Author:
WANG ZIREN,MEYER RONALD L.
Abstract
Although the retinotectal projection of goldfish has
long been known to have a high degree of retinotopic order,
the structural basis for this in terms of the precise positioning
of axonal arbors from neighboring retinal ganglion cells
has not been determined. In studying this, a small number
of neighboring retinal ganglion cells was selectively labeled
by a microinjection of DiI into the retina. Following axoplasmic
transport for several days, the tectum was removed and
flat-mounted for fluorescence microscopy. The injection
labeled a small number of axons and their terminal arbors
which ranged in size from 108 × 134 μm to 394
× 331 μm with a mean of 233 × 219 μm.
This mean size corresponds to about 1/15 of the length
of one tectal axis. Although individual arbors labeled
from one small retinal injection were always observed near
the same retinotopic position, they were almost never coextensive.
Overlap between pairs of arbors along the lines of projection
perpendicular to the tectal surface averaged 57% of the
area of a single arbor. These results indicate that neighboring
retinal ganglion cells do not converge onto the same locus
but instead project as a continuous retinotopic array of
partially overlapping terminal fields.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
4 articles.
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