Indirect visual cortical input to the deep layers of the hamster's superior colliculus via the basal ganglia

1982 ◽  
Vol 208 (3) ◽  
pp. 239-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert W. Rhoades ◽  
David C. Kuo ◽  
Jeffrey D. Polcer ◽  
Stephen E. Fish ◽  
Theodore J. Voneida
1988 ◽  
Vol 59 (6) ◽  
pp. 1783-1797 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. L. Colby

1. The dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) of the cat is a major thalamic relay between the retina and several visual cortical areas. These cortical areas in turn project to the superior colliculus (SC). The aim of the present experiment was to determine which LGN layers provide a necessary input to the corticotectal circuit. 2. Individual layers of the LGN were reversibly inactivated by microinjection of cobalt chloride during recording of visual responses in the retinotopically corresponding part of the superior colliculus. 3. For cells driven through the contralateral eye, inactivation of layer A or the medial interlaminar nucleus (MIN) had little effect on visual responsiveness in the superior colliculus. In contrast, inactivation of layer C abolished visual responses at one-quarter of the SC recording sites, reduced responses at another quarter, and left half of the recording sites unaffected. 4. For cells driven through the ipsilateral eye, inactivation of layer C1 or the MIN had no effect. Inactivation of layer A1 uniformly reduced visual responses in the superior colliculus and usually abolished them entirely. 5. These results are compatible with previous work showing that cortical input to the SC originates from Y-cells. They indicate that two of the five Y-cell containing layers (A1 and C) provide major inputs to the corticotectal circuit. The results suggest that layer A1 is functionally allied to layer C as well as to layer A.


1976 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 1352-1361 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. L. Finlay ◽  
P. H. Schiller ◽  
S. F. Volman

1. The receptive-field properties of corticotectal cells in the monkey's striate cortex were studied using stationary and moving stimuli. These cells were identified by antidromic activation from the superior colliculus. 2. Corticotectal cells form a relatively homogeneous group. They are found primarily in layers 5 and 6. These cells can usually be classified as CX-type cells but show broader orientation tuning, larger receptive fields, higher spontaneous activity, and greater binocular activation than CX-type cells do in general. A third of the corticotectal cells were direction selective. 3. These results suggest that the cortical input to the superior colliculus is not directly responsible for the receptive-field properties of collicular cells. We propose that this input has a gating function in contributing to the control of the downflow of excitation from the superficial to the deep layers of the colliculus.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nora L. Benavidez ◽  
Michael S. Bienkowski ◽  
Muye Zhu ◽  
Luis H. Garcia ◽  
Marina Fayzullina ◽  
...  

AbstractThe superior colliculus (SC) receives diverse and robust cortical inputs to drive a range of cognitive and sensorimotor behaviors. However, it remains unclear how descending cortical input arising from higher-order associative areas coordinate with SC sensorimotor networks to influence its outputs. Here, we construct a comprehensive map of all cortico-tectal projections and identify four collicular zones with differential cortical inputs: medial (SC.m), centromedial (SC.cm), centrolateral (SC.cl) and lateral (SC.l). Further, we delineate the distinctive brain-wide input/output organization of each collicular zone, assemble multiple parallel cortico-tecto-thalamic subnetworks, and identify the somatotopic map in the SC that displays distinguishable spatial properties from the somatotopic maps in the neocortex and basal ganglia. Finally, we characterize interactions between those cortico-tecto-thalamic and cortico-basal ganglia-thalamic subnetworks. This study provides a structural basis for understanding how SC is involved in integrating different sensory modalities, translating sensory information to motor command, and coordinating different actions in goal-directed behaviors.


Author(s):  
Caroline A. Miller ◽  
Laura L. Bruce

The first visual cortical axons arrive in the cat superior colliculus by the time of birth. Adultlike receptive fields develop slowly over several weeks following birth. The developing cortical axons go through a sequence of changes before acquiring their adultlike morphology and function. To determine how these axons interact with neurons in the colliculus, cortico-collicular axons were labeled with biocytin (an anterograde neuronal tracer) and studied with electron microscopy.Deeply anesthetized animals received 200-500 nl injections of biocytin (Sigma; 5% in phosphate buffer) in the lateral suprasylvian visual cortical area. After a 24 hr survival time, the animals were deeply anesthetized and perfused with 0.9% phosphate buffered saline followed by fixation with a solution of 1.25% glutaraldehyde and 1.0% paraformaldehyde in 0.1M phosphate buffer. The brain was sectioned transversely on a vibratome at 50 μm. The tissue was processed immediately to visualize the biocytin.


