Abstract

Cats rendered hemianopic by a unilateral visual cortical ablation can recover the visual orienting response in the hemianopic visual field following disruption of the caudal non-tectotectal containing half of the commissure of the superior colliculus. Ibotenic acid lesions of a small ‘critical zone’ in the contralateral substantia nigra result in a similar recovery effect. A conceptual framework developed by Wallace et al. (1990) [J. Comp. Neurol. 296, 222–252] proposed that elimination of contralateral substantia nigra ‘critical zone’ inhibition on the superior colliculus ipsilateral to a visual cortical lesion is responsible for the recovery. This model is insufficient, however, to explain the observation that hemi-decorticate cats with contralateral substantia nigra ‘critical zone’ lesions which include but extend beyond the ‘critical zone’ do not demonstrate the recovery. In these cats, subsequent transection of the commissure of the superior colliculus does lead to the recovery. We hypothesize that another projection through the caudal commissure of the superior colliculus, from the pedunculopontine nucleus, is involved in the recovery effect. Visual orienting behavior was recorded before and after ibotenic acid lesions made in the pedunculopontine nucleus region contralateral to a visual cortical ablation in 16 cats. Four cats with lesions in a small rostral region of the contralateral pedunculopontine nucleus recovered the visual orienting response in the previously hemianopic visual field. Contralateral tectal projections from the pedunculopontine nucleus are thought to be cholinergic and terminate as distinct patches in the intermediate gray layers of the superior colliculus. Since this region of the pedunculopontine nucleus also receives GABA-ergic afferents from the substantia nigra, we propose that a subcortical neural circuit including the substantia nigra, pedunculopontine nucleus, and superior colliculus is involved in the recovery of visual orienting.

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