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The Journal of Neuroscience, November 15, 1998, 18(22):9394-9408
Signals from the Superficial Layers of the Superior Colliculus
Enable the Development of the Auditory Space Map in the Deeper
Layers
Andrew J.
King,
Jan W. H.
Schnupp, and
Ian D.
Thompson
University Laboratory of Physiology, Oxford OX1 3PT, United Kingdom
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ABSTRACT |
We have examined whether the superficial layers of the superior
colliculus (SC) provide the source of visual signals that guide the
development of the auditory space map in the deeper layers. Anatomical
tracing experiments with fluorescent microspheres revealed that a
retinotopic map is present in the newborn ferret SC. Aspiration of the
caudal region of the superficial layers of the right SC on postnatal
day 0 did not cause a reorganization of this projection.
Consequently, recordings made when the animals were mature showed that
visual units in the remaining superficial layers in rostral SC had
receptive fields that spanned a restricted region of anterior space.
Auditory units recorded beneath the remaining superficial layers were
tuned to corresponding anterior locations. Both the superficial layer
visual map and the deeper layer auditory map were normal in the left,
unoperated SC. The majority of auditory units recorded throughout the
deeper layers ventral to the superficial layer lesion were also tuned
to single sound directions. In this region of the SC, however, we
observed much greater scatter in the distribution of preferred sound
directions and a significant increase in the proportion of units with
spatially ambiguous responses. The auditory representation was
degraded, although many of these units were also visually responsive.
Equivalent lesions of the superficial layers made in adult ferrets did
not alter the topographic order in the auditory representation,
suggesting that visual activity in these layers may be involved in
aligning the different sensory maps in the developing SC.
Key words:
sound localization; superior colliculus; auditory space
map; visual space map; bimodal neurons; ferret; developmental
plasticity; retinocollicular projection; superficial layers; lesion
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INTRODUCTION |
The registration of sensory maps in
the superior colliculus (SC) allows the different cues associated with
multisensory objects to be integrated in ways that facilitate
goal-directed orienting behavior (Stein and Meredith, 1993 ). Aligning
these maps during development is an activity-dependent process that
relies heavily on sensory experience. This applies particularly to the
synthesis of a map of auditory space, which requires that SC neurons
become tuned systematically to monaural and binaural localization cues that are initially encoded in separate brainstem pathways.
Several studies have highlighted the importance of visual experience in
shaping the development of the map of auditory space. If the
representation of visual space in the SC is shifted systematically by
surgically deviating the eye in young ferrets (King et al., 1988 ) or by
raising owls with prismatic spectacles that optically displace the
visual field (Knudsen and Brainard, 1991 ), a corresponding change takes
place in the auditory map. Consequently, the alignment between the
preferred visual and auditory stimulus locations is preserved. On the
other hand, various abnormalities in the auditory representation have
been reported in animals that have been deprived of visual cues during
development (Withington-Wray et al., 1990 ; Knudsen et al., 1991 ;
Withington, 1992 ; King and Carlile, 1993 ).
The nature of the process by which visual signals calibrate the
developing auditory responses is unknown. In prism-reared owls, changes
in the auditory map are brought about by retuning neurons to interaural
time differences (ITD) that correspond to the optically displaced
visual map. These shifts in ITD tuning are first observed in the
external nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICX) (Brainard and
Knudsen, 1993 ), which projects topographically to the SC (Knudsen and
Knudsen, 1983 ). Paradoxically, the interaction between the two
modalities, therefore, takes place in barn owls in what appears to be a
purely auditory nucleus, rather than at the level of the bimodal
neurons in the SC.
Although most neurons throughout the barn owl SC are bimodal (Knudsen,
1982 ), the superficial layers of the mammalian SC are exclusively
visual in function. Anatomical (Grantyn et al., 1984 ; Mooney et al.,
1984 , 1988 ; Moschovakis et al., 1988 ; Behan and Appell, 1992 ; Hall and
Lee, 1997 ) and physiological (Mooney et al., 1992 ; Lee et al., 1997 )
studies have revealed the existence of columnar connections between the
superficial visual and the deeper multisensory layers. Moreover, in
ferrets, the superficial layers project topographically to the nucleus
of the brachium of the inferior colliculus (BIN) (Baron et al., 1998 ),
the primary source of auditory input to the deep SC (Schnupp and King,
1997 ).
These studies suggest that, in mammals, the superficial SC may be part
of the circuit by which visual signals influence the maturation of
auditory spatial tuning. If so, partial removal of this region early in
development should result in a localized change in the underlying
auditory map that is comparable to the effects of visual deprivation.
To test this possibility, we have examined the effects on the visual
and auditory representations of making restricted lesions of the
superficial layers in both neonatal and adult ferrets.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Superior colliculus lesions. A partial lesion of the
superficial layers of the SC was made unilaterally in nine ferret kits from two different litters on the day of birth (P0). The animals were
anesthetized with Saffan (Alfaxalone/Alfadolone acetate; Mallinckrodt
Veterinary Ltd., Uxbridge, UK; dose equivalent to 0.6-0.8 ml/kg) and
the midbrain exposed by removal of the overlying cranium and dura. At
this age, the cortex does not overly the SC. The superficial layers of
the right SC were sectioned mediolaterally, and the caudal region was
removed by aspiration. Care was taken to avoid the adjacent inferior
colliculus. At the conclusion of the surgery the animals were recovered
and returned to their mothers.
Similar lesions were also made in the right SC of two adult ferrets
(both just over 1 year in age) that were anesthetized with Saffan (2 ml/kg). The scalp was reflected, the cranium over the SC was removed,
and the cortex was aspirated unilaterally to expose the right SC. Once
the superficial layer ablation had been made, the brain cavity was
packed with Sterispon (Allen and Hanbury, London, UK), the cranium was
replaced, and the scalp was sutured. The animals received antibiotic
(Penbritin; SmithKline Beecham, Brentford, UK; 0.2 ml, i.m.) and opiate
analgesia (Temgesic; Reckitt and Colman, Hull, UK; 0.05 ml, i.m.).
In each case, the extent of the lesion was determined both
physiologically by recording visual responses in the remaining superficial layers and/or histologically when the animals were used in
a terminal tract tracing or recording experiment.
Anatomical tracing experiments. The state of the
retinocollicular projection was analyzed in a further nine newborn
ferrets. P0 ferret kits were anesthetized either with ether or with
Saffan, the scalp was reflected, and the cranium and dura over the SC were removed. In the initial experiments, multiple injections of either
red or green fluorescent microspheres (LumaFluor, Naples, FL; diluted
1:10 with sterile saline) were made in caudal SC; usually, a single
injection of the other tracer was made in rostral SC. In a subsequent
group of animals, a single injection of one tracer was made in caudal
SC, and a single injection of the other tracer was made in rostral SC;
the separation of these paired injections was systematically varied.
