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Is there a retinopetal system in the rat?

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Summary

The centrifugal innervation of the retina was reinvestigated in albino and pigmented rats with intraocular injections of horseradish peroxidase (HRP), radioactive wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) and proline. No labeled cells were found in the brains injected with HRP and proline, except some eye muscle motoneurons in one case apparently involving orbital contamination from the injection. In the cases injected with WGA and having a survival time of at least two days cells were labeled in the lateral mesencephalic tegmentum, ventral to the parabigeminal nucleus and in the periaqueductal gray. Both these findings are most likely due to transneuronal anterograde-retrograde transport of the tracer through the superior colliculus. The results yielded no compelling evidence for the existence of a direct retinopetal pathway in the rat, which is in contrast to a recently claimed retinal projection originating from the pretectum. Special attention was paid to the labeling in the lateral mesencephalic tegmentum, an area giving rise to retinal projections in various submammalian species. This finding is discussed with regard to the possibility that also in the rat the lateral tegmentum exerts an early influence on visual input, but at the “higher” collicular level and not at the “original” retinal one.

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Supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (grants no. 3.433.78, 3.505.79 and 3.580.79), the EMDO-Stiftung and the Dr. Eric Slack-Gyr-Stiftung in Zürich

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Schnyder, H., Künzle, H. Is there a retinopetal system in the rat?. Exp Brain Res 56, 502–508 (1984). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00237991

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00237991

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