal's
comfort, the right orbit was infiltrated thoroughly with 0.75%
bupivicaine HCl, a local anesthetic with prolonged action. Once the
enucleation was complete, the room lights were turned on and the monkey
was reawakened. It received 4 hr of natural visual stimulation through
the remaining left eye before perfusion. These measures were designed
to produce robust anti-Zif268 staining in the left eye's ocular
dominance columns but not to affect CO levels, which require more time
to change (Wong-Riley, 1994 ).

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Figure 8.
Monkey 7 (laser vs normal). A, Left
retina with a fresh laser lesion, extending from 4 to 10° temporal to
the fovea, made by applying 20 spots at 200 mW. The lesion appears
white from acute coagulation necrosis. B,
Healed scar, 7 weeks later, after resorption of the edema.
C, Retinal sections, cut at the levels indicated in the
diagram. Although the injury is limited mostly to photoreceptor cell
bodies and outer segments, there is some inner nuclear layer damage.
Dark lines, running across the retinal layers, are folds
in the paraffin sections.
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The laser produced a complex lesion in the left eye, consisting of
concentric rings of increasing retinal damage (Fig. 8C). Injury was confined predominately to photoreceptor outer segments and
the outer nuclear layer, but the inner nuclear layer was also partially
damaged. In the cortex, CO revealed a scotoma that corresponded closely
to the coordinates of the retinal lesion (Fig.
9A). Within the scotoma, an
enucleation pattern was visible, rather than a suture pattern. Outside
the scotoma, CO staining was homogeneous, because metabolic activity
was equal in the normal right retina and the unlesioned left retina. A
random sample of 100 3 × 3 pixel boxes gave a mean optical
density of 0.465 ± 0.068 (SD). Within the scotoma, the dark
ocular dominance columns (normal right eye) had an optical density of
0.435 ± 0.032 (SD), measured by sampling 50 3 × 3 pixel
boxes. The same sampling approach yielded an optical density of
0.351 ± 0.034 (SD) for the light ocular dominance columns (lesioned left eye). ANOVA (F = 3.95; df = 148;
p < 0.001) confirmed significant loss of CO activity
in the light ocular dominance columns compared with enzyme levels
outside the scotoma. More interestingly, the modest difference between
the optical density of CO reaction product outside the scotoma (0.465)
and in the dark ocular dominance columns (0.435) was also significant
(F = 4.55; df = 148; p < 0.01).
This finding provided further evidence for binocular interaction in
layer IVc, corroborating the suture experiments in Monkeys 2, 3, and 6. It was also consistent with a report by DeYoe et al. (1995) that
tetrodotoxin blockage reduces background spike rates in layer IVc of
ocular dominance columns belonging to both the injected eye (by 72%)
and the normal eye (by 39%).

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Figure 9.
Monkey 7 (laser vs normal). A,
Montage showing the scotoma induced by the laser lesion in Figure 8.
Within the scotoma, the CO pattern resembles ocular dominance columns,
proving that retinal damage sparing the ganglion cell layer still
produces a CO pattern tantamount to enucleation. Measurements confirmed
significant loss of CO activity, within both the lasered left eye's
ocular dominance columns (optical density, 0.351) and the intact right
eye's ocular dominance columns (optical density, 0.435), compared with
CO activity outside the scotoma (optical density, 0.465). Outside the
scotoma, CO staining was essentially homogeneous, because both retinas
were normal, although there was some irregular fluctuation in density.
This occurs as an artifact of montaging, because CO staining intensity
varies slightly with section depth in layer IVc . B,
Single Zif268 section showing ocular dominance columns in layer IVc.
Outside the cortical scotoma, the dark Zif268 columns correspond to the
intact left eye's ocular dominance columns (Chaudhuri et al., 1995 ).
Within the cortical scotoma, the dark Zif268 columns match the dark CO
columns serving the freshly enucleated right eye. This is shown for the
boxed region in Figure 10.
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Zif268 immunohistochemistry showed ocular dominance columns throughout
V1 (Fig. 9B). Outside the scotoma, the pale Zif268 columns
were assumed to match the ocular dominance columns of the freshly
enucleated right eye, based on work by Chaudhuri et al. (1995) . Inside
the scotoma, the dark Zif268 columns were found to match the dark CO
columns belonging to the right eye (Fig. 10). Therefore, Zif268 levels inside
the scotoma remained greater in the right eye's columns, even after 10 hr of darkness and enucleation of the right eye. This experiment
demonstrates that Zif268 patterns can linger long after stimulus
conditions change, mandating caution when using Zif268 to assign CO
columns to one eye or the other, especially in complex experiments
involving a series of manipulations to each eye.

