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Axonal Projections from Middle Temporal Area to the Pulvinar in the Common Marmoset

Authors :
Toshiki Tani
Hiroaki Mizukami
Kazuhisa Sakai
Wataru Suzuki
Hiroshi Abe
Noritaka Ichinohe
Satoshi Watanabe
Akira Arafune-Mishima
Hiromi Mashiko
Akiya Watakabe
Tetsuo Yamamori
Source :
Neuroscience. 446
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The pulvinar, the largest thalamic nucleus in the primate brain, has connections with a variety of cortical areas and is involved in many aspects of higher brain functions. Among cortico-pulvino-cortical systems, the connection between the middle temporal area (MT) and the pulvinar has been thought to contribute significantly to complex motion recognition. Recently, the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus), has become a valuable model for a variety of neuroscience studies, including visual neuroscience and translational research of neurological and psychiatric disorders. However, information on projections from MT to the pulvinar in the marmoset brain is scant. We addressed this deficiency by injecting sensitive anterograde viral tracers into MT to examine the distribution of labeled terminations in the pulvinar. The injection sites were placed retinotopically according to visual field coordinates mapped by optical intrinsic imaging. All injections produced anterograde terminal labeling, which was densest in the medial nucleus of the inferior pulvinar (PIm), sparser in the central nucleus of the inferior pulvinar, and weakest in the lateral pulvinar. Within each subnucleus, terminations formed separate retinotopic fields. Most labeled terminals were small but these comingled with a few large terminals, distributed mainly in the dorsomedial part of the PIm. Our results further delineate the organization of projections from MT to the pulvinar in the marmoset as forming parallel complex networks, which may differentially contribute to motion processing. It is interesting that the densest projections from MT target the PIm, the subnucleus recently reported to preferentially receive direct retinal projections.

Details

ISSN :
18737544
Volume :
446
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fa977959db03505ddd57519e3e26878d