Hickey T L, Spear P D, Kratz K E
J Comp Neurol. 1977 Mar 15;172(2):265-81. doi: 10.1002/cne.901720206.
The effects of visual deprivation upon dorsal lateral geniculate (DLG) cell size were compared for seven kittens reared with monocular lid-suture (MD), seven with binocular lid-suture (BD), and six with one eye lid-sutured and the other eye enucleated soon after birth (MD-E). Six additional kittens were reared normally for comparison. For each kitten the cross-sectional areas of 300 cells were measured in one or both nuclei. Measurements were taken from the binocular segment of laminae A and A1 and the monocular segment of lamina A. In agreement with previous studies, cells in the binocular segment of the deprived laminae of MD cats were smaller (33-34%) than those in the non-deprived laminae. Comparisons with normal animals indicated that this difference was due to an increase (10-15%) in size of cells in the non-deprived laminae as well as a decrease (23-25%) in size of cells in the deprived laminae. Cells in the monocular segment also were affected by deprivation in MD cats, and this effect increased with the age (and duration of the deprivation) of the animal. However, it was always smaller than the decrease in cell size in the binocular portion of the DLG. In BD kittens, DLG cells were smaller (7-12%) than normal in all portions of the nucleus, including both the binocular and monocular segments. Direct comparisons between the deprived laminae of MD and BD kittens indicated that the decrease in cell size was greater for MD kittens in the binocular segment, but tended to be greater for BD kittens in the monocular segment. In MD-E kittens, DLG cells in the deprived laminae were smaller (11-17%) than normal in all portions of the nucleus, including both the binocular and monocular segments. Thus, the effects of deprivation were similar to those in BD kittens, even though inputs from the deprived eye had been placed at a competitive advantage in MD-E kittens. These results indicate that two factors may affect cell size in the DLG of visually deprived cats: deprivation per se and abnormal binocular competition. Finally, separate analyses for the ten largest and the ten smallest cells in each lamina of each cat were carried out in an attempt to determine if the changes in cell size were limited to the largest cells. In every case, differences observed for the total sample of cells were paralleled by differences from normal of both the largest cells present and the smallest cells present in the deprived laminae. Since at least two alternative interpretations can account for this finding, the question of whether the large cells are selectively affected by visual deprivation remains unanswered in the cat.
比较了七只单眼眼睑缝合(MD)饲养的小猫、七只双眼眼睑缝合(BD)饲养的小猫和六只出生后不久一只眼睑缝合而另一只眼球摘除(MD-E)的小猫视觉剥夺对背外侧膝状体(DLG)细胞大小的影响。另外六只小猫正常饲养作为对照。对每只小猫,在一个或两个核中测量300个细胞的横截面积。测量取自A层和A1层的双眼段以及A层的单眼段。与先前的研究一致,MD猫被剥夺层的双眼段中的细胞比未被剥夺层中的细胞小(33%-34%)。与正常动物比较表明,这种差异是由于未被剥夺层中细胞大小增加(10%-15%)以及被剥夺层中细胞大小减小(23%-25%)所致。MD猫单眼段中的细胞也受到剥夺的影响,并且这种影响随着动物年龄(和剥夺持续时间)的增加而增大。然而,它总是小于DLG双眼部分细胞大小的减小。在BD小猫中,DLG细胞核的所有部分,包括双眼段和单眼段,细胞都比正常小猫小(7%-12%)。MD和BD小猫被剥夺层之间的直接比较表明,MD小猫双眼段细胞大小的减小更大,但单眼段BD小猫的细胞大小减小往往更大。在MD-E小猫中,被剥夺层的DLG细胞在细胞核的所有部分,包括双眼段和单眼段,都比正常小猫小(11%-17%)。因此,尽管在MD-E小猫中来自被剥夺眼的输入处于竞争优势,但剥夺的影响与BD小猫相似。这些结果表明,两个因素可能影响视觉剥夺猫DLG中的细胞大小:剥夺本身和异常的双眼竞争。最后,对每只猫每层中最大的十个细胞和最小的十个细胞分别进行分析,试图确定细胞大小的变化是否仅限于最大的细胞。在每种情况下,观察到的细胞总样本的差异与被剥夺层中存在的最大细胞和最小细胞与正常细胞的差异平行。由于至少有两种不同的解释可以说明这一发现,所以在猫中视觉剥夺是否选择性地影响大细胞的问题仍然没有答案。