Abstract
The postnatal development of retinal projections was studied in the brushtailed possum, Trichosurus vulpecula. [3H]proline was injected into one eye of 13 young possums aged 24-84 days in order to trace retinal pathways. The dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNd) can be identified in Nissl material at 19 days but not at 9-10 days. By 40 days some cytoarchitectural lamination of the LGNd is apparent and by 71 days the adult pattern of cell layers is present. At 24 days retinal fibers occupy by lateral part of the LGNd on both sides of the brain. By 38-40 days the retinal fibers fill be contralateral LGNd and the binocular part of the ipsilateral LGNd and there is a beginning of the segregation of retinal fibers into left and right eye territories. By 49-50 days a partial segregation is achieved, and complete segregation by 71 days. At 9-10 days the superior colliculus is not differentiated into layers and there is a thick zone of cell proliferation around the ventricle. By 23 days the superior colliculus has well-defined cell layers and there is still some indication of cell proliferation around the ventricle. By 40 days, the superior colliculus shows little evidence of cell proliferation. At 24 days retinal fibers fill the superficial layers of the contralateral optic tectum and are lightly distributed through the superficial layers of the rostral half of the ipsilateral tectum. By 38 days the ipsilateral retinal input is restricted to the deeper layers of the tectum. These results show that the adult pattern of retinal projections to the LGNd and optic tectum develops a number of weeks before eye opening occurs (at 90-120 days).
Published Version
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