The volume of the single injections was 50 nl, and for the multiple
injections a total volume of 100-200 nl was injected. The cranium was
replaced, the scalp was sutured, and the animals survived overnight in
an incubator. After a terminal dose of pentobarbitone sodium (Sagatal;
Rhône Mérieux, Harlow, UK; 120 mg/kg, i.p.), the kits were
perfused through the heart with PBS, followed by a brief
perfusion with 1% paraformaldehyde in phosphate buffer. The superior
pole of the cornea was marked with a knife cut, the eyes were removed, and the retinas were dissected out, post-fixed with 4%
paraformaldehyde in phosphate buffer, and prepared as a flat mount.
After removing the eyes, the perfusion continued with 4%
paraformaldehyde in phosphate buffer. The brain was post-fixed and 30 µm frozen sections were cut to allow reconstruction of the injection sites.
Analysis of the distribution of labeled ganglion cells was performed
with a computer-microscope package, using a camera lucida to
superimpose the mouse-drawn images over the image of the retina. The
retinas were sampled at regular intervals (either at 500 or 200 µm),
and all the labeled cells in a sample box were counted (sample box size
either 125 × 125 µm or 75 × 75 µm, respectively). Cells
of one color were drawn, the screen was cleared, and then cells of the
other color were drawn. The software identified candidate cells as
double-labeled; these were then confirmed visually. Isodensity contours
were drawn using Systat (Version 5.0 for Windows) and expressed as a
percentage of the maximum number of cells of a given color found in a
sample box in that retina. A graphics tablet was used to measure the
retinal area bounded by the 20% and by the 40% contour lines; these
areas were expressed as a percentage of the total retinal area. The
segregation of the cells was also measured with a nearest neighbor
analysis (Krug et al., 1998 ). Briefly, the program determined whether
the nearest neighbor of a given cell was labeled with the same or with
a different tracer. A value of 1 was given if the neighbor was the same
color and a value of 0 if different (if the cell was double-labeled, a
value of 0.5 was used). Given equally sized populations of red and
green cells, totally segregated populations will have an average
neighbor value of 100%, and totally intermixed populations will have
an average of 50%. Simulations have shown that changes in the relative sizes of the two populations cause the mean values for each population to deviate symmetrically away from the values found with matched populations, provided the ratio of population numbers is not >4:1 (Krug et al., 1998 ). Consequently, we have averaged the two neighbor values (one for red cells and one for green cells) obtained on each
retina and have excluded retinas in which the ratio of the two
populations exceeded 4:1.
The state of the retinal projection was analyzed in three of the adult
ferrets (>6 months of age) that had undergone partial ablation of the
SC at P0 using retrograde tracing of horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The
animals were anesthetized with Saffan (2 ml/kg, i.m.). The scalp was
reflected, the cranium over the SC was removed, and the cortex was
aspirated to reveal the SC. Multiple injections of HRP (20% in 2%
DMSO in saline; total volume of 4 µl) were made into the remaining
rostral portions of the SC. The injections avoided the more medial
portion of the SC to minimize spread across the midline. The brain
cavity was packed with Sterispon, the cranium was replaced, and the
scalp was sutured. The animals received injections of Penbritin (0.2 ml, i.m.) and Temgesic (0.05 ml, i.m.) and survived for 2-3 d. After a
terminal dose of Sagatal (120 mg/kg, i.p.), the animals were perfused
through the heart with PBS followed by a brief perfusion with 1%
paraformaldehyde in phosphate buffer. The superior pole of the cornea
was marked with a knife cut, the contralateral eye was removed, and the
retina was dissected out, prepared as a flat mount, and post-fixed for 2 hr with 1% paraformaldehyde and 1.25% glutaraldehyde in phosphate buffer. After removing the eye, the perfusion continued with 1% paraformaldehyde and 1.25% glutaraldehyde in phosphate buffer. The
retinas were reacted for HRP using a modified Hanker-Yates protocol
(Perry and Linden, 1982 ). The distribution of labeled ganglion cells
was analyzed using the computer microscope, with a sample interval of
500 µm and a sample box size of 125 × 125 µm.
Forty-eight hours before the terminal recording experiment, another
three of the ferrets that had received lesions of the SC at P0 were
reanesthetized with Saffan and 500 µCi of
[3H]proline (Amersham) were injected into the
vitreous humor of the left eye. The post-fixed brains were cut
parasagittally at 30 or 40 µm. Air-dried sections were dehydrated,
defatted, and then coated with nuclear research emulsion. The sections
were exposed at 4°C for 4-8 weeks and then developed. The developed sections were counter-stained with cresyl violet and coverslipped.
Electrophysiological recording. Full details are given in
King and Hutchings (1987) and Schnupp et al. (1995) . Six of the ferrets
in which a partial lesion of the superficial layers had been made on P0
were prepared for electrophysiological recording when they were at
least 7 months old. Recordings were also made from the two ferrets that
had received caudal SC ablations in adulthood, beginning 105 and
111 d after surgery, respectively. Anesthesia was induced with
Saffan and maintained during surgery by supplementary intravenous
doses. Body temperature was maintained at ~39°C. A craniotomy was
made bilaterally above the cortex overlying the SC and a minimal metal
headholder, which surrounded both craniotomies and which supported the
animal from behind, was attached to the skull. The eyelids were
trimmed, the pupils were dilated with atropine sulfate, and the eyes
were protected with zero refractive power contact lenses to allow
mapping of visual receptive fields. To prevent eye movements, the
ferrets were paralyzed with Flaxedil (gallamine triethiodide; Sigma,
St. Louis, MO; 12 mg, i.v.). Anesthesia and paralysis were maintained
with a continuous intravenous infusion of Nembutal (pentobarbitone
sodium; Abbott Laboratories, Queensborough, UK; 1 mg · kg 1 · hr 1) and
Flaxedil (20 mg · kg 1 · hr 1),
respectively. The ferrets were ventilated artificially with room air
supplemented with 95% O2 and 5% CO2,
and the heart rate, electrocardiogram, electroencephalogram, and
end-tidal CO2 were monitored continuously.
All recordings were performed in an anechoic chamber. The animal was
placed on a small table at the center of a vertical robotic hoop with a
radius of 0.65 m (Annetts et al., 1987 ). A Kef T27 loudspeaker and 1 cm diameter LED were mounted on the hoop. Movement of
the speaker-LED assembly along the hoop allowed the vertical angle of
the stimulus to be varied, whereas the azimuthal angle was varied by
rotating the hoop around the animal. These movements were directed
either by a remote control unit or by the data acquisition software.
Neural activity was recorded with a tungsten microelectrode that was
lowered vertically through the intact cortex and into the SC using a
remotely controlled, motorized microdrive. The neural signals were
amplified (~10,000 times), bandpass filtered (500-5000 Hz), and
digitized (25 kHz, 8 bit). Single units were isolated using our own
spike-sorting software (Schnupp et al., 1995 ; Schnupp and King, 1997 ).
We typically isolated three single units at each recording site.
