We studied the effects of unilateral enucleation of the eye on the motor asymmetry of goldfish fries and morphometric characteristics of their Mauthner neurons, MNs (data of 3D reconstruction using serial slices). Enucleation of the right or left eye in ambidextral fishes resulted in stable preference of turnings during swimming toward the side of visual deafferentation and in a shift of the initial motor asymmetry coefficient (MAC) by 25%, on average. Ipsilateral enucleation of the eye in dextral and sinistral fishes intensified the initial motor asymmetry by 20%. Contralateral enucleation of the eye in dextral and sinistral fishes induced inversion of the motor asymmetry with a decrease in the MAC by 50%, on average. All operated fishes stably (within 3 months or more) preferred to turn toward the side of the enucleated eye. Morphological measurements showed that the size of the ventral dendrite of the MN contralateral with respect to the side of enucleation noticeably decreased. At the same time, this neuron (according to a shift in the motor asymmetry of the fish) became the functionally dominant unit. These data agree with the earlier supposition on a reciprocal relation between the level of functional activity of the MN and the size of its ventral dendrite. Selective changes in the dimension of the ventral dendrite of the MN receiving visual inputs probably resulted from the action of some endogenous trophic factor. The effect of this factor was enhanced after enucleation of the eye and the corresponding dysfunction of the contralateral visual input. A specific local change in the balance of neurotransmitter influences upon the MN ventral dendrite can play the role of such a factor. From the neurophysiological aspect, a decrease in the size of the ventral MN dendrite is a primary link in the chain of events resulting in modification of behavior; it leads to intensification of the integral functional activity of the MN and a shift of the motor asymmetry of the fish compensating, in such a way, the effect of unilateral visual deprivation.
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