Abstract

Visual information in birds is to great extent processed in the optic tectum (TeO), a prominent laminated midbrain structure. Retinal input enters the TeO in its superficial layers, while output is limited to intermediate and deeper layers. In addition to visual information, the TeO receives multimodal input from the auditory and somatosensory pathway. The TeO gives rise to a major ascending tectofugal projection where neurons of tectal layer 13 project to the thalamic nucleus rotundus, which then projects to the entopallium. A second tectofugal projection system, called the accessory pathway, has however not been studied as thoroughly. Again, cells of tectal layer 13 form an ascending projection that targets a nucleus known as either the caudal part of the nucleus dorsolateralis posterior of the thalamus (DLPc) or nucleus uveaformis (Uva). This nucleus is known for multimodal integration and receives additional input from the lateral pontine nucleus (PL), which in turn receives projections from layer 8–15 of the TeO. Here, we studied a particular cell type afferent to the PL that consists of radially oriented neurons in layer 9. We characterized these neurons with respect to their anatomy, their retinal input, and the modulation of retinal input by local circuits. We found that comparable to other radial neurons in the tectum, cells of layer 9 have columnar dendritic fields and reach up to layer 2. Sholl analysis demonstrated that dendritic arborization concentrates on retinorecipient layers 2 and 4, with additional arborization in layers 9 and 10. All neurons recorded in layer 9 received retinal input via glutamatergic synapses. We analyzed the influence of modulatory circuits of the TeO by application of antagonists to γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and acetylcholine (ACh). Our data show that the neurons of layer 9 are integrated in a network under strong GABAergic inhibition, which is controlled by local cholinergic activation. Output to the PL and to the accessory tectofugal pathway thus appears to be under strict control of local tectal networks, the relevance of which for multimodal integration is discussed.

Highlights

  • The vertebrate midbrain has recently come back into the focus of network analysis due to its central role for visual and multimodal processing (Basso and May, 2017; Ahmadlou et al, 2018; De Franceschi and Solomon, 2018; Herman et al, 2018; Beltramo and Scanziani, 2019)

  • Cells Projecting to the Lateral Pontine Nucleus

  • In the two animals where tracer application was located in the tecto-tegmental tract at the level of the reticular formation underneath the inferior colliculus, a variety of cell types throughout the midbrain was labeled

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Summary

Introduction

The vertebrate midbrain has recently come back into the focus of network analysis due to its central role for visual and multimodal processing (Basso and May, 2017; Ahmadlou et al, 2018; De Franceschi and Solomon, 2018; Herman et al, 2018; Beltramo and Scanziani, 2019). Chicken Tectal Layer 9 Neurons (Helmbrecht et al, 2018; Marachlian et al, 2018), the optic tectum (TeO) of birds has already been studied for a long time in a variety of species, adding a dimension of comparative analysis (Luksch, 2003; Wylie et al, 2009).

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