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Figure 10.
Monkey 7 (laser vs normal). Boxed
region from Figure 9, comparing the CO
(A) and Zif268 (B) patterns
inside the cortical scotoma. The dark columns match
(arrows), indicating that higher Zif268 levels persisted
in the right eye's ocular dominance columns, despite 10 hr of dark
adaptation, enucleation of the right eye, and 4 hr of stimulation of
the left eye. Presumably the laser lesion prevented visual stimulation
of the left eye from inducing greater Zif268 levels in its ocular
dominance columns. The section contains some blotchy artifact, perhaps
from tissue manipulation during flat mounting.
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Monkey 8 (laser vs enucleation)
The previous experiment showed that an enucleation CO pattern is
induced by laser lesions, even when ganglion cells are spared. In this
next experiment, we asked whether sparing of ganglion cells results in
milder loss of CO activity. To provide a benchmark for comparison in
the same cortex, we enucleated the right eye of a normal adult macaque.
Eleven months later, a lesion was made in the temporal retina of the
left eye using a setting of 220 mW (see journal front
cover). Fourteen weeks later, concerned that the lesion might have damaged ganglion cells, we decided to make
another, less intense, lesion in the same eye. Accordingly, a smaller
lesion was made nasal to the fovea using an energy setting of only 180 mW (Fig. 11A). Three weeks later
[3H]proline was injected into the eye to assay
ganglion cell integrity by examining the density of transneuronal
labeling in the cortex. One week later the animal was perfused.

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Figure 11.
Monkey 8 (laser vs enucleation).
A, Montage of the left retina, prepared from photos
taken immediately after applying 15 laser spots at a setting of 180 mW
to create a 0.5 mm lesion 6-9° nasal to the fovea. The 1.5 mm
lesion, 6-12° temporal to the fovea, was made 14 weeks earlier by
applying 25 spots at 220 mW. Note the dramatic difference in the
appearance of the fresh lesion and the old lesion. The
diagrams show the extent of retinal damage from the two
lesions, compiled from serial paraffin sections. B,
Sample histological sections show the damage from the smaller nasal
(bottom left) and larger temporal (bottom
right) laser lesions. The temporal lesion caused more severe
inner retinal damage and had more sloping borders. Both these features
were reflected in the cortical findings illustrated in Figure 12.
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The larger, 18-week-old laser lesion caused some ganglion cell
destruction, as we feared (Fig. 11B). Surrounding a
central zone of partial ganglion cell injury, there were concentric
rings of damage limited to more outer retina. In the left cortex, CO revealed a 10 mm scotoma in layer IVc, surrounded by ocular dominance columns induced by enucleation of the right eye (Fig.
12A). The size and
location of the scotoma closely matched the retinotopic coordinates of
the laser lesion, as in the previous cases. There was a steady decline
in CO content within the left eye's columns, from the edge to the
center of the scotoma. Consequently, the ocular dominance columns were
quite distinct near the periphery of the scotoma but nearly erased in
the center. From this distribution of CO activity, one would expect
more robust single-cell responses from the lesioned eye at the edge of
the scotoma than at the center, as reported by Schmid et al. (1996) .
The gradient in CO loss was mirrored by the density of autoradiographic
labeling (Fig. 12B). It fell off toward the center of
the cortical scotoma, reflecting greater ganglion cell damage (Fig.
11). The parallel fading of [3H]proline label and
CO activity implied that sparing of ganglion cells spares CO activity.
The scotoma extended through all cortical layers, matching perfectly
the scotoma in layer IVc. Inside the scotoma, all CO patches appeared
faint, and alternating dark and light rows were absent (Fig.
13).

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Figure 12.
Monkey 8 (laser vs enucleation).
A, CO montage showing the cortical scotoma induced by
the laser lesion temporal to the fovea in Figure 11, silhouetted
against a backdrop of ocular dominance columns induced by enucleation
of the right eye. Note the gradual loss of CO activity from the
periphery to the center of the scotoma. Even in the center, CO activity
is slightly greater in the ocular dominance columns of the lesioned eye
than in those of the enucleated eye. MC, Monocular
crescent; *blind spot. B, Hole in the autoradiographic
montage caused by laser injury to ganglion cells. It also has sloping
edges but appears shallower than the metabolic hole in
A, because columns are still seen clearly throughout.