As the electrode was lowered vertically through the cortex, 100 msec
light flashes were presented at a rate of ~0.8 Hz from a
1-cm-diameter LED mounted in front of the contralateral eye. The
appearance of a strong, characteristic response evoked by this
flashing, stationary stimulus indicated that the electrode had entered
the superficial layers of the SC. We then used the hoop-mounted LED to
map the receptive fields of both single units and multiunits in the
superficial layers. Subsequently, the electrode was advanced into the
deeper layers of the SC as auditory stimuli, consisting of 100 msec
broadband noise bursts (30-30,000 Hz, 100 msec duration with a 5 msec
rise/fall time), were delivered with an interstimulus interval of
~1.5 sec from the hoop-mounted speaker. In those tracks in which the
superficial layers were missing, no strong visual drive was
encountered. The electrode was therefore advanced with both noise
bursts and visual stimuli presented from within the contralateral hemifield.
Once an acoustically responsive unit was isolated, we estimated its
threshold with the loudspeaker positioned near the receptive field
center of the visual responses obtained in the superficial layers of
the same electrode track or, if no superficial layer visual responses
were encountered, at the angle from which the strongest auditory
response was elicited for previous units in the track. To obtain the
threshold, the sound level was reduced in 5 or 10 dB steps until the
95% confidence interval for the number of evoked spikes overlapped the
baseline of spontaneous activity and a clear peak in the peristimulus
time histogram (PSTH) was no longer apparent. We then determined the
spatial response profile of each unit by measuring the response
in 20° azimuth steps from positions 160° contralateral to 160°
ipsilateral to the recording site. The vertical coordinates of the
speaker were held constant at the elevation of the visual receptive
field center for the overlying superficial layers. For some of the
electrode penetrations in which no superficial layer visual activity
was encountered, we also measured auditory elevation profiles to ensure that the loudspeaker was positioned at an optimum angle for mapping the
azimuth profile. All auditory responses were mapped at a sound level of
20-30 dB above unit threshold. Because the largest interaural level
differences generated by the ferret's head are ~25 dB (Carlile, 1990 ; Carlile and King, 1994 ), this stimulus level will provide binaural cues at all frequencies and positions.
The discharge of the unit was measured in response to 20 stimulus
presentations at each speaker position. After the first spatial profile
was obtained we often redetermined the auditory unit threshold at the
speaker position that gave the strongest response. The duration of the
response was estimated by inspection of the PSTH pooled over all the
data for each unit. This was used to set a window within which spikes
were counted to measure the strength of the response. The period from
500-1000 msec after stimulus onset, well after the end of the
stimulus-evoked response, was used to derive an estimate of the
spontaneous activity of each unit. The number of stimulus-evoked spikes
was calculated as the mean number of spikes per presentation in the
response period minus the number of spikes during an equivalent length of time in the spontaneous period. Azimuth profiles were classified objectively by the data acquisition software into one of five categories: "tuned", "bilobed", "broad", "complex", or
"omnidirectional". Tuned profiles contained a single peak, whereas
bilobed profiles had two peaks, and complex cells had more than two. A
peak in the response profile was defined as a region of at least 80%
of the maximal response, flanked by regions with 40% of the maximal response, with the flanking regions not >160° apart. Broad cells exhibited a response peak that was wider than 160°; whereas
omnidirectional responses remained above 40% of the maximum at all
speaker positions tested. These same classification criteria are used
routinely in this laboratory and, therefore, allow a direct comparison
of the results reported here with those from previous studies.
Histological reconstructions of recording sites. Recording
sites were marked with small electrolytic lesions ( 5 µA for 5 sec).
At the end of the recording session, typically after ~40 hr of
recording, the animal was overdosed with Sagatal and perfused through
the heart with PBS followed by 10% formal saline. The brainstem was
removed, cryoprotected with 30% sucrose, and cut into 50 µm coronal
sections on a freezing microtome. The Nissl-stained sections were used
to assess the extent of the neonatal lesion and to reconstruct the
recording sites. The histological coordinates of each recording site
were expressed as a fraction of SC length and width and then plotted on
a standardized SC template. The rostrocaudal coordinates of the
recording sites were measured from the rostrolateral border on this
standardized template in a direction normal to the isoazimuth contours
previously described in normal, adult ferrets (King and Hutchings,
1987 ).
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RESULTS |
Retinocollicular topography at P0
With one exception, all retinas of animals injected at P0 gave a
clear segregation of the red- and green-labeled populations of ganglion
cells after injections of label into the SC. Figure 1 illustrates the distributions of
labeled ganglion cells in three retinas taken from animals in which the
separation of paired injections of tracer was varied systematically. In
each of these animals, the green injection was placed caudally and
slightly laterally, and the red injection was placed more rostrally;
the separations give the distances between the centers of the injection
sites. The dashed lines indicate isodensity contours for the red- and the green-labeled populations. In each case, the outer contour encloses
the area of retina where the density of labeled ganglion cells was at
least 20% of the peak density found for that color. The retina in
Figure 1A displays the least segregation of any retina in the series with considerable overlap in the contours for the
red and green populations. In fact, >50% of the cells in the red
focus, the smaller population, were double-labeled. The pattern of
retinal labeling was not caused by overlapping injection sites;
although only 240 µm separated the injections, the diameter of the
green injection site was 100 µm, and that of the red site was 70 µm. Despite the lack of segregation of red and green cells, the
isodensity contour revealed that the greatest density of red cells was
temporal to the center of the green population, as expected from the
adult map. With increasing injection site separation, the segregation
of the foci of red- and green-labeled ganglion cells increased (Fig.
1B,C), and the number of
double-labeled cells decreased. No double labeling was found in the
retina shown in Figure 1C, which is from the animal with the
most widely separated injection sites.

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Figure 1.
Retinocollicular topography in newborn ferrets.
Flattened whole mounts of the contralateral retina showing the
distribution of retrogradely labeled ganglion cells after a 50 nl
injection of green fluorescent beads into the caudolateral pole of the
contralateral SC and an injection of red fluorescent beads into the
more rostral SC in three different P0 ferrets. The
insets to the bottom left of each panel
representdorsal views of the left SC on which the green
(open area) and red (filled area)
injection sites have been plotted. The separation of the green and red
injection sites was systematically varied across animals; the distance
between the centers of the injection sites in the SC is given below
each dorsal view. The retinas were sampled at 500 µm intervals, and
the number of labeled cells was counted in a sample box of 125 × 125 µm. The isodensity contours for cells containing green beads and
cells containing red beads have been plotted separately
(fine hatching for green and bold
dashes for red). For each retina and for each population of
cells, the maximum number of cells in a sample box was noted, and the
isodensity contours reflect 20% intervals of this peak density. Note
that the separation between the retinal loci most heavily labeled by
red or green beads varies with the spacing of the injections in the SC.
S, Superior; T, temporal;
I, inferior; N, nasal; L,
lateral; R, rostral; M, medial,
C, caudal.
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The isodensity contour analysis reveals clear topography in the
retinocollicular projection of the newborn ferret. The projection is
not a strict point-to-point mapping, because there is both convergence
and divergence in the projection. Thus, two points 240 µm apart in
the SC receive input from substantially overlapping retinal areas (Fig.
