Abstract
In this work we studied the effects of unilateral eye enucleation on the contents and distribution of leu-enkephalin-, met-enkephalin-arg6-gly7-leu8-, and substance-P-like immunoreactivities (L-ENK-I, ENK-8-I, and SP-I, respectively) in the superficial layers of the rat superior colliculus (SC) by means of the unlabelled antibody peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. In the normal rat only a few L-ENK-I neurons appear dispersed in the stratum griseum superficiale. No immunostained somata appear in the stratum opticum. The most striking effect of unilateral enucleation was the dramatic appearance of a laminarly distributed population of L-ENK-I and/or ENK-8-I neurons in the dorsal stratum opticum of the SC contralateral to the enucleated side. This population of immunoreactive cells was observed with all the survival times examined in the present study (3, 7, 15, and 30 days) and was always accompanied by an increase in the immunostaining of L-ENK-I and/or ENK-8-I fibers in the contralateral stratum griseum superficiale. Enucleation also produced a decrease in the immunostaining of SP-I dendrites that only became obvious 15 days after enucleation. However, the number of SP-I somata or terminal-like immunoreactive structures showed no detectable changes. These results show that retinal deafferentation of the superficial layers of the rat SC has different effects on some immunohistochemically distinguishable neuronal subgroups in the SC, suggesting different functional or trophic relationships of the retinal input to these groups of neurons.
Published Version
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