C, Montage of the scotoma resulting from the laser
lesion nasal to the fovea. Because the laser damage was less severe and
more evenly distributed, the loss of CO activity is milder and lacks a
periphery-to-center gradient. D, Sparing of ganglion
cells was confirmed by 3[H]proline labeling within the CO
scotoma, which remained nearly normal. This experiment shows that outer
retinal damage reduces cortical CO activity, but less than inner
retinal damage or enucleation.
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Figure 13.
Monkey 8 (laser vs enucleation). A single section
through the upper layers from the cortex illustrated in Figure
12A is shown. Dots mark the
perimeter of the CO scotoma. Outside the scotoma, alternating light and
dark rows of patches were visible everywhere, except in the monocular
crescent (where they were rendered almost invisible by enucleation of
the right eye) and in the blind spot representation (*). Inside the
scotoma, all the patches appeared equally pale, indicating that
enucleation and partial retinal damage have comparable effects on CO
activity outside layer IV. Similar findings were present in the upper
layers of the right visual cortex.
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In the lateral geniculate body, a gap in
[3H]proline label within laminae 2, 3, and 5 was
induced by ganglion cell destruction (Fig.
14). Even after consulting a detailed
atlas (Malpeli and Baker, 1975 ), we could not decide whether the gap in
the lateral geniculate body corresponded exactly to the gap in the
cortex. The correlation was hard to assess, because the gap extended
across 10 sections and had a different configuration in each section. The gap would have been difficult to map physiologically, because its
borders were so scattered and indistinct. In the
[3H]proline gap, CO activity and Nissl staining
were both reduced.

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Figure 14.
Monkey 8 (laser vs enucleation).
A, Autoradiograph of the left lateral geniculate body,
showing a gap in laminae 2 and 3 from retinal ganglion cell destruction
(large arrow). The gap has fuzzy edges and contains
fragments of label (small arrows). B,
Another section, 300 µm more caudal, showing migration of the gap
dorsally into laminae 3 and 5 (large arrows). Again, the
label is fragmented (small arrows). To map this complex
scotoma precisely in three dimensions would be a daunting task,
requiring dozens of electrode penetrations and arbitrary decisions
about boundaries.
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The smaller, 4-week-old laser lesion produced damage confined almost
entirely to photoreceptor cell bodies and outer segments (Fig.
11B). Predictably, CO activity in the cortical
scotoma was affected less severely than in the other hemisphere (Fig.
12, compare A, C), and autoradiographic input remained
essentially intact (Fig. 12D). CO columns serving the
lasered left eye did not fade from the edge to the center of the
cortical scotoma, as on the other side, reflecting more even
distribution of retinal damage. The fact that CO columns remained
easily visible within the cortical scotoma confirmed that outer retinal
damage affects cortical CO levels less than inner retinal damage or
enucleation. However, the survival time after the second, smaller laser
lesion was only 4 weeks. A longer survival would have been better, to
guarantee that CO levels had sufficient time to reach their nadir.
Ideally, the enucleation and the laser lesions should also have been
performed simultaneously.
Human subject C.E.C. (macular degeneration vs normal)
This 67-year-old man lost vision in his left eye from a subretinal
neovascular membrane that developed from macular degeneration (Fig.
15A). It resulted in a large
central scotoma (Fig. 15B) and an acuity of only counting
fingers at 2 feet. The right eye was normal. Four years later he died
of lung cancer. In the macula there was a thick fibrovascular membrane
beneath the retina, which caused total destruction of the
photoreceptors (Fig. 15C,D). The inner nuclear layer was
split by a large cyst. The ganglion cell layer showed only mild atrophy
and cell loss.

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Figure 15.
Human subject (C.E.C.). A, Left
fundus, showing a macular scar (yellow area) from
a fibrovascular membrane, which detached the retina locally and
destroyed the photoreceptors. *Approximate location of the fovea.