1A), and the axons of many retinal ganglion cells
contact both sites. One indication of the retinal convergence is that
the average injection site (in animals receiving only single injections
of any one tracer) occupied just over 1% of the area of the SC,
whereas the average percentage of retina labeled at 20% of peak
density was 14%; this value drops to 6.5% if the 40% isodensity
contours are used. Another measure of topographic precision is the
nearest neighbor value. Figure 2
illustrates how this changes with separation of the injection sites,
showing increasing segregation with separation. The nearest neighbor
value measures the scatter in the total populations of labeled cells and so is sensitive to the numbers of labeled ganglion cells
distributed across the retina that are not shown by the isodensity
contours. On average, ~20% (mean = 21.7%; SD = 12.4;
n = 8) of the labeled cells in a given retina fell
outside the 20% density contour line. Thus, even when the injection
sites were separated by 1 mm and the isodensity contours were clearly
segregated (Fig. 1C), the neighbor value was still <100%.
Because this halo of labeled cells scattered across the retina is not
seen after injections in the adult SC (Wingate et al., 1992 ; I. D. Thompson, unpublished observations), these cells are presumably
eliminated by ganglion cell death in the neonate.

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Figure 2.
Nearest neighbor analysis of the retinocollicular
topography in P0 ferrets. For a given retina, we estimated the
probabilities (1) that any green cell had as its nearest neighbor
another green cell and (2) that any red cell had as its nearest
neighbor another red cell. These two probabilities were averaged to
give a mean neighbor value for each retina (a value of 100% indicates
two totally segregated populations, and a value of 50% indicates two
totally overlapping populations). All the retinas analyzed for this
figure were taken from ferrets that had a single injection of tracer in
more rostral SC, and the separations indicate the distance between the
center of the rostral injection and the center of the more caudal
injection (in 3 cases, multiple caudal injections were made that were
spaced mediolaterally; the separation gives the closest site). The
graph shows how increasing the separation of the injections produces
increasingly segregated populations of labeled retinal ganglion cells.
However, even with a separation of >1 mm, the neighbor value does not
reach 100% in P0 ferrets.
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Effect of neonatal superficial layer lesions on the representation
of visual space
The volume of tissue aspirated at P0 was assessed in adult ferrets
by examination of Nissl-stained sections. In the six animals used for
electrophysiological recording, we estimated that between 40 and 90%
of the superficial layers had been removed from the right SC. In most
cases, ~50% of the superficial SC was left intact. The aspirated
area extended forward from the caudal end of the SC and, in one animal,
included part of the dorsal inferior colliculus. Auditory data from
this animal were, therefore, not included in this study. In most cases,
the neonatal surgery removed the stratum griseum superficiale (SGS)
across the full mediolateral extent of the SC, although we never
observed any damage to the contralateral SC. Occasionally, the extreme
medial or lateral regions of the SGS were found to be intact. This is
illustrated by the coronal sections shown in Figure
3, A and B, which
are taken from one of the animals used for recording. The section in
Figure 3A shows a rostral region of the SC where the
superficial layers are completely intact, whereas most of the SGS and
stratum opticum (SO) are missing from the more caudal section in Figure
3B. As an additional means of estimating the extent of the
neonatal aspiration, we prepared parasagittal
sections from three of the ferrets for autoradiography after injecting
[3H]proline into the contralateral eye 2 d
before the recording experiment. An example is shown in Figure
3C, which illustrates that the labeling of retinocollicular
terminals is restricted to the remaining rostral portion of the
superficial layers.

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Figure 3.
Partial lesions of the superficial layers of the
SC. A, B, Nissl-stained coronal sections
through two regions of the right SC of an adult ferret in which the
caudal pole of the superficial layers had been removed on P0. In each
case, the white dashed lines indicate the lower border
of the stratum opticum. This border was determined by a
careful examination of the sections using both light-field and
dark-field illumination and by comparison with other sections of the
ferret SC that were treated with a myelin stain. The rostral section
(A) shows intact superficial layers, whereas, in
the caudal section (B), these layers are missing
across most of the mediolateral extent of the nucleus.
C, Parasagittal, Nissl-stained section of the midbrain
of an adult ferret in which the caudal region of the superficial layers
had been aspirated at P0. Two days before the terminal recording
experiment, this animal received an intraocular injection of
[3H]proline. The midbrain was then prepared for
autoradiography. The terminal labeling in the remaining portion of the
superficial layers of the SC is shown by the distribution of black
silver grains. At this mediolateral level of the SC, the superficial
layers would normally extend more caudally as indicated by the
black dashed line. In this animal, ~50% of the
superficial region was removed by the neonatal surgery.
SC, Superior colliculus; IC, inferior
colliculus.
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At least part of the SO appeared to be intact in many sections.
Occasional sections from some, but not all, animals showed evidence of
localized damage to the dorsal part of the stratum griseum intermediale
(SGI). Because of the extensive intrinsic connections found within the
deeper layers of the SC (Behan and Kime, 1996 ; Meredith and Ramoa,
1998 ), the data recorded in regions of the SC where any of the SGI
appeared to be missing were excluded.
In each of the lesioned animals, we mapped the visual receptive fields
of multiunit activity recorded in the remaining, intact superficial
layers. The variation in visual best azimuth with recording site for
these electrode penetrations is shown in Figure 4A. Multiunit data
obtained from the left, control SC in the same animals are shown in
Figure 4B. The rostrocaudal extent of the remaining
superficial layers of the SC on the lesioned side was sampled at
intervals of 200 µm or less, whereas larger electrode track
separations were used for other parts of the nucleus. Histological reconstructions of the recording sites confirmed that the absence of
data points in the caudal part of Figure 4A closely
matched the extent of the superficial layer lesion. Consequently,
ferret 9454, which had the smallest lesion, yielded the most data
points.

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Figure 4.
Effect of neonatal aspiration of the caudal part
of the superficial layers of the right SC on the visual representation.
A, Filled or open symbols
indicate the multiunit visual best azimuths recorded in the remaining
rostral portion of the superficial layers of the right SC. Different
symbols are used for different animals. Note that the volume of the
superficial layer region that was left intact and, therefore, the
number of electrode penetrations that could be made varied between the
animals. B, Filled or open
symbols indicate the multiunit best azimuths plotted against
the full extent of the superficial layers of the left, unoperated SC.
In both panels, the background gray symbols show the
distribution of multiunit visual best azimuths along the rostrocaudal
axis of the SC in normal adult ferrets (King and Carlile, 1993 ; Schnupp
et al., 1995 ).
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The visual best azimuths of the multiunit responses recorded in the
remaining superficial layers tended to lie within or close to the range
of values represented in this part of the nucleus in normal, adult
ferrets, although most of the data from ferrets 9349 and 9456 fell just
outside the normal range (Fig. 4A). The region of the
visual field mapped in each animal was determined by the size of the
lesion and, therefore, did not include the posterior locations that are
normally represented in caudal SC. In contrast, the visual
representation on the control side (Fig. 4B) was
entirely normal.
