Disruption of binocularly correlated signals alters the postnatal development of spatial properties in cat striate cortical neurons
Y. M. Chino, E. L. Smith 3rd, H. Wada, W. H. Ridder 3rd, A. L. Langston and G. A. Lesher College of Optometry, University of Houston, Texas 77204-6052. 1. Extracellular single-cell recording techniques were employed to investigate the effects of ocular misalignment on the postnatal development of th...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1991-04, Vol.65 (4), p.841-859 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Y. M. Chino, E. L. Smith 3rd, H. Wada, W. H. Ridder 3rd, A. L. Langston and G. A. Lesher
College of Optometry, University of Houston, Texas 77204-6052.
1. Extracellular single-cell recording techniques were employed to
investigate the effects of ocular misalignment on the postnatal development
of the spatial response properties of striate cortical neurons. The primary
objective of the study was to gain insight into the neural basis of
strabismic amblyopia. 2. Two basic rearing strategies were used to study
specific aspects of experimental strabismus in developing kittens. In one
group, strabismus was optically induced by fitting kittens with goggles
that held a 15-diopter base-in prism in front of one eye (MP) or both eyes
(BP) between the ages of 4 wk and 4 mo. In the second group, a unilateral
esotropia was surgically induced at 3 wks of age either by the simple
resection of the lateral rectus muscle tendon (tenotomy) or by a more
drastic procedure that involved removing sections of the lateral rectus and
superior oblique muscles (myectomy). In addition, the eyelids of the
nondeviating eyes of these kittens were sutured closed (ESO/MD). The first
rearing paradigm isolated the effects of conflicting visual inputs on
neural development, whereas the second procedure isolated the effects of
anomalous ocular motility by producing a misalignment without putting the
deviated eye at a competitive disadvantage. 3. The recording experiments
were conducted when the animals were greater than or equal to 9 mo of age.
A total of 445 striate cortical neurons were isolated and quantitatively
studied in 17 cats (3 MPs, 3 BPs, 5 ESO/MDs, 3 goggle-reared controls, and
3 normals). In addition, we analyzed the distribution of preferred stimulus
orientations of 1,205 single units that had been studied qualitatively in
our previous investigation of 42 kittens reared with optically induced
strabismus. 4. As expected, the proportion of binocularly driven units was
reduced in both MP and BP cats. The great majority of units in ESO/MD
animals were exclusively driven or highly dominated by the open deviating
eye. 5. Prism-reared animals showed physiological deficits in spatial
resolution, contrast sensitivity, contrast gain, and peak firing rate.
These effects were manifest in both eyes, although there was always an
interocular asymmetry in the deficits observed in the two eyes. In MP
animals, the units dominated by the treated eye, which was contralateral to
the recording hemisphe |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1991.65.4.841 |