Cross-hierarchical plasticity of corticofugal projections to dLGN after neonatal monocular enucleation

Perception is the result of interactions between the sensory periphery, thalamus, and cerebral cortex. Inputs from the retina project to the first-order dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN), which projects to the primary visual cortex (V1). In return, the cortex innervates the thalamus. While la...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Giasafaki, C, Grant, E, Hoerder-Suabedissen, A, Hayashi, S, Lee, S, Molnár, Z
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022
_version_ 1826312353988214784
author Giasafaki, C
Grant, E
Hoerder-Suabedissen, A
Hayashi, S
Lee, S
Molnár, Z
author_facet Giasafaki, C
Grant, E
Hoerder-Suabedissen, A
Hayashi, S
Lee, S
Molnár, Z
author_sort Giasafaki, C
collection OXFORD
description Perception is the result of interactions between the sensory periphery, thalamus, and cerebral cortex. Inputs from the retina project to the first-order dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN), which projects to the primary visual cortex (V1). In return, the cortex innervates the thalamus. While layer 6 projections innervate all thalamic nuclei, cortical layer 5 neurons selectively project to the higher order lateral posterior nucleus (LP) and not to dLGN. It has been demonstrated that a subpopulation of layer 5 (Rbp4-Cre+) projections rewires to dLGN after monocular or binocular enucleation in young postnatal mice. However, the exact cortical regional origin of these projections was not fully determined, and it remained unclear whether these changes persisted into adulthood. In this study, we report gene expression changes observed in the dLGN after monocular enucleation at birth using microarray, qPCR at P6, and in situ hybridization at P8. We report that genes that are normally enriched in dLGN, but not LP during development are preferentially downregulated in dLGN following monocular enucleation. Comparisons with developmental gene expression patters in dLGN suggest more immature and delayed gene expression in enucleated dLGN. Combined tracing and immuno-histochemical analysis revealed that the induced layer 5 fibers that innervate enucleated dLGN originate from putative primary visual cortex and they retain increased VGluT1+ synapse formation into adulthood. Our results indicate a new form of plasticity when layer 5 driver input takes over the innervation of an originally first-order thalamic nucleus after early sensory deficit.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T08:27:44Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:7e381208-4cdc-42cd-9bfd-ef62c29440aa
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T08:27:44Z
publishDate 2022
publisher Wiley
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:7e381208-4cdc-42cd-9bfd-ef62c29440aa2024-02-21T13:54:55ZCross-hierarchical plasticity of corticofugal projections to dLGN after neonatal monocular enucleationJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:7e381208-4cdc-42cd-9bfd-ef62c29440aaEnglishSymplectic ElementsWiley2022Giasafaki, CGrant, EHoerder-Suabedissen, AHayashi, SLee, SMolnár, ZPerception is the result of interactions between the sensory periphery, thalamus, and cerebral cortex. Inputs from the retina project to the first-order dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN), which projects to the primary visual cortex (V1). In return, the cortex innervates the thalamus. While layer 6 projections innervate all thalamic nuclei, cortical layer 5 neurons selectively project to the higher order lateral posterior nucleus (LP) and not to dLGN. It has been demonstrated that a subpopulation of layer 5 (Rbp4-Cre+) projections rewires to dLGN after monocular or binocular enucleation in young postnatal mice. However, the exact cortical regional origin of these projections was not fully determined, and it remained unclear whether these changes persisted into adulthood. In this study, we report gene expression changes observed in the dLGN after monocular enucleation at birth using microarray, qPCR at P6, and in situ hybridization at P8. We report that genes that are normally enriched in dLGN, but not LP during development are preferentially downregulated in dLGN following monocular enucleation. Comparisons with developmental gene expression patters in dLGN suggest more immature and delayed gene expression in enucleated dLGN. Combined tracing and immuno-histochemical analysis revealed that the induced layer 5 fibers that innervate enucleated dLGN originate from putative primary visual cortex and they retain increased VGluT1+ synapse formation into adulthood. Our results indicate a new form of plasticity when layer 5 driver input takes over the innervation of an originally first-order thalamic nucleus after early sensory deficit.
spellingShingle Giasafaki, C
Grant, E
Hoerder-Suabedissen, A
Hayashi, S
Lee, S
Molnár, Z
Cross-hierarchical plasticity of corticofugal projections to dLGN after neonatal monocular enucleation
title Cross-hierarchical plasticity of corticofugal projections to dLGN after neonatal monocular enucleation
title_full Cross-hierarchical plasticity of corticofugal projections to dLGN after neonatal monocular enucleation
title_fullStr Cross-hierarchical plasticity of corticofugal projections to dLGN after neonatal monocular enucleation
title_full_unstemmed Cross-hierarchical plasticity of corticofugal projections to dLGN after neonatal monocular enucleation
title_short Cross-hierarchical plasticity of corticofugal projections to dLGN after neonatal monocular enucleation
title_sort cross hierarchical plasticity of corticofugal projections to dlgn after neonatal monocular enucleation
work_keys_str_mv AT giasafakic crosshierarchicalplasticityofcorticofugalprojectionstodlgnafterneonatalmonocularenucleation
AT grante crosshierarchicalplasticityofcorticofugalprojectionstodlgnafterneonatalmonocularenucleation
AT hoerdersuabedissena crosshierarchicalplasticityofcorticofugalprojectionstodlgnafterneonatalmonocularenucleation
AT hayashis crosshierarchicalplasticityofcorticofugalprojectionstodlgnafterneonatalmonocularenucleation
AT lees crosshierarchicalplasticityofcorticofugalprojectionstodlgnafterneonatalmonocularenucleation
AT molnarz crosshierarchicalplasticityofcorticofugalprojectionstodlgnafterneonatalmonocularenucleation