Abstract
BackgroundExperience during early postnatal development plays an important role in the refinement of specific neural connections in the brain. In the mammalian visual system, altered visual experiences induce plastic adaptation of visual cortical responses and guide rearrangements of afferent axons from the lateral geniculate nucleus. Previous studies using visual deprivation demonstrated that the afferents serving an open eye significantly retract when cortical neurons are pharmacologically inhibited by applying a γ-aminobutyric acid type A receptor agonist, muscimol, whereas those serving a deprived eye are rescued from retraction, suggesting that presynaptic activity can lead to the retraction of geniculocortical axons in the absence of postsynaptic activity. Because muscimol application suppresses the spike activity of cortical neurons leaving transmitter release intact at geniculocortical synapses, local synaptic interaction may underlie the retraction of active axons in the inhibited cortex.Method and FindingsNew studies reported here determined whether experience-driven axon retraction can occur in the visual cortex inactivated by blocking synaptic inputs. We inactivated the primary visual cortex of kittens by suppressing synaptic transmission with cortical injections of botulinum neurotoxin type E, which cleaves a synaptic protein, SNAP-25, and blocks transmitter release, and examined the geniculocortical axon morphology in the animals with normal vision and those deprived of vision binocularly. We found that afferent axons in the animals with normal vision showed a significant retraction in the inactivated cortex, as similarly observed in the muscimol-treated cortex, whereas the axons in the binocularly deprived animals were preserved.ConclusionsTherefore, the experience-driven axon retraction in the inactivated cortex can proceed in the absence of synaptic transmission. These results suggest that presynaptic mechanisms play an important role in the experience-driven refinement of geniculocortical axons.
Highlights
Experience during early postnatal development plays an important role in the development of brain function and the refinement of specific neural connections
These results suggest that presynaptic mechanisms play an important role in the experience-driven refinement of geniculocortical axons
In the mammalian visual system, monocular visual deprivation (MD) in early life induces a loss of cortical response to a deprived eye together with a significant retraction of afferent axons from the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) serving the deprived eye [1,2,3,4]
Summary
Experience during early postnatal development plays an important role in the development of brain function and the refinement of specific neural connections. In the mammalian visual system, monocular visual deprivation (MD) in early life induces a loss of cortical response to a deprived eye together with a significant retraction of afferent axons from the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) serving the deprived eye (ocular dominance plasticity) [1,2,3,4]. When cortical cells are selectively inhibited pharmacologically by a c-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptor agonist, muscimol, leaving the activity of geniculocortical afferents intact, the open eye becomes less effective than the deprived eye [6,7,8]. Previous studies using visual deprivation demonstrated that the afferents serving an open eye significantly retract when cortical neurons are pharmacologically inhibited by applying a c-aminobutyric acid type A receptor agonist, muscimol, whereas those serving a deprived eye are rescued from retraction, suggesting that presynaptic activity can lead to the retraction of geniculocortical axons in the absence of postsynaptic activity. Because muscimol application suppresses the spike activity of cortical neurons leaving transmitter release intact at geniculocortical synapses, local synaptic interaction may underlie the retraction of active axons in the inhibited cortex
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