B, The macular scar caused a central scotoma, mapped on
a Goldmann perimeter, which extended ~30° into the nasal visual
field. Within the scotoma the subject could not see a 1000 apostilb
light spot 64 mm2 against a 31.5 apostilb
background. C, Paraffin section cut along the horizontal
meridian of the left retina, through the optic nerve (large
arrow) and macula (small arrow), stained with
hematoxylin and eosin. The retina was detached by a thick fibrovascular
membrane. D, Magnified view, cut through the fovea (*),
showing the fibrovascular membrane between the choroid and inner
nuclear layer (arrow pairs). The photoreceptors were
destroyed. The inner nuclear layer (curved arrows) was
split by a large cyst, but the ganglion cell layer was relatively
spared.
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Figure 16 shows a CO reconstruction of
the left visual cortex. Ocular dominance columns were visible nearly to
the monocular crescent representation, reflecting the huge cortical
magnification of the central 30° of vision. The columns were low in
contrast, which we attribute to relative sparing of the ganglion cells. The findings in this subject confirmed the results in Monkeys 7 and 8, that damage concentrated in the outer retinal layers is sufficient to
label ocular dominance columns with CO. However, the columns were
fainter than those seen after enucleation.

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Figure 16.
Human subject (C.E.C.). A, CO
montage of the flat-mounted medial surface of the left occipital lobe,
revealing ocular dominance columns from the retinal lesion in the left
eye. The columns were low in contrast, compared with those seen after
monocular enucleation. B, Drawing of the columns in
A. They could not be seen clearly in the regions shaded
gray. Because central vision is highly magnified,
columns were visible throughout striate cortex, except anteriorly in
the immediate vicinity of the monocular crescent (MC)
representation.
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DISCUSSION |
Monocular core zones versus binocular border strips
The main point of this paper is to highlight the difference
between the effects of enucleation and eyelid suture on CO activity in
striate cortex. This difference is noteworthy because it provides a
clue to the organization of monocular and binocular zones in the
cortex. Enucleation produces a high-contrast pattern of light and dark
columns precisely equivalent to the distribution of geniculocortical afferents in layer IVc, as they might be revealed by intraocular injection of [3H]proline (Fig.
17). The same pattern has been
described after tetrodotoxin blockade (Wong-Riley and Carroll, 1984 ).
Eyelid suture, on the other hand, produces a novel pattern of thin dark
columns alternating with wide pale columns (Horton, 1984 ; Hendry and
Jones, 1986 ; Crawford et al., 1989 ; Trusk et al., 1990 , Tigges et al., 1992 ). Lens removal (Tigges et al., 1992 ) and atropine instillation (Hendrickson et al., 1987 ) also produce this pattern. It has nothing to
do with the shrinkage and expansion of ocular dominance columns reported after early visual deprivation (Hubel et al., 1977 ), because
(1) it occurs from eyelid suture even in adult animals (whose ocular
dominance columns are frozen); and (2) the thin columns are
in register with the ocular dominance columns of the open
eye, not the deprived eye. This was proven in Monkey 3 by injecting the
open eye with [3H]proline (Fig. 4). The thin CO
columns fit inside the columns of proline label.

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Figure 17.
Schematic diagram of normal macaque striate
cortex (top), looking through the cortical layers from
the pial surface. On the left, brackets
mark the boundaries of the geniculocortical afferents serving each eye
(R, right; L, left) in layer IVc. Each
ocular dominance column contains a row of CO patches within a central,
predominately monocular, core zone. The core zone of each ocular
dominance column is flanked by a thin border strip. Together, the
border strips from each ocular dominance column create a binocular
compartment straddling the boundary between ocular dominance columns.
Note that our subdivision of striate cortex into border strips and core
zones is not equivalent to the well established "blob-interblob"
dichotomy, because interblob tissue is located in both core zones and
border strips. After enucleation or a laser lesion, CO activity in
layer IVc is lost in the core zones and border strips of the affected
eye's ocular dominance columns, giving rise to a high-contrast pattern
of dark and light columns, which corresponds exactly to the ocular
columns seen after [3H]proline eye injection.
After lid suture, CO activity drops in the core zones and border strips
of the closed eye's ocular dominance columns and in the
border strips of the open eye's columns, creating a pattern of thin
dark columns alternating with wide pale columns. The columns are low in
contrast, because suture has a less drastic effect on CO activity than
enucleation.
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The crucial point is that the dark CO columns are narrower than the
open eye's ocular dominance columns. They coincide with the open
eye's monocular core zones, containing the CO patches (Fig. 17).
Figure 3 captures this relationship in a single section by showing rows
of patches merging with thin dark CO columns as they enter layer IVc.
