Topographic Arrangement of the Rotundo-entopallial Projection in the Pigeon (Columba livia)
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2010-11-01Metadata
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Fredes, Felipe
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Topographic Arrangement of the Rotundo-entopallial Projection in the Pigeon (Columba livia)
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Abstract
The tectofugal pathway (retina – optic tectum – nucleus
rotundus – entopallium) is a prominent route mediating
visual discrimination in diurnal birds. Several lines of
evidence have shown that at the tecto-rotundal stage
this pathway is composed of multiple parallel channels.
Anatomical studies show that the nucleus rotundus is
composed of at least four subdivisions, according to differences
in cytoarchitectonic, histochemical, and hodological
properties. Each of these subdivisions is in
receipt of a highly convergent, nontopographic tectal
projection, originating from a distinct subset of tectorotundal
neurons. Physiological studies show that neurons
of different subdivisions respond specifically to different
visual dimensions, such as color, luminance, twodimensional
motion, and in-depth motion. At present it
is less clear whether or to what extent this channel
segregation is preserved at the telencephalic stage of
the tectofugal pathway. The entopallium shows no
obvious subdivisions or laminations. Nevertheless, tracttracing
experiments show that separate portions of the
entopallium receive efferent projections from different
rotundal subdivisions, in a way that maintains the rostrocaudal
order of these subdivisions. In the present
study we investigate in detail the topography of the
rotundo-entopallial projection by means of anterograde
and retrograde neuronal tracers. Our results confirm
the zonal topography proposed by previous studies and
indicate that each zone in the entopallium receives a
direct and topographically organized projection from its
corresponding rotundal subdivision. These results suggest
that the spatial arrangement of the different rotundal
functional modules is preserved at the entopallial
level.
Patrocinador
Fondecyt; Grant numbers: 1030522, 1080094, 1080220.
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/119097
DOI: DOI: 10.1002/cne.22460
ISSN: 0021-9967
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JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY Volume: 518 Issue: 21 Pages: 4342-4361 Published: NOV 1 2010
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