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J Neurophysiol 94: 1962-1970, 2005. First published May 25, 2005; doi:10.1152/jn.00166.2005
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Visual Experience Is Necessary for Maintenance But Not Development of Receptive Fields in Superior Colliculus

M. M. Carrasco, K. A. Razak and S. L. Pallas

Graduate Program in Neurobiology and Behavior, Department of Biology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia

Submitted 15 February 2005; accepted in final form 23 May 2005

Sensory deprivation is thought to have an adverse effect on visual development and to prolong the critical period for plasticity. Once the animal reaches adulthood, however, synaptic connectivity is understood to be largely stable. We reported previously that N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor blockade in the superior colliculus of the Syrian hamster prevents refinement of receptive fields (RFs) in normal or compressed retinotopic projections, resulting in target neurons with enlarged RFs but normal stimulus tuning. Here we asked whether visually driven activity is necessary for refinement or maintenance of retinotopic maps or if spontaneous activity is sufficient. Animals were deprived of light either in adulthood only or from birth until the time of recording. We found that dark rearing from birth to 2 mo of age had no effect on the timing and extent of RF refinement as assessed with single unit extracellular recordings. Visual deprivation in adulthood also had no effect. Continuous dark rearing from birth into adulthood, however, resulted in a progressive loss of refinement, resulting in enlarged, asymmetric receptive fields and altered surround suppression in adulthood. Thus unlike in visual cortex, early visually driven activity is not necessary for refinement of receptive fields during development, but is required to maintain refined visual projections in adulthood. Because the map can refine normally in the dark, these results argue against a deprivation-induced delay in critical period closure, and suggest instead that early visual deprivation leaves target neurons more vulnerable to deprivation that continues after refinement.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: S. L. Pallas, Dept. of Biology, Georgia State Univ., 24 Peachtree Center Ave., Atlanta, GA 30303 (E-mail: spallas{at}gsu.edu)




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