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The transplantation of eyes to genetically eyeless salamanders: visual projections and somatosensory interactions.

Authors :
Harris WA
Source :
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience [J Neurosci] 1982 Mar; Vol. 2 (3), pp. 339-53.
Publication Year :
1982

Abstract

Eyes were transplanted from normal axolotls to eyeless mutants, and several anatomical and physiological observations were made on the central visual centers in these animals. Some central projections were bilateral to the optic centers of the thalamus and midbrain, some traveled ipsilaterally to the same centers, and the rest grew down the spinal cord. This is similar to what has been found in eyes transplanted to normal hosts. The type of projection made in eyeless hosts correlated with the site of nerve entry into the CNS as in control hosts. Thus, the transplanted projection did not appear to be influenced by the host's optic nerves and tracts or lack of them. In spite of the transplanted optic fibers' taking abnormal paths, they made normally organized topographic maps on the host tecta. The visual and somatosensory topographic projections to the tectum were found to be in near perfect register normally, but in eyeless mutants to which rotated eyes had been transplanted, they were not. Acetylcholinesterase activity, found in the primary optic neuropil in normal animals, was greatly diminished in eyeless mutants, yet normal mutants with grafted eyes. Finally, transplantation of an eye to an eyeless mutant corrected the abnormally dark pigmentation caused by eyelessness but only in those cases of bilateral central innervation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0270-6474
Volume :
2
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
7062113