The intervening pale CO columns are wider than the closed eye's ocular
dominance columns. This can occur, of course, only if eyelid suture
affects CO levels inside the open eye's ocular dominance
columns. Loss of CO activity occurs within the open eye's border
strips, the thin leaflets of tissue situated between the core zones and
the actual column boundaries. The border strips are binocular, by
definition, because their CO content is affected by suture of either
eye.
Our observation that border strips lose CO activity regardless of
which eye is sutured implies that they contain binocular units. After
suture of either eye, such units presumably fire at a lower rate, and
hence their CO content declines. In newborn monkeys, LeVay et al.
(1980) found many binocular cells straddling the boundaries of ocular
dominance columns in layer IVc. They emphasized the presence of these
units to support their contention that ocular dominance columns in baby
monkeys are not yet fully segregated. Even in older monkeys, however,
they remarked that, "the changeover between the two eyes occurred
over a distance of not more than 100 µm. Such very narrow zones of
overlap are seen in normal adults and may represent an actual mixing of
left- and right-eye activity at the border or, more likely, may mainly reflect the size of the uninsulated electrode tip." Their report of a
100 µm overlap was prescient, because 100 µm corresponds closely to
a pair of border strips. In view of the observations of LeVay et al.
(1980) , further recordings are warranted in search of binocular units
in layer IVc. Recordings in awake monkeys have suggested that binocular
interactions occur in all cortical layers, including IVc
(Creutzfeldt et al., 1987 ; Snodderly and Gur, 1995 ). The substrate for
such interactions might be provided by local cortical circuits, which
often cross column boundaries (Katz et al., 1989 ; Anderson et al.,
1993 ; Wiser and Callaway, 1996 ). In particular, layer VI pyramidal
neurons send a massive projection to layer IVc, which usually is not
confined to the "home" column (Wiser and Callaway, 1997 ).
The loss of CO activity in border strips of both eyes, induced by
suture of only one eye, might also be explained by physiological changes occurring outside layer IVc. Border strips and core zones are
vertical slabs extending through all cortical layers, just like ocular
dominance columns. The border strips of each eye, united together,
encompass the territory between each row of CO patches. Cells driven
well by either eye (ocular dominance groups 3-5) are concentrated in
these regions. In cat striate cortex, LeVay and Voigt (1988) have shown
that horopter-encoding stereo cells are located between ocular
dominance columns, as predicted by Ferster (1981) . In macaque striate
cortex, the functional architecture for stereo-sensitive units has not
been explored, but it seems likely that cells with tuned disparity
selectivity will be found in border strips (Poggio, 1995 ). The division
of striate cortex into core zones and border strips may, therefore,
represent a columnar system for stereo cells. Eyelid suture reduces CO
in both eyes' border strips, because they are rich in stereo cells, and in the closed eye's core zones. As a result, CO staining remains robust only within rows of patches serving the open eye, enhancing their stripe-like appearance (see Fig. 7B, outside the
scotoma). This pattern may become visible in layer IVc via transmission through intrinsic cortical circuits, e.g., by changes in the CO content
of axons and dendrites passing vertically through layer IVc.
It is natural to inquire why enucleation and lid suture produce
different CO patterns in layer IV but not in other layers (Fig.
7A,B, compare CO within the scotomas). Enucleation (and tetrodotoxin) both silence geniculocortical afferents. This causes a
drastic reduction in CO levels in geniculocortical axon terminals and
in postsynaptic cells in layer IVc, giving rise to a high-contrast columnar pattern identical to the ocular dominance columns. The modest
loss of CO activity in the normal eye's border strips is obscured
(although optical density measurements in Fig. 9A showed it). By distinction, after eyelid suture (and lens removal or atropine
administration), vigorous levels of spontaneous activity are maintained
by geniculocortical afferents. In fact, responses can be evoked by
light stimulation through the closed eyelids (Horton, 1984 ). CO levels
remain normal within geniculate cell bodies (Horton, 1984 ) and probably
within their cortical afferents. Under these circumstances, what
emerges is a low-contrast CO pattern in layer IVc, reflecting loss of
physiologically driven activity in neurons and circuits intrinsic to
the cortex.
The striking difference between the suture and the enucleation CO
patterns has not been appreciated clearly by previous observers, perhaps because variation in enzyme staining has made it hard to
compare data from different experiments involving different types of
deprivation. We standardized our measurements of optical density (Fig.
