Optic fibers follow aberrant pathways from rotated eyes in Xenopus laevis

The Journal of Comparative Neurology
P Grant, P M Ma

Abstract

The rotated eye paradigm has been a major experimental test of the neuronal specificity model for the development of ordered retinotectal connections in amphibians. In most studies, however, no optic fiber pathways were traced from rotated eyes and correlated with visuotectal projections. As an initial approach to this question, optic fibers from eyes rotated at different embryonic stages were traced with 3H-proline autoradiography. Three experimental series were prepared: in situ eye rotations, isochronic transplants of eyes rotated between embryos at the same stage, and heterochronic transplants of eyes rotated between embryos at different stages. Single or multiple optic fiber pathways developing from rotated eyes are identified by their sites of entry and trajectory in the brain. These include a normal chiasmatic (CH) pathway, and three aberrant pathways, identified as trigeminal (TR), diencephalic (DI), and oculomotor (OC). The latter three enter the brain ipsilaterally, some crossing contralaterally via commissural pathways. Depending on stage and type of operation, TR pathways develop in 50-100% of the animals, while CH pathways are more common after rotation at stage 21/22. The surgical procedure affects the initial tra...Continue Reading

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