For most recording sites in the residual superficial layers of the
right SC, we also isolated single units and mapped their receptive
fields. Differences between single and multiunit visual receptive
fields have been reported after neonatal, partial SC lesions in
hamsters (Finlay et al., 1979 ; Pallas and Finlay, 1989 ) and visual
deprivation in Xenopus (Keating and Kennard, 1987 ). We
therefore examined the relationship between the best azimuths of the
single-unit responses and their rostrocaudal location in the
superficial layers (Fig. 5). Many of the
single-unit best azimuths fell outside the range covered by the
multiunit data from normal adult ferrets, typically yielding more nasal
best azimuths than would have been expected from their recording sites. Most of these data were recorded from ferrets 9349 and 9456, which also
gave more nasal multiunit receptive fields than in normal animals. This
was not caused by abnormal eye position in these animals; the azimuthal
coordinates of the back-projected optic disc position were, in both
cases, within 1° of the mean value based on 38 normal, adult ferrets.
The apparent anterior shift in the distribution of visual best azimuths
may reflect a change in the curvature of part of the SC after the
neonatal superficial layer lesion. Alternatively, it is possible that
there may be an expansion in the representation of the central visual
field in these two animals.

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Figure 5.
Single-unit visual best azimuths
(filled symbols) recorded in the remaining
rostral part of the superficial layers of the right SC in adult ferrets
that had received partial superficial layer lesions at P0. Because of
insufficient single-unit recordings from control animals, these data
are superimposed on the distribution of multiunit visual best azimuths
obtained from normal, adult ferrets (gray
symbols).
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In none of the ferrets did we observe any indication of a compression
of the visual field representation analogous to that reported for the
hamster SC after partial lesions of the superficial layers at birth
(Finlay et al., 1979 ; Pallas and Finlay, 1991 ). We confirmed
anatomically that neonatal lesions do not appear to induce a
reorganization of the visual representation in the residual superficial
layers by making multiple HRP injections into the SC. Figure
6 shows the distributions of retinal
ganglion cells, retrogradely labeled from the SC, in two adult ferrets in which a caudal ablation of the superficial layers of the SC had been
made on the day of birth. The isodensity contours again indicate the
relative density of labeling compared with the peak local density in
each retina. The outer contour line represents 10% of the peak
density. Heavy labeling was found in the retina temporal, but not
nasal, to the optic disc; no region within the nasal part of the retina
reached 20% of the peak density. In particular, there was no evidence
of a horizontal streak extending into nasal retina. In normal animals,
the streak extends nasally, such that the density of the
retinocollicular projection in midnasal retina is ~75% of that found
at the area centralis (FitzGibbon et al., 1996 ). Although at a low
density, a number of ganglion cells were labeled in the nasal retina of
the ferrets that had received neonatal caudal SC lesions. Whether these
reflect rescue of the relatively small numbers of early topographic
errors or a rewiring of cells that originally projected to caudal SC is
not clear.

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Figure 6.
Flattened whole mounts of the retina in two adult
ferrets showing the distribution of retrogradely labeled ganglion cells
after multiple injections of HRP into the contralateral SC. The caudal
part of the superficial layers of the SC had been aspirated at P0. The
retinas were sampled at 500 µm intervals, and the number of labeled
cells was counted in a sample box of 125 × 125 µm. For each
retina, the maximum number of cells in a sample box was noted, and the
isodensity contours reflect 10% intervals, beginning at 10% of this
peak density. The smallest contours, near the peak, are not shown. Note
that the labeling is concentrated in the temporal retina. The two
retinas differ in the extent to which inferior retina is labeled, which
reflects a difference in the medial spread of the HRP injections in the
SC. S, Superior; T, temporal;
I, inferior; N, nasal.
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Effect of partial, neonatal lesions of the superficial layers on
the responses of neurons in the deeper layers of the superior
colliculus
Distribution of acoustically responsive units
We were able to record acoustically responsive units throughout
the intermediate and deep layers of the SC, both under the lesioned and
nonlesioned areas. Auditory units were encountered immediately ventral
to the lesion in the upper tier of the SGI where this formed the new
dorsal surface of the nucleus. Azimuth response profiles were obtained
for 126 units on the lesioned side and for 41 units on the control
side. Of the units recorded on the lesioned side, 31 were found in
electrode tracks that passed vertically through the remaining
superficial layers from which visual responses were mapped. For
brevity, the data obtained from these penetrations will be referred to
as the S+ condition. The other 95 auditory units were recorded in the
part of the SC where the superficial layers were missing, as indicated
by a lack of characteristic visual activity and confirmed by subsequent
histological reconstruction of the electrode penetrations. These units
were recorded in three animals, with the majority coming from ferrets 9310 and 9349. They are referred to in the following sections as the
S condition, because they were unlikely to have received direct
superficial layer inputs during postnatal development.
Bimodal units in the intermediate and deep layers
Once the auditory azimuth profile had been mapped, we tested some
of the auditory units for visual sensitivity by positioning a bright
flashing LED either at the same angle from which the strongest auditory
response had been evoked or directly in front of the eye so that it
filled most of the visual field. Of the 14 units in the S+ condition
tested in this way, five (36%) were shown to be bimodal. In the S
condition, 35 of 58 auditory units tested (60%) also responded to
visual stimulation, even though the superficial visual layers had been
removed. Most of these bimodal units were found in the SGI. Only four
units were tested in this way on the control side. Of these, two were
found to be bimodal. The proportion of bimodal cells found in the S
condition is similar to that reported for the normal cat SC (Meredith
and Stein 1986 , 1990 ).
Auditory sensitivity and responsiveness
The response strengths at the best loudspeaker position varied
from 0.3-7.0 evoked spikes per presentation. The mean response at the
best speaker position was highest in the S condition with 1.46 evoked
spikes per presentation (±1.17 SD), compared with 1.32 (±1.04) in the
S+ condition and 0.90 (±0.66) on the unoperated control side. The
difference between the S condition and the unoperated side is
statistically significant (Wilcoxon rank sum test, p = 0.01). Unit thresholds also appeared to be significantly lower on
average in the S condition (mean 16 dB SPL) than in the S+ condition
(25 dB SPL, Wilcoxon rank sum tests, p = 0.01) or on
the control side (22 dB SPL, p = 0.004). Lower average
thresholds for the S units were observed consistently in every
animal. The thresholds for the S+ condition and the control side were
not significantly different (p = 0.33).
Auditory spatial tuning
Because the superficial layer lesions were made along the
rostrocaudal axis of the SC and, therefore, affected the nasotemporal extent of the visual field representation, we have restricted our
analysis of auditory spatial tuning to the azimuthal dimension. As in
previous studies (Schnupp et al., 1995 ), we assigned the azimuth
response profiles to different categories and compared the relative
proportions in each with those previously reported for normal, adult
ferrets at comparable sound levels with respect to unit threshold. On
the control side, 70% (±SE of 7%) were classified as tuned, compared
with 71 (±8%) in the S+ group, 79 (±4%) in the S group, and 77 (±5%) in the normal, adult population. Using a statistical test for
comparing percentages (Bailey, 1981 ), we found that the proportion of
tuned units in the four groups did not differ significantly from one
another. The response profiles for the majority of the remaining units
were classed as either bilobed or broad. More units exhibited
ambiguously tuned bilobed response profiles in the S group than in
any of the other groups and were found in roughly equal proportion in
ferrets 9310 and 9349. The difference between the proportion of bilobed
response profiles in the S group (17 of 95 units) and in the normal,
adult ferrets (3 of 52 units) just reached significance (one-tailed test, p < 0.05).
