Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 9, 280-298, Copyright © 1989 by Society for Neuroscience
Responses of lateral geniculate neurons that survive long-term visual cortex damage in kittens and adult cats
N Tumosa, MA McCall, W Guido and PD Spear
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706.
Damage to visual cortex (areas 17-19) in kittens or adult cats produces
severe retrograde degeneration of neurons in the dorsal lateral geniculate
nucleus (LGN). However, some neurons survive in otherwise degenerated
portions of the LGN after a visual cortex lesion at any age. Previous
studies have shown that there are well-defined differences in potential
retinal inputs, soma size, synaptic connections, outputs, and physiological
properties of output targets of the surviving LGN cells in cats that
received visual cortex damage at different ages. The present experiment
investigated the relationships between these differences and the responses
of surviving LGN neurons to visual stimulation. Recordings were made from
surviving neurons in the degenerated A- and C-layers of the LGN in cats
that had received a visual cortex lesion on the day of birth, at 8 weeks of
age, or as adults (survival was 11.5-36 months). Normal adult cats were
studied for comparison. The visual receptive field was mapped, and tests
were carried out to classify each cell as X, Y, or W. In addition,
quantitative methods were used to assess response amplitude, strength of
receptive-field surround inhibition, spatial-frequency tuning to drifting
or counterphased sine-wave gratings, and response to nondominant-eye
stimulation for each cell. We found that surviving cells in all LGN layers
respond to light, have normal receptive-field organization, and have normal
eye dominance following a lesion at any age tested. In addition, gross
retinotopic organization of the LGN is normal. However, 2 main
abnormalities were observed following a lesion at all 3 ages. First, there
is a reduction in the percentage of X cells in the A layers, from 62% in
normal LGNs to about 15% in degenerated LGNs. Second, many surviving cells
in both the A- and C-layers have abnormally large receptive-field centers.
Other differences that were observed between normal A-layer cells and
surviving A-layer cells could be attributed to the loss of X cells. These
results indicate that cells within a structure that shows severe retrograde
degeneration after brain damage can maintain relatively normal function and
can take part in potentially important residual neural pathways. Previous
studies indicate that these residual pathways can show both anatomical and
physiological compensation for the brain damage, and the present findings
bear on the consequences and mechanisms of this compensation.