Author:
KE MIN,MOONEY RICHARD D.,RHOADES ROBERT W.
Abstract
Administration of a single subcutaneous dose of
5,7-dihydroxytryptamine (5,7-DHT) to newborn hamsters results
in a significant increase in the density of serotoninergic
(5-HT) fibers in the superficial layers of the superior
colliculus (SC) and marked abnormalities in the uncrossed
retinotectal projection when these animals reach adulthood
(Rhoades et al., 1993). The present study was undertaken
to determine whether elevation of 5-HT in the developing
SC altered the visual representation in SC. Multi-unit
recordings from SC cells demonstrated that the overall
organization of the visual map in the superficial SC laminae
was normal and that the receptive-field sizes for unit
clusters were unchanged in the 5,7-DHT-treated animals.
However, when a combination of CNQX and MK-801 was directly
applied to the SC to block postsynaptic activity, the receptive
fields of unit clusters (presumably retinotectal axon terminals)
in the 5,7-DHT treated animals were significantly larger
than those in the normally reared hamsters. These results
are consistent with the conclusions that elevation of 5-HT
levels in the developing SC reduces the postnatal refinement
of the crossed retinotectal axons, and that mechanisms
operating within the SC may act to maintain normal sizes
for the receptive fields of its constituent neurons.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
10 articles.
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