1983 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 674-685 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Z. Wise ◽  
D. R. Irvine

1. The auditory responses of 207 single neurons in the intermediate and deep layers of the superior colliculus (SC) of barbiturate -or chloralose-anesthetized cats were recorded extracellularly. Sealed stimulating systems incorporating calibrated probe microphone assemblies were employed to present tone- and noise-burst stimuli. 2. All acoustically activated neurons responded with onset responses to noise bursts. Of those neurons also tested with tonal stimuli, approximately 30% were unresponsive over the frequency range tested (0.1-40 kHz), while the others had higher thresholds to tones than to noise. 3. Details of frequency responsiveness were obtained for 55 neurons; 21 were broadly tuned, while 34 were sharply tuned with clearly defined characteristic frequencies (CFs). All sharply tuned neurons had CFs greater than or equal to 10 kHz. 4. The majority of neurons (81%) responded with latencies in the range 8-20 ms; only 11% of neurons had latencies greater than 30 ms. 5. Binaural response properties were examined for 165 neurons. The great majority (79%) received monaural excitatory input only from the contralateral ear (EO). However, most EO cells were binaurally influenced, the contralateral response being either inhibited (EO/I; 96 of 131 units) or facilitated (EO/F; 33 of 131 units) by simultaneous ipsilateral stimulation. Small subgroups were monaurally excited by either ear (EE cells; 8%) or were unresponsive monaurally but responded strongly to binaural stimulation (OO/F cells; 7%). 6. EO/I, EO/F, and OO/F neurons showed characteristic forms of sensitivity to interaural intensity differences (IIDs). The IID functions of EO/I neurons would be expected to produce large contralateral spatial receptive fields with clearly defined medial borders, such as have been described in studies of deep SC neurons employing free-field stimuli. 7. Preliminary evidence suggests a possible topographic organization of IID sensitivity in deep SC, such that the steeply sloping portion of the function (corresponding to the medial edge of the receptive field) is shifted laterally for EO/I neurons located more caudally in the nucleus. 8. The auditory properties of deep SC neurons are compared with previous reports and implications for the organization of auditory input are considered. The binaural properties and auditory spatial fields of deep SC neurons suggest that any representation of auditory space in this structure is unlikely to be based on restricted spatial fields.


1997 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chang-Jin Jeon ◽  
Michael K. Hartman ◽  
R. Ranney Mize

AbstractBiochemical studies provide evidence that the pathway from visual cortex to the superior colliculus (SC) utilizes glutamate as a neurotransmitter. In the present study, we have used immunocytochemistry, visual cortex lesions, and retrograde tracing to show directly by anatomical methods that glutamate or a closely related analog is contained in corticocollicular neurons and terminals. A monoclonal antibody directed against gamma-L-glutamyl-L-glutamate (gamma glu glu) was used to localize glutamate-like immunoreactivity in both the superior colliculus (SC) and visual cortex (VC). Unilateral lesions of areas 17–18 were made in four cats to determine if gamma glu glu labeling was reduced in SC by this lesion. WGA-HRP was injected into the SC of 10 additional cats in order to determine if corticocollicular neurons were also labeled by the gamma glu glu antibody. A distinctive dense band of gamma glu glu immunoreactivity was found within the deep superficial gray and upper optic layers of SC where many corticotectal axons are known to terminate. Both fibers and cells were labeled within the band. Immunoreactivity was also found in cells and fibers throughout the deep layers of SC. Measures of total immunoreactivity (i.e. optical density) in the dense band were made in sections from the SC both ipsilateral to and contralateral to the lesions of areas 17–18. A consistent reduction in optical density was found in both the neuropil and in cells within the dense band of the SC ipsilateral to the lesion. A large percentage of all corticocollicular neurons that were retrogradely labeled by WGA-HRP also contained gamma glu glu. These results provide further evidence that the corticocollicular pathway in mammals is glutamatergic. The results also suggest that visual cortex ablation alters synthesis or storage of glutamate within postsynaptic SC neurons, presumably as a result of partial deafferentation.