To assess the sharpness of auditory spatial tuning, we measured the
width of each azimuth response profile in which the response had fallen
to 50% of maximum (50% bandwidth). As in previous studies, we
included in this estimate all regions of the response profile that
exceeded the 50% level, whether or not these regions were classified
as separate peaks. The distribution of 50% bandwidths is shown by the
histograms in Figure 7. The spread in the
histograms in each of the three experimental conditions is very close
to that found in normal, adult ferrets. As expected from the very similar proportions of tuned units, we found no differences in the mean
50% bandwidths between any of the groups (105° for normal, adult
ferrets, 114° on the control side, 104° in the S+ group, and 112°
in the S group; Wilcoxon rank sum tests, p > 0.25).

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Figure 7.
Distribution of 50% azimuth profile bandwidths
(width of each azimuth response profile in which the response had
fallen to 50% of maximum) in normal, adult animals and in adult
ferrets that had received a partial lesion of the superficial layer
lesions on P0. The data from normal animals are from King and Carlile
(1993) .
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Auditory topography
The topographic order in the auditory representation was assessed
by plotting the azimuthal best position (where the maximum response was
obtained) against the rostrocaudal distance of each unit from the
rostrolateral border of the SC and, when possible, against the visual
best azimuth of multiunit activity recorded in the superficial layers
of the same electrode penetration. Figure 8 illustrates how the auditory best
azimuths vary with recording site in the S and S+ groups from the
right SC and in the left, unoperated SC. In each case, the data are
superimposed on data obtained in previous studies from normal, adult
ferrets. Only tuned units, which represented the great majority of the
auditory responses recorded in each group, are included in this and
subsequent figures. This is partly for reasons of clarity and partly
because the proportion of tuned units did not differ significantly
across the groups.

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Figure 8.
The effect of neonatal superficial layer lesions
on auditory azimuth topography. The filled and
open symbols show the auditory single-unit best azimuths
plotted against the rostrocaudal location of their recording sites in
adult ferrets that had received partial lesions of the superficial
layers of the right SC on P0. The different symbols represent data from
different animals. The gray symbols indicate data
obtained from normal adult controls during previous studies, and the
lines represent 95% confidence intervals for those
data. Left, Representation of sound azimuth in the
deeper layers of the right SC ventral to the superficial layer lesion.
Middle, Representation in rostral parts of the right SC
where the superficial layers were intact. Note that the rostrocaudal
range of recording sites overlaps in these two groups because of
interanimal variations in the extent of the lesion.
Right, Representation of sound azimuth on the
unoperated, left side of the SC.
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It is clear from Figure 8 that a large proportion of auditory units in
the S group (left panel) were tuned to sound directions that fell outside the normal range of values associated with each recording site. Although the majority were tuned to contralateral locations, a few best azimuths were also found well into the
ipsilateral hemifield. In contrast, the auditory best azimuths of all
the tuned units recorded beneath the intact superficial layers fell within the normal range (Fig. 8, middle panel), as did those
recorded in the unoperated, left SC (Fig. 8, right panel).
It therefore appears that a partial lesion of the superficial layers
led to degradation in the order of the auditory representation that was localized to the region of the deep SC from which the superficial layers had been removed. The range of best azimuths represented in each
region of the SC was very similar among all the animals that
contributed to each group.
In Figure 9, different symbols have been
used to differentiate between auditory units shown to be bimodal and
those that either did not appear to respond to or were not tested with
visual stimuli. Many of the units with aberrant auditory best positions
were also visually responsive. This appears to indicate that, in the
absence of directly overlying superficial layers, visual inputs from
other sources do not rescue the auditory topography. We were able to hold the units for long enough to measure their visual receptive fields
in only a few cases. For some of these bimodal units, we noted a close
correspondence between the auditory and visual best azimuths, whereas,
in others, these values varied by 40° or more. We have too few data
to be able to describe how the visual azimuths of units recorded in the
deeper layers of these animals vary with their rostrocaudal recording
site, or whether neonatal removal of the overlying superficial layers
alters this relationship.

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Figure 9.
Representation of sound azimuth in the deeper
layers of the right SC ventral to the superficial layer lesion. These
data are replotted from Figure 8. This time different symbols are used
to indicate whether the auditory units were shown to be visually
responsive.
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The auditory representation was quantified by comparing the observed
best azimuth for each unit with the value predicted for that recording
site from the normal adult map. King and Carlile (1993) have previously
reported that the polynomial equation Y = 15.9 13X 24.2X2 provides
the best fit for the auditory azimuth map obtained at sound levels of
25-30 dB above unit threshold (where X is the standardized
electrode distance from the rostrolateral pole of the SC in
millimeters, and Y the auditory best azimuth in degrees). The distribution of auditory topography errors, which represent the
difference between the measured best azimuths and the value predicted
from this polynomial function, are shown for each of the groups by the
histograms in Figure 10. The histograms
were unimodal and centered on low error values. As expected from Figure 8, the width of the histograms for both the left SC control data (Fig.
10B) and the S+ group from the right SC (Fig.
10C) was very similar to that found for the normal, adult
ferrets (Fig. 10A). In contrast, a much greater
spread in topography errors was observed for the S group (Fig.
10D).

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Figure 10.
The effect of neonatal partial lesions of the
superficial layers of the right SC on the topography of the auditory
representation. The histograms plot the angular difference between the
azimuthal best positions (where the maximum response was obtained) of
tuned auditory units and the expected value at each recording site,
which was derived from the polynomial function that produced the best
fit for the map of sound azimuth in normal adult ferrets. The
bar below each histogram is centered on the mean
topography error and extends to two SDs on either side. The spread in
the distribution of topography errors is clearly widest in panel
D, which refers to the part of the SC where the
superficial layers were missing.
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The variances of these topography errors are given in Table
1, together with the p values
of the F tests that were used to compare the variances.
Because the scatter in the normal, adult data increases slightly toward
the caudal end of the SC, we have restricted these comparisons to data
obtained from the same rostrocaudal extent of the nucleus. In the S
condition, almost the entire SC was sampled, given that in one of the
ferrets only ~10% of the superficial layers was left intact. The
auditory units comprising the S+ group were, however, restricted to the
rostral 1.25 mm of the SC. The S+ data were, therefore, compared with a
subset of the normal adult data from an equivalent rostral region. The variance of the topography errors for the S group, where the superficial layers were missing, was significantly greater than the
variance associated with the S+ group, the left unoperated SC, or the
normal control animals. On the other hand, there was no difference in
the scatter in the auditory representation between the rostral region
of the right SC with intact superficial layers and either of the two
control groups.
Because of the possibility that auditory units located in the SGI might
be more affected than those in the stratum griseum profundum (SGP) by
aspiration of the superficial layers, we also measured the topography
errors in the S group at different depths below the new surface of
the SC. However, we found no difference in the variance of the
topography errors between auditory units located within 600 µm of the
surface and those found in deeper regions of the SC
(p = 0.21).
