AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates corticotectal neurons from the visual cortex that relay signals to the superior colliculus, focusing on their response properties and connections in awake rabbits.
  • Researchers classified these neurons into three types based on their receptive field structures: Cx (overlapping ON/OFF), S2 (largely separated), and S1 (single ON or OFF), revealing differences in their firing rates, axon conduction speeds, and visual response characteristics.
  • A notable finding is that a subgroup of Cx neurons with fast conduction and high spontaneous firing rates receive direct input from the thalamus, suggesting a specialized relay mechanism enhancing visual signal processing in the superior colliculus.

Article Abstract

The superior colliculus receives powerful synaptic inputs from corticotectal neurons in the visual cortex. The function of these corticotectal neurons remains largely unknown due to a limited understanding of their response properties and connectivity. Here, we use antidromic methods to identify corticotectal neurons in awake male and female rabbits, and measure their axonal conduction times, thalamic inputs and receptive field properties. All corticotectal neurons responded to sinusoidal drifting gratings with a nonlinear (nonsinusoidal) increase in mean firing rate but showed pronounced differences in their ON-OFF receptive field structures that we classified into three groups, Cx, S2, and S1. Cx receptive fields had highly overlapping ON and OFF subfields as classical complex cells, S2 had largely separated ON and OFF subfields as classical simple cells, and S1 had a single ON or OFF subfield. Thus, all corticotectal neurons are homogeneous in their nonlinear spatial summation but very heterogeneous in their spatial integration of ON and OFF inputs. The Cx type had the fastest conducting axons, the highest spontaneous activity, and the strongest and fastest visual responses. The S2 type had the highest orientation selectivity, and the S1 type had the slowest conducting axons. Moreover, our cross-correlation analyses found that a subpopulation of corticotectal neurons with very fast conducting axons and high spontaneous firing rates (largely "Cx" type) receives monosynaptic input from retinotopically aligned thalamic neurons. This previously unrecognized fast-conducting thalamic-mediated corticotectal pathway may provide specialized information to superior colliculus and prime recipient neurons for subsequent corticotectal or retinal synaptic input.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11079980PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1945-23.2024DOI Listing

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