2015 ◽  
Vol 114 (2) ◽  
pp. 978-988 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth A. Stubblefield ◽  
John A. Thompson ◽  
Gidon Felsen

The superior colliculus (SC) plays a critical role in orienting movements, in part by integrating modulatory influences on the sensorimotor transformations it performs. Many species exhibit a robust brain stem cholinergic projection to the intermediate and deep layers of the SC arising mainly from the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus (PPTg), which may serve to modulate SC function. However, the physiological effects of this input have not been examined in vivo, preventing an understanding of its functional role. Given the data from slice experiments, cholinergic input may have a net excitatory effect on the SC. Alternatively, the input could have mixed effects, via activation of inhibitory neurons within or upstream of the SC. Distinguishing between these possibilities requires in vivo experiments in which endogenous cholinergic input is directly manipulated. Here we used anatomical and optogenetic techniques to identify and selectively activate brain stem cholinergic terminals entering the intermediate and deep layers of the awake mouse SC and recorded SC neuronal responses. We first quantified the pattern of the cholinergic input to the mouse SC, finding that it was predominantly localized to the intermediate and deep layers. We then found that optogenetic stimulation of cholinergic terminals in the SC significantly increased the activity of a subpopulation of SC neurons. Interestingly, cholinergic input had a broad range of effects on the magnitude and timing of SC responses, perhaps reflecting both monosynaptic and polysynaptic innervation. These findings begin to elucidate the functional role of this cholinergic projection in modulating the processing underlying sensorimotor transformations in the SC.


2000 ◽  
Vol 83 (6) ◽  
pp. 3430-3452 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.H.L.M. Goossens ◽  
A. J. Van Opstal

Trigeminal reflex blinks evoked near the onset of a saccade cause profound spatial-temporal perturbations of the saccade that are typically compensated in mid-flight. This paper investigates the influence of reflex blinks on the discharge properties of saccade-related burst neurons (SRBNs) in intermediate and deep layers of the monkey superior colliculus (SC). Twenty-nine SRBNs, recorded in three monkeys, were tested in the blink-perturbation paradigm. We report that the air puff stimuli, used to elicit blinks, resulted in a short-latency (∼10 ms) transient suppression of saccade-related SRBN activity. Shortly after this suppression (within 10–30 ms), all neurons resumed their activity, and their burst discharge then continued until the perturbed saccade ended near the extinguished target. This was found regardless whether the compensatory movement was into the cell's movement field or not. In the limited number of trials where no compensation occurred, the neurons typically stopped firing well before the end of the eye movement. Several aspects of the saccade-related activity could be further quantified for 25 SRBNs. It appeared that 1) the increase in duration of the high-frequency burst was well correlated with the (two- to threefold) increase in duration of the perturbed movement. 2) The number of spikes in the burst for control and perturbed saccades was quite similar. On average, the number of spikes increased only 14%, whereas the mean firing rate in the burst decreased by 52%. 3) An identical number of spikes were obtained between control and perturbed responses when burst and postsaccadic activity were both included in the spike count. 4) The decrease of the mean firing rate in the burst was well correlated with the decrease in the velocity of perturbed saccades. 5) Monotonic relations between instantaneous firing rate and dynamic motor error were obtained for control responses but not for perturbed responses. And 6) the high-frequency burst of SRBNs with short-lead and long-lead presaccadic activity (also referred to as burst and buildup neurons, respectively) showed very similar features. Our findings show that blinking interacts with the saccade premotor system already at the level of the SC. The data also indicate that a neural mechanism, rather than passive elastic restoring forces within the oculomotor plant, underlies the compensation for blink-related perturbations. We propose that these interactions occur downstream from the motor SC and that the latter may encode the desired displacement vector of the eyes by sending an approximately fixed number of spikes to the brainstem saccadic burst generator.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document