dark rearing
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2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takahiro Gotou ◽  
Katsuro Kameyama ◽  
Ayane Kobayashi ◽  
Kayoko Okamura ◽  
Takahiko Ando ◽  
...  

Monocular deprivation (MD) of vision during early postnatal life induces amblyopia, and most neurons in the primary visual cortex lose their responses to the closed eye. Anatomically, the somata of neurons in the closed-eye recipient layer of the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) shrink and their axons projecting to the visual cortex retract. Although it has been difficult to restore visual acuity after maturation, recent studies in rodents and cats showed that a period of exposure to complete darkness could promote recovery from amblyopia induced by prior MD. However, in cats, which have an organization of central visual pathways similar to humans, the effect of dark rearing only improves monocular vision and does not restore binocular depth perception. To determine whether dark rearing can completely restore the visual pathway, we examined its effect on the three major concomitants of MD in individual visual neurons, eye preference of visual cortical neurons and soma size and axon morphology of LGN neurons. Dark rearing improved the recovery of visual cortical responses to the closed eye compared with the recovery under binocular conditions. However, geniculocortical axons serving the closed eye remained retracted after dark rearing, whereas reopening the closed eye restored the soma size of LGN neurons. These results indicate that dark rearing incompletely restores the visual pathway, and thus exerts a limited restorative effect on visual function.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Malak El-Quessny ◽  
Kayla Maanum ◽  
Marla B. Feller

ABSTRACTChanges in dendritic morphology in response to activity have long been thought to be a critical component of how neural circuits develop to properly encode sensory information. Here we report the impact of dark-rearing on the dendritic morphology and function of a retinal ganglion cell type, a ventral-preferring direction-selective ganglion cell (vDSGC). vDSGCs have asymmetric dendrites oriented along their preferred direction. We found that, at eye opening, vDSGC dendrites are not yet ventrally oriented, and that, surprisingly, dark-rearing prevents ventral orientation of vDSGC dendrites. Despite their dramatic change in dendritic morphology, vDSGCs in dark-reared mice maintain ventral directional preference. Direction selective tuning in dark-reared mice is mediated by asymmetric inhibition, as observed in vDSGCs of normally reared animals. Hence, we postulate that dendritic form follows proper circuit function, where dendritic orientation is refined over the course of development and is dependent on structured visual experience following eye opening.


2018 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 1659 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce A. Berkowitz ◽  
Robert H. Podolsky ◽  
Ali M. Berri ◽  
Kristin Dernay ◽  
Emma Graffice ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marjena Popović ◽  
Andrea K. Stacy ◽  
Mihwa Kang ◽  
Roshan Nanu ◽  
Charlotte E. Oettgen ◽  
...  

AbstractMany sensory neural circuits exhibit response normalization, which occurs when the response of a neuron to a combination of multiple stimuli is less than the sum of the responses to the individual stimuli presented alone. In the visual cortex, normalization takes the forms of cross-orientation suppression and surround suppression. At the onset of visual experience, visual circuits are partially developed and exhibit some mature features such as orientation selectivity, but it is unknown whether cross-orientation suppression or surround suppression are present at the onset of visual experience or require visual experience for their emergence. We characterized the development of these properties and their dependence on visual experience in ferrets. Visual experience was varied across three conditions: typical rearing, dark rearing, and dark rearing with daily exposure to simple sinusoidal gratings (14-16 hours total). Cross-orientation suppression and surround suppression were noted in the earliest observations, and did not vary considerably with experience. We also observed evidence of continued maturation of receptive field properties in the second month of visual experience: substantial length summation was observed only in the oldest animals (postnatal day 90); evoked firing rates were greatly increased in older animals; and direction selectivity required experience, but declined slightly in older animals. These results constrain the space of possible circuit implementations of these features.Significance StatementThe development of the brain depends on both nature – factors that are independent of the experience of an individual animal – and nurture – factors that depend on experience. While orientation selectivity, one of the major response properties of neurons in visual cortex, is already present at the onset of visual experience, it is unknown if response properties that depend on interactions among multiple stimuli develop without experience. We find that the properties of crossorientation suppression and surround suppression are present at eye opening, and do not depend on visual experience. Our results are consistent with the idea that a majority of the basic properties of sensory neurons in primary visual cortex are derived independent of the experience of an individual animal.


2013 ◽  
Vol 109 (8) ◽  
pp. 2064-2076 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rie Funahashi ◽  
Takuro Maruyama ◽  
Yumiko Yoshimura ◽  
Yukio Komatsu

Immature excitatory synapses often have NMDA receptors but not AMPA receptors in central neurons, including visual cortical pyramidal neurons. These synapses, called silent synapses, are converted to functional synapses with AMPA receptors by NMDA receptor activation during early development. It is likely that this process underlies the activity-dependent refinement of neuronal circuits and brain functions. In the present study, we investigated postnatal development of excitatory synapses, focusing on the role of visual inputs in the conversion of silent to functional synapses in mouse visual cortex. We analyzed presumably unitary excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) between a pair of layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons, using minimal stimulation with a patch pipette attached to the soma of one of the pair. The proportion of silent synapses was estimated by the difference in the failure rate between AMPA- and NMDA-EPSCs. In normal development, silent synapses were present abundantly before eye opening, decreased considerably by the critical period of ocular dominance plasticity, and almost absent in adulthood. This decline in silent synapses was prevented by dark rearing. The amplitude of presumably unitary AMPA-EPSCs increased with age, but this increase was suppressed by dark rearing. The quantal amplitude of AMPA-EPSCs and paired-pulse ratio of NMDA-EPSCs both remained unchanged during development, independent of visual experience. These results indicate that visual inputs are required for the conversion of silent to functional synapses and this conversion largely contributes to developmental increases in the amplitude of presumably unitary AMPA-EPSCs.


2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (10) ◽  
pp. 1594-1601 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liping Yu ◽  
Jinghong Xu ◽  
Benjamin A. Rowland ◽  
Barry E. Stein

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