Axonal growth and target selection during development: retinal projections to the ventrobasal complex and other “nonvisual” structures in neonatal Syrian hamsters
- 20 December 1984
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 230 (4) , 576-592
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.902300407
Abstract
In newborn hamsters, there is a direct retinal projection to the ventrobasal complex, the principal thalamic somatosensory nucleus. The projection decreases precipitously between the second and third postnatal days. A few retinofugal axons remain dorsally along the lateral border of the nucleus on day 4, and none are present thereafter. In neonatal hamsters, retinofugal axons project to additional “nonvisual” nuclei including the periventricular and anterior nuclei of the hypothalamus, zona incerta, substantia nigra, inferior colliculus, pons, and mesencephalic tegmentum. Some of these connections remain in adult hamsters, although in apparently reduced density or relative volume, while others disappear. The contribution of transient connections to the normal morphological or functional development of the brain remains to be clarified. The combined results of this and other studies show that the normally transient retino‐ventrobasal projection is a substrate for abnormal connections in that it can be permanently stabilized by appropriate neurosurgery on the day of birth.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bilateral transitory projection to visual areas from auditory cortex in kittensDevelopmental Brain Research, 1984
- Prenatal development of individual retinogeniculate axons during the period of segregationNature, 1984
- The normal and abnormal postnatal development of retinogeniculate projections in golden hamsters: An anterograde horseradish peroxidase tracing studyDevelopmental Brain Research, 1984
- Is there a genuine exuberancy of callosal projections in development? A quantitative electron microscopic study in the catNeuroscience Letters, 1983
- Multiple sets of visual cortical neurons projecting transitorily through the corpus callosumNeuroscience Letters, 1983
- Regulation of axon number in primate optic nerve by prenatal binocular competitionNature, 1983
- Selective collateral elimination in early postnatal development restricts cortical distribution of rat pyramidal tract neuronesNature, 1982
- Anomalous visual connections to somatosensory and auditory systems following brain lesions in early lifeDevelopmental Brain Research, 1982
- Cell death in the mammalian visual system during normal development: I. Retinal ganglion cellsJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1982
- Thalamic afferents from the dorsal column nuclei. An experimental anatomical study in the ratJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1967