1), thereby preserving the absolute intensity and contrast of CO
reaction product in our sections. We also combined suture with a focal
lesion (Sherman et al., 1974 ) to produce both patterns in the same
cortex (Fig. 7A). This approach provided the strongest
evidence that the two patterns are truly distinct. Trusk and Wong-Riley
(1990) have reported, in abstract form, that retinal laser lesions
produce a CO pattern in macaque striate cortex similar to enucleation.
Our results are in agreement. It is easy to understand why laser
destruction of ganglion cells produces a local CO pattern resembling
enucleation. It is more surprising that damage to the outer retina is
sufficient to produce such a pattern (albeit lower in contrast; see
Figs. 9A, 12C). Nothing is known about
spontaneous activity of ganglion cells after photoreceptor ablation. It
is probably diminished if our reasoning in the preceding paragraph is
correct.
Fill-in of cortical scotomas after focal retinal laser lesions
After focal retinal laser lesions, single-cell responses
are silenced in corresponding regions of the lateral geniculate body and the visual cortex (Eysel et al., 1980 ; Eysel, 1982 ; Gilbert et al.,
1990 ; Kaas et al., 1990 ; Heinen and Skavenski, 1991 ). Eventually, these
scotomas seem to fill in with responses driven by retina just outside
the laser lesion (Chino et al., 1992 ; Gilbert and Wiesel, 1992 ;
Darian-Smith and Gilbert, 1994 , 1995 ; Das and Gilbert, 1995 ; Rosa et
al., 1995 ; Schmid et al., 1996 ). The cortical scotomas produced by
retinal laser lesions have not been mapped previously using CO. Our
five laser lesions showed fill-in phenomenon or not that a hole in CO
activity remains in the cortex months after a laser lesion. This is
true whether or not the other eye is enucleated (see Figs. 7, 9, 12).
The hole corresponds retinotopically to the laser lesion visible in the
fundus. Although our findings do not exclude topographic plasticity,
the persistence of a large CO hole in the cortex tells us that neuronal
activity remains profoundly depressed after a retinal lesion.
Some investigators have reported that the fill-in phenomenon occurs
after ganglion cell destruction (Chino et al., 1995 ), whereas others
have emphasized that fill-in does not require their elimination
(Gilbert and Wiesel, 1992 ; Schmid et al., 1996 ). In our experience,
retinal laser burns can be untidy lesions. In one animal, we tried to
destroy all ganglion cells but failed (Fig. 6). In another animal, we
tried to spare ganglion cells but damaged them anyway (Fig. 11, large
lesion). The edges of laser lesions tend to slope, especially near the
fovea, but they can be sharp. Apple et al. (1976) conducted a
histological study of retinal damage in monkeys after experimental
laser photocoagulation. They observed that, "in spite of the precise
delivery capacity of the instrument, one can never be entirely assured
of the degree of damage inflicted on the retina," because of
variation in beam focus, retinal thickness, and pigment density.
Unfortunately, most investigators (with the exception of Chino et al.,
1995 ) have provided only a casual description, if any, of the damage from each laser lesion.
The argument that cortical "plasticity" or "reorganization"
occurs after focal retinal laser lesions hinges on the crucial observation that the cortex is initially silent and then regains responsiveness. Undoubtedly many factors contribute to the fill-in phenomenon, but the most obvious explanation is that the retina partially recovers from the acute effects of the laser lesion. The
thermal injury appears initially as a glowing white blotch from acute
retinal swelling, opacification, and coagulation necrosis. As the
retina heals over a few weeks, it regains transparency (Fig. 8, compare
A, B). After retinal recuperation, surviving ganglion cells
may resume firing, accounting in turn for resumption of cortical
activity. If a few spared ganglion cells receive input from
photoreceptors outside the laser lesion, they may be able to drive
occasional cortical neurons inside the scotoma, which appear to have
displaced, enlarged receptive fields. Parvicellular giant ganglion
cells, with dendritic fields ranging from 250 to 850 µm (Rodieck and
Watanabe, 1993 ), could easily receive input from outside large retinal
lesions. Ganglion cells with smaller dendritic fields, located just
inside retinal lesions, are likely to get input from intact
photoreceptors. This is especially true in the primate, where
photoreceptors in the macula are laterally displaced hundreds of
micrometers from the ganglion cells they supply. To explain the fill-in
of cortical scotomas, we plainly need to learn more about the
functional recovery of partially damaged retina.
