Dooley James C, Donaldson Michaela S, Krubitzer Leah A
Center for Neuroscience, University of California, Davis, Davis, California; and.
Center for Neuroscience, University of California, Davis, Davis, California; and
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Feb 1;117(2):566-581. doi: 10.1152/jn.00431.2016. Epub 2016 Nov 16.
The functional organization of the primary visual area (V1) and the importance of sensory experience in its normal development have been well documented in eutherian mammals. However, very few studies have investigated the response properties of V1 neurons in another large class of mammals, or whether sensory experience plays a role in shaping their response properties. Thus we reared opossums (Monodelphis domestica) in normal and vertically striped cages until they reached adulthood. They were then anesthetized using urethane, and electrophysiological techniques were used to examine neuronal responses to different orientations, spatial and temporal frequencies, and contrast levels. For normal opossums, we observed responses to the temporal and spatial characteristics of the stimulus to be similar to those described in small, nocturnal, eutherian mammals such as rats and mice; neurons in V1 responded maximally to stimuli at 0.09 cycles per degree and 2.12 cycles per second. Unlike other eutherians, but similar to other marsupials investigated, only 40% of the neurons were orientation selective. In stripe-reared animals, neurons were significantly more likely to respond to vertical stimuli at a wider range of spatial frequencies, and were more sensitive to gratings at lower contrast values compared with normal animals. These results are the first to demonstrate experience-dependent plasticity in the visual system of a marsupial species. Thus the ability of cortical neurons to alter their properties based on the dynamics of the visual environment predates the emergence of eutherian mammals and was likely present in our earliest mammalian ancestors.
NEW & NOTEWORTHY: These results are the first description of visual response properties of the most commonly studied marsupial model organism, the short-tailed opossum (Monodelphis domestica). Further, these results are the first to demonstrate experience-dependent plasticity in the visual system of a marsupial species. Thus the ability of cortical neurons to alter their properties based on the dynamics of the visual environment predates the emergence of eutherian mammals and was likely present in our earliest mammalian ancestors.
在真兽类哺乳动物中,初级视觉区(V1)的功能组织以及感觉经验在其正常发育中的重要性已有充分记录。然而,很少有研究调查另一大类哺乳动物中V1神经元的反应特性,或者感觉经验是否在塑造它们的反应特性中发挥作用。因此,我们将负鼠(Monodelphis domestica)饲养在正常和垂直条纹的笼子里,直到它们成年。然后用乌拉坦麻醉它们,并使用电生理技术检查神经元对不同方向、空间和时间频率以及对比度水平的反应。对于正常负鼠,我们观察到对刺激的时间和空间特征的反应与在小型夜行性真兽类哺乳动物(如大鼠和小鼠)中描述的反应相似;V1中的神经元对每度0.09周期和每秒2.12周期的刺激反应最大。与其他真兽类不同,但与其他已研究的有袋类动物相似,只有40%的神经元具有方向选择性。在条纹饲养的动物中,与正常动物相比,神经元在更广泛的空间频率范围内对垂直刺激做出反应的可能性显著更高,并且对较低对比度值的光栅更敏感。这些结果首次证明了有袋类物种视觉系统中依赖经验的可塑性。因此,皮质神经元根据视觉环境动态改变其特性的能力早于真兽类哺乳动物的出现,并且可能存在于我们最早的哺乳动物祖先中。
这些结果首次描述了最常研究的有袋类模式生物短尾负鼠(Monodelphis domestica)的视觉反应特性。此外,这些结果首次证明了有袋类物种视觉系统中依赖经验的可塑性。因此,皮质神经元根据视觉环境动态改变其特性的能力早于真兽类哺乳动物的出现,并且可能存在于我们最早的哺乳动物祖先中。