Author:
MARTINEZ-MARCOS ALINO,LANUZA ENRIQUE,MARTINEZ-GARCIA FERNANDO
Abstract
Retinal ganglion cells projecting to the optic tectum and visual
thalamus have been investigated in the lizard, Podarcis
hispanica. Injections of biotinylated dextran-amine in
the optic tectum reveal seven morphological cell varieties
including one displaced ganglion cell type. Injections in the
visual thalamus yield similar ganglion cell classes plus four
giant ganglion cells, including two displaced ganglion cell
types. The present study constitutes the first comparison of
tectal versus thalamic ganglion cell types in reptiles. The
situation found in lizards is similar to that reported in mammals
and birds where some cell types projecting to the thalamus are
larger than those projecting to the mesencephalic roof. The
presence of giant retino-thalamic ganglion cells with specific
dendritic arborizations in sublaminae A and B of the inner
plexiform layer suggests that parts of the visual thalamus of
lizards could be implicated in movement detection, a role that
might be played by the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus, which
is involved in our tracer injections.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
4 articles.
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