Auditory-visual alignment
We also examined the relationship between the auditory best
azimuths of deeper layer units and the visual best azimuths of multiunit activity recorded in the overlying superficial layers. A
close correspondence was found between the restricted visual and
auditory representations in the rostral SC for the S+ group (Fig. 11,
left panel). The auditory
best positions of two units were somewhat more contralateral than their
superficial layer visual counterparts. These units were, however,
recorded from a region of the deeper layers that was beneath the edge
of the lesion. On the left control side, the correspondence between the auditory and visual best azimuths throughout the rostrocaudal extent of
the SC closely resembled that seen in normal, adult ferrets (Fig. 11,
right panel).

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Figure 11.
Relationship between the representations of
visual azimuth in the superficial layers and auditory azimuth in the
deeper layers of the superior colliculus. For each vertical electrode
penetration, the best visual azimuth is plotted against the auditory
best position. Left, Filled symbols
indicate the responses recorded from the rostral region of the right
superior colliculus, where the superficial layers were still intact
after a lesion on P0. Right, Filled and
open symbols indicate the data obtained from the left,
unoperated side. In both panels, the gray symbols
represent data from normal adult controls that were used in earlier
studies.
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The difference between the auditory and visual coordinates of units
recorded in the same vertical electrode penetrations is shown by the
histograms in Figure 12. Like the
auditory topography errors shown in Figure 10, the auditory-visual
misalignments in the normal, adult group (Fig. 12A),
on the left control side of the SC (Fig. 12B), and in
the S+ condition on the right side (Fig. 12C) were small and
approximately normally distributed. A series of F tests did
not reveal any statistical difference in the variance in the
auditory-visual misalignments between any of the three groups (Table
2).

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Figure 12.
The effect of neonatal partial lesions of the
superficial layers of the right SC on auditory-visual misalignments.
The histograms plot the angular difference between the best azimuths of
multiunit visual responses in the superficial layers and those of tuned
auditory single units recorded in the deeper layers of the same
electrode penetration. The bar below each histogram is
centered on the mean misalignment and extends to 2 SDs on either
side.
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Partial lesions of the superficial layers in adult ferrets
The data presented so far indicate that partial lesions of the
superficial layers in P0 ferrets result in a localized disruption of
topographic order in the auditory representation in the deeper layers.
This disrupted topography could represent a failure of the auditory
space map to develop normally or it might be a consequence of damage to
local circuits within the SC that is unrelated to developmental
superficial-deep layer interactions. To distinguish between these
possibilities, we also examined the consequences of making partial
lesions of the superficial layers in two adult ferrets. Recordings made
~4 months after the surgery revealed the presence of a normal
representation of sound azimuth ventral to both lesioned and
nonlesioned regions of the SC. This is shown in Figure
13, which shows the relationship
between the auditory best azimuths of the tuned units and the
rostrocaudal location of the recording electrode. Thirty-two auditory
units (of a total of 38) were classified as tuned to single sound
directions. Histological reconstruction of the electrode tracks
revealed that 23 of these units were recorded in regions of the SC from
which the superficial layers had been removed. Figure 13A
shows that the best azimuths for virtually all of these units fell
within the normal range. Moreover, the variance in the auditory
topography errors (Fig. 13B,C) did
not differ significantly from that found in normal, adult controls
(two-tailed F test, p = 0.47), indicating
that, in contrast to the effects of neonatal lesions, the auditory
representation beneath the adult lesion was unimpaired.

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Figure 13.
The effect of aspirating part of the superficial
layers in adult ferrets on the topography of the auditory
representation. A, Relationship between auditory best
azimuth and rostrocaudal recording site. The filled
triangles indicate the responses of units recorded in electrode
tracks where the overlying superficial layers were missing. The
open circles show data recorded in the extreme caudal
part of the SC where the superficial layers were still intact. As in
Figure 8, data from the normal adult control population are represented
by the gray symbols. B, C,
Distribution of auditory topography errors in the normal adult animals
and in the ferrets that received partial superficial layer lesions in
adulthood, shown as in Figure 10.
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The lesions in the adult animals left small regions of the SC intact at
both the rostral and caudal ends of the nucleus. Figure 13A
also includes the auditory best azimuths of nine units that were
recorded in one of the two animals from the caudal pole of the SC where
the superficial layers were intact. These units were tuned to very
contralateral sound directions that closely matched the visual best
azimuths of units recorded in this residual region of the superficial layers.
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DISCUSSION |
Representation of visual space in the superficial layers
Ablation of the caudal half of the optic tectum in adult goldfish
(Gaze and Sharma, 1970 ) and frogs (Udin, 1977 ) produces a
compression of regenerating retinotectal axons, so that the entire
visual field becomes mapped over the remaining rostral region. A
similar compression of the visual field representation can be induced
by making partial SC lesions in neonatal hamsters (Finlay et al.,
1979 ; Pallas and Finlay, 1989 , 1991 ). In contrast, our
physiological data indicate that partial removal of the superficial layers in P0 ferrets does not lead to a reorganization of the visual
representation in the remaining region.
The failure to obtain map compression in the ferret SC probably does
not reflect excessive target ablation (Pallas and Finlay, 1989 ).
Although only 10% of the superficial layers was spared in one ferret,
50% or more remained in three of the others. The overall developmental
state of the retinal projections at birth in the two species is also
similar. Segregation of the uncrossed and crossed retinal axons has not
occurred (Linden et al., 1981 ; Thompson et al., 1995 ), and the bulk of
ganglion cell death has yet to happen (Tay et al., 1986 ; Henderson et
al., 1988 ). What is different is the state of retinotopic order in the
SC of newborn hamsters and ferrets. The pattern of retrograde labeling
observed after SC injections of fluorescent microspheres indicates that the ferret retincollicular projection possesses a high degree of
topographic order on P0. This is consistent with a recent anterograde tracing study by Chalupa and Snider (1998) , which found that retinal axons in neonatal and fetal ferrets exhibit few targeting errors within
the contralateral SC. In contrast, the retinocollicular projection in
neonatal rats (Simon and O'Leary, 1992 ) and hamsters (Thompson and
Cordery, 1994 ) is initially much more diffuse and depends on activity
in the target tissue for its subsequent maturation (Simon et al.,
1992 ).
Auditory responses after superficial layer lesions
The auditory responses were normal beneath the intact superficial
layers, and their preferred stimulus directions closely matched those
of the overlying visual units. In contrast, the range of auditory best
azimuths corresponding to each recording site in the region of the SC
below the superficial layer lesion was significantly greater than
normal. This was true irrespective of the size of the lesion. It is
unlikely that the neonatal surgery damaged the auditory afferents to
the deeper layers of the SC. In ferrets, the ipsilateral BIN and ICX
provide the principal auditory inputs, and the projection from the BIN
is spatially ordered along the rostrocaudal axis of the SC (King et
al., 1998 ). Anterograde tracing studies in mice (Wallace and Fredens,
1989 ) and cats (Kudo et al., 1984 ) have shown that afferent fibers from the BIN spread throughout the deeper layers of the SC but are concentrated primarily in SGI and in SGP. After tracer injections in
the ferret BIN, the heaviest axonal labeling is found in SGP and, to a
lesser extent, in the mid and upper regions of SGI (J. Baron, T. P. Doubell, and A. J. King, unpublished observations). As reported
in the other studies (Kudo et al., 1984 ; Wallace and Fredens, 1989 )
some axons also extend into the lower part of SO. Nevertheless, the
majority of these afferents course through regions of the SC that are
well away from the lesioned area. Moreover, acoustically responsive
neurons were found throughout the intermediate and deep layers, and
their firing rates and thresholds were clearly unimpaired by the
lesions. In addition, the azimuth bandwidths and the proportion of
tuned units were no different from those recorded in the unoperated,
left SC.
