Abstract

Extracellular microelectrode recordings from 148 single cells in the pretectum of the hooded rat were classified according to their temporal response properties to light stimulation of their retinal receptive fields. Fifty-six cells were classified as tonic-on cells, 22 cells were classified as tonic-off cells, and 53 cells were classified as phasic cells. Seventeen cells could not be assigned to one of these 3 groups. The diameters of the receptive field centers of the tonic-on pretectal cell were clustered about a mean of 31° and the temporal response of these cells was sustained. Constriction of the contralateral pupil was produced by electrical stimulation through the recording electrode at sites containing tonic-on pretectal cells, but not at sites containing tonic-off pretectal cells or phasic pretectal cells. For this reason, we argue that tonic-on cells are likely to mediate constriction in the light reflex of the rat's pupil. Receptive field maps together with electrolytic marking lesions at recording and stimulation sites showed that tonic-on pretectal cells are retinotopically organized and are aggregated in a strip running from the dorso-medial tip of the pretectum to the ventro-lateral boundary. The anatomical distribution of these cells is coextensive with the region known as the pretectal olivary nucleus (PO) in the rat 26,27. Using fine microelectrodes, recordings were obtained from 27 axons presumed origin (fibers). Of these, 14 were tonic-on, 10 were phasic, 2 were tonic-off, and 2 were unclassified. Recordings from tonic-on fibers were obtained near tonic-on pretectal cells, typically in the most dorsal light-responsiveness region of the pretectum. These fibers were activated by single pulse electrical stimulation of the optic chiasm. The mean receptive field center diameter of 6 tonic-on fibers was 10.1°, or about a factor of 3 less than that of pretectal tonic-on cells. The mean conduction velocity of 14 tonic-on fibers was 3.1 m/s. We argue that the tonic-on cells of the PO serve to integrate signals from tonic-on center retinal ganglion cells with adjacent receptive fields to provide signals for constriction of the pupil to neurons in the oculomotor nucleus.

Highlights

  • The pathway for the direct light reflex of the pupil in mammals appears to involve at least two central brain nuclei

  • The pretectal olivary nucleus (PO) receives a retinal projection in every mammal which has been examined2.3,26, 27, and it has been shown to project to E W in the cat 6 and in the monkey2,23,32. (The nucleus of the optic tract (NOT), a pretectal region which has been implicated in pupil control in the cat[28], apparently does not project to EW3.)

  • We have described the receptive field properties and the time course of response of tonic-on cells in the rat's pretectum

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Summary

Introduction

The pathway for the direct light reflex of the pupil in mammals appears to involve at least two central brain nuclei. The optic fibers subserving the light reflex of the pupil are thought to connect with neurons in (1) the contralateral pretectum (ipsilateral for the consensual light reflex), which in turn project to (2) preganglionic pupilloconstrictor neurons in the contralateral nucleus of Edinger - Westphal ( E W ) 20,21. Recent studies have shown that the rat's pretectum contains multiple representations of the visual field that overlap with optic terminal projection zones defined by orthogradely transported radiolabel and with distinct aggregations of cell bodies2627. O n e of these aggregations, the pretectal olivary nucleus (PO), has been implicated in the light reflex of the pupil in the rat, and in other mammals, on the basis of its afferent and efferent connections. (The nucleus of the optic tract (NOT), a pretectal region which has been implicated in pupil control in the cat[28], apparently does not project to EW3.) The PO receives a retinal projection in every mammal which has been examined2.3,26, 27, and it has been shown to project to E W in the cat 6 and in the monkey2,23,32. (The nucleus of the optic tract (NOT), a pretectal region which has been implicated in pupil control in the cat[28], apparently does not project to EW3.)

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