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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 56 (1984), S. 92-105 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Mouse ; Anophthalmia ; Visual callosal connections
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Visual callosal connections were examined using the horseradish peroxidase (HRP) technique in normal, neonatal and adult C57BL mice, and in adults of this strain which were bilaterally enucleated within 12 h of birth. In addition, callosal connections were also delineated in two strains of congenitally anophthalmic mice, ZRDCTan and orJ. Material from 129/J mice served as controls for the latter strain. In normal adults anterograde labelling and HRP labelled cells were visible primarily at the borders of area 17. In the 17–18a border region, labelled neurons were located primarily in layers II–III and V. In the medial striate cortex, a small number of labelled cells were present, primarily in lamina VI. Anterograde HRP labelling in the normal adults was also located primarily at the borders of area 17. At the 17–18a border, it was very heavy in layers V and VI, somewhat lighter in layer IV, and fairly dense in layers II–III and the lower half of lamina I. Labelling indicative of anterograde HRP transport was also visible in lowermost lamina V and layer VI across the entire mediolateral extent of area 17. In normals injected with HRP on postnatal day 2 and perfused 24 h later, callosal neurons were distributed throughout the dorsal posterior neocortex, primarily in layers V and VI. Only a very few labelled cells were visible in the supragranular laminae. In adult mice blinded at birth, the zone of callosal cells and terminals extended much further into area 17 than in normals, but aside from the anterograde labelling in layer VI and lowermost lamina V, the medial one-third of the striate cortex was still for the most part devoid of callosal cells and fibers. The laminar distributions of the labelled cells and anterograde transport in the blinded animals were the same as in the normal mice. In both strains of anophthalmic mice the pattern of callosal connections was unlike that in either the normals or neonatal enucleates. In the caudal “visual” cortex, callosal cells and anterograde transport indicative of terminal labelling were visible primarily in the 17–18a border area. Rostrally, however, they were both distributed in multiple (two-three) patches within area 17. Serial reconstructions demonstrated that these patches tended to be aligned in stripes which ran parallel to the 17–18a border. One of these was always located at the 17–18a border, and here the laminar distribution of labelled cells and anterograde labelling was the same as in the normals. In the more medial patches, however, labelled cells and anterograde labelling were confined almost completely to layers II and III. The distribution of callosal cells in neonatal ZRDCT-an mice was not appreciably different from that in C57BL mice of the same age.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 55 (1984), S. 9-25 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual development ; Corpus callosum ; Superior colliculus lesions ; Axonal tracing ; HRP ; Autoradiography ; Hamster
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Visual callosal connections were examined using autoradiographic (ARG) and horse-radish peroxidase (HRP) techniques in normal adult hamsters, and in adults subjected to ablation of the superficial tectal laminae at birth. Additional ARG and HRP experiments were carried out in hamsters 1–27 days of age in order to describe the normal development of this pathway. Neonatal collicular lesions, which deprived visual cortical neurons of a major terminal zone in the midbrain, substantially altered the visual callosal pathway. In the lesioned animals, the numbers of supragranular callosal cells in the 17–18a border region and lamina VI callosal neurons in medial area 17 were significantly greater than normal. The ARG experiments demonstrated additional clearcut abnormalities in the visual callosal pathway of the lesioned hamsters. First, the mediolateral extent of the supragranular callosal zone around the 17–18a border was increased. Secondly, dense label was visible over lower layer V and lamina VI throughout area 17. Finally, labelling in lamina I could also be observed across the entire mediolateral extent of area 17. Experiments in the developing hamsters suggested that some of the abnormalities observed in the lesioned animals may have resulted from the maintenance of normally transient developmental states. During the first postnatal week, both callosal cells and anterograde labelling were evenly distributed throughout the dorsal posterior neocortex, but only in the subplate region. During the second postnatal week, supragranular callosal cells were also labelled in both medial and lateral area 17, but from their first appearance, they were always most numerous in the 17–18a border region. At the same time callosal axons invaded the supragranular laminae, but only near the 17–18a border. By the end of the second postnatal week, the visual callosal pathway was very similar to that in the adult.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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