If the superficial layers transmit visual signals that contribute to
the refinement of the developing auditory space map, the consequences
of superficial layer lesions should mimic the effects on the auditory
responses of visual deprivation. Disrupting the pattern of visual input
during development by binocular eyelid suture leads to the emergence of
an auditory representation that is abnormal in various ways (Knudsen et
al., 1991 ; Withington, 1992 ; King and Carlile, 1993 ). In ferrets, both
eyelid suture (King and Carlile, 1993 ) and superficial layer lesions
degrade the precision of the auditory representation without affecting the azimuth-tuning bandwidths of individual units. In each case, many
units are tuned to sound directions outside the normal range of values
and the proportion of units with spatially ambiguous bilobed response
profiles increases.
Auditory responses also develop abnormally in the SC of ferrets in
which NMDA receptor antagonists are applied locally, via Elvax
implants, during the period over which the auditory map normally
matures. This results in more ambiguously tuned auditory units and
greater scatter in the auditory representation (Schnupp et al., 1995 ).
Both changes closely resemble the effects of superficial layer lesions,
although, in contrast to the animals raised with Elvax implants, we did
not observe a significant reduction in the proportion of tuned auditory
units in the present study. The visual map in the superficial layers of
the ferret SC was found to be unaffected after removal of the Elvax
implants (Schnupp et al., 1995 ). It is, therefore, possible that NMDA
receptor blockade disrupts the transmission of signals between the
superficial and deeper layers, particularly in infancy when excitatory
synaptic currents in the SC are dominated by these receptors (Hestrin, 1992 ; Wu et al., 1996 ; Shi et al., 1997 ).
Partial ablation of the superficial layers of the SC produces a
localized disruption of the auditory representation if this procedure
is performed at P0, but not in adult animals. Again, this is comparable
to the effects of Elvax implantation because chronic application of
NMDA receptor antagonists in adult ferrets does not affect the auditory
map. The auditory representation is also most susceptible to altered
visual cues during an early stage of development (Withington-Wray et
al., 1990 ; King, 1993 ; Brainard and Knudsen, 1998 ).
Do visual signals from the superficial layers guide the development
of the auditory space map?
A fairly well ordered map of visual space is found in the deeper
layers of the cat SC, which shares the same axes as the superficial layer visual map (Meredith and Stein, 1990 ) and the deep layer auditory
map (Middlebrooks and Knudsen, 1984 ). Many deep layer visual neurons
also respond to sound (Gordon, 1973 ; Middlebrooks and Knudsen, 1984 ;
Meredith and Stein, 1986 , 1990 ; Schnupp et al., 1997 ), although, in
cats, the responses to visual stimuli first appear >1 week after the
first auditory responses (Wallace and Stein, 1997 ). The receptive
fields of both modalities are progressively sharpened as the neurons
begin to integrate multisensory signals. As long as the deeper layer
visual responses possess some spatial tuning and topographic order,
they could provide the signals that calibrate the developing auditory
space map. An alternative template could be provided by the superficial
layer neurons, which exhibit much smaller receptive fields, a more
precise topography, and more reliable responses than their deeper layer counterparts (Meredith and Stein, 1990 ). Moreover, an adult-like visual
map can be demonstrated in the superficial layers in cats (Kao et al.,
1994 ), ferrets (King and Carlile, 1995 ), and primates (Wallace et al.,
1997 ) as soon as the eyes open.
In the region of the SC below the superficial layer lesion, we found
that most auditory neurons tested were also visually responsive. It
seems likely that, as in cats (Hardy and Stein, 1988 ; Harting et al.,
1992 ; Niida et al., 1997 ), these visual responses arise from
extrastriate cortical areas rather than the superficial layers, as
appears to be the case in hamsters (Mooney et al., 1992 ).
Alternatively, they may reflect aberrant inputs from cortical or
subcortical regions that normally innervate the superficial layers. In
the cat, axons from the posteromedial lateral suprasylvian cortex enter
the ipsilateral SC via the SO and arborize in the SGS, SO, and SGI
(Bruce, 1993 ). We cannot say whether the superficial layer lesion
altered the visuotopic organization in the deeper layers and are
therefore unable to rule out the possibility that some of the
descending corticotectal axons may have been damaged by this procedure.
Nevertheless, the presence of visual activity below the lesion was
clearly not sufficient to calibrate the spatial tuning of the auditory
neurons. Consequently, it seems more likely that neurons within the
superficial layers provide signals that actively guide the maturation
of the underlying auditory space map.
Topographically organized connections between the superficial and
deeper layers of the SC provide a means by which highly localized
visual signals could influence the activity of acoustically responsive
neurons. Our observation that auditory units recorded below the
superficial layer lesion had significantly lower thresholds and higher
mean responses than in other parts of the SC is consistent with a
descending inhibitory influence from those layers. However, it has
recently been demonstrated in SC slices from young tree shrews that
excitatory postsynaptic currents can be generated in SGI neurons by
electrical stimulation of the superficial layers (Lee et al., 1997 ).
The largest currents resulted from activation sites dorsal to the
intermediate layer neuron. Although action potentials were also
recorded in these neurons, subthreshold excitatory currents could, in
principle, provide sufficient depolarization to enhance simultaneous
auditory activity in a location-specific manner and subsequently
strengthen the synapses associated with those inputs.
Our findings would suggest that developmental interactions between
visual and auditory inputs take place in the SC. However, in owls,
prism rearing alters ITD tuning in both the SC and the ICX (Brainard
and Knudsen, 1993 ). It is possible that the map of sound azimuth in the
mammalian BIN, which provides the principal, spatially ordered auditory
input to the SC (King et al., 1998 ), may also be influenced by altered
visual experience, given that the ferret BIN contains bimodal neurons
(Schnupp and King, 1997 ) and receives a spatially ordered projection
from both the superficial and deeper layers of the SC (Baron et al.,
1998 ).
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FOOTNOTES |
Received June 23, 1998; revised Aug. 28, 1998; accepted Sept. 2, 1998.
We are grateful to the Wellcome Trust and the EU Biotechnology Program
(Bio4CT960000) for financial support and to Patricia Cordery for
excellent histological assistance. A.J.K. holds a Wellcome Senior
Research Fellowship and J.W.H.S. holds a Dunhill Research Fellowship
(awarded by Defeating Deafness: the Hearing Research Trust).
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Andrew J. King, University
Laboratory of Physiology, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PT, UK.
 |
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