Abstract

We describe the architecture of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus and primary visual cortex (striate cortex; area 17) of the New World capuchin monkey (Cebus apella) on the basis of the distribution of cell bodies and cytochrome oxidase histochemistry. Changes in staining for cytochrome oxidase following unilateral enucleation served to indicate the organization of the representation of the two eyes in the retinogeniculocortical pathway. The number and disposition of eye-specific layers within the lateral geniculate nucleus of Cebus are consistent with the common plan of geniculate organization in anthropoid primates, and the radial organization of area 17 fits the pattern common to New World squirrel and Old World macaque monkeys, including the presence of cytochrome-oxidase-rich zones in supragranular and deeper cortical layers (Horton: Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. [Biol.] 304:199-253, '84). Our principal finding is that cytochrome oxidase histochemistry following unilateral eye removal unequivocally reveals ocular dominance columns in the striate cortex of Cebus. As in the macaque (Hubel: Nature 292:762-764, '82), ocular dominance columns extend through the thickness of cortex and blobs are centered on columns, but the array of columns viewed tangentially is less orderly or more mosaic than in the macaque, and there is apparently significant overlap between columns. The presence of well-defined ocular dominance columns in Cebus, as in Ateles (Florence, Conley, and Casagrande: J. Comp. Neurol. 243:234-248, '86) but not in other New World monkeys examined previously, emphasizes the phylogenetic lability of binocular segregation in the primate visual cortex. In addition, the present results indicate significant differences with respect to the tangential organization of the ocular dominance domain between primate species in which ocular dominance columns are present.

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