In a clever experiment, Schmid et al. (1995) made local serous retinal
detachments by overloading animals with intravenous fluids. In these
animals the retina was spared significant thermal injury. Under these
conditions, the cortical fill-in effect occurred immediately. This
finding supports our contention that delayed cortical recovery after
laser lesions is related to retinal healing. A simple control
experiment could clarify this point. After documenting cortical fill-in
months after a retinal lesion, one could then re-laser the same patch
of retina. If the fill-in effect promptly disappeared, it would be
retinal in origin.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 2, 1998; revised March 19, 1998; accepted April 10, 1998.
This work was supported by the National Eye Institute, That Man May
See, and Research to Prevent Blindness. We thank Robin Troyer for her
assistance with these experiments. We also thank the California
Regional Primate Research Center (especially Dr. Celia Valverde, Jenny
Short, and David Robb) for their help. The California Primate Center is
supported by National Institutes of Health Base Grant RR00169. The
Zif268 antibody was a gift from Rodrigo Bravo. Julie L. Schnapf, Sharif
A. Taha, Christian F. Wehrhahn, and Marcello G. P. Rosa provided
valuable comments on this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Jonathan C. Horton, Beckman
Vision Center, 10 Kirkham Street, University of California San
Franscico, San Francisco, CA 94143-0730.
 |
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D. D. Dilks, J. T. Serences, B. J. Rosenau, S. Yantis, and M. McCloskey
Human Adult Cortical Reorganization and Consequent Visual Distortion
J. Neurosci.,
September 5, 2007;
27(36):
9585 - 9594.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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J. V. Liu, H. Ashida, A. T. Smith, and B. A. Wandell
Assessment of Stimulus-Induced Changes in Human V1 Visual Field Maps
J Neurophysiol,
December 1, 2006;
96(6):
3398 - 3408.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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D. V. Giannikopoulos and U. T. Eysel
Dynamics and specificity of cortical map reorganization after retinal lesions
PNAS,
July 11, 2006;
103(28):
10805 - 10810.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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K. R. Duffy and M. S. Livingstone
Loss of Neurofilament Labeling in the Primary Visual Cortex of Monocularly Deprived Monkeys
Cereb Cortex,
August 1, 2005;
15(8):
1146 - 1154.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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J. C Horton and D. L Adams
The cortical column: a structure without a function
Phil Trans R Soc B,
April 29, 2005;
360(1456):
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[Abstract]
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C. I. Baker, E. Peli, N. Knouf, and N. G. Kanwisher
Reorganization of Visual Processing in Macular Degeneration
J. Neurosci.,
January 19, 2005;
25(3):
614 - 618.
[Abstract]
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M. L. J. Crawford and R. S. Harwerth
Ocular Dominance Column Width and Contrast Sensitivity in Monkeys Reared with Strabismus or Anisometropia
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
September 1, 2004;
45(9):
3036 - 3042.
[Abstract]
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[PDF]
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C. Fonta, L. Negyessy, L. Renaud, and P. Barone
Areal and Subcellular Localization of the Ubiquitous Alkaline Phosphatase in the Primate Cerebral Cortex: Evidence for a Role in Neurotransmission
Cereb Cortex,
June 1, 2004;
14(6):
595 - 609.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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B. T. Barrett, A. Bradley, and P. V. McGraw
Understanding the Neural Basis of Amblyopia
Neuroscientist,
April 1, 2004;
10(2):
106 - 117.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
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V. Abudara, A. F. Alvarez, M. H. Chase, and F. R. Morales
Nitric Oxide as an Anterograde Neurotransmitter in the Trigeminal Motor Pool
J Neurophysiol,
July 1, 2002;
88(1):
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[Abstract]
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M B Calford, C Wang, V Taglianetti, W J Waleszczyk, W Burke, and B Dreher
Plasticity in adult cat visual cortex (area 17) following circumscribed monocular lesions of all retinal layers
J. Physiol.,
April 15, 2000;
524(2):
587 - 602.
[Abstract]
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J. C. Horton, D. R. Hocking, and D. L. Adams
Metabolic Mapping of Suppression Scotomas in Striate Cortex of Macaques with Experimental Strabismus
J. Neurosci.,
August 15, 1999;
19(16):
7111 - 7129.
[Abstract]
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