Thalamic projections to area 17 in a prosimian primate, Microcebus murinus

Abstract
Electrophysiological recording of single neurons was used to describe the representation of visual space in area 17, and the technique of retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was applied to relate these results to projections from the thalamus in the prosimian primate Microcebus murinus. The visuotopic organization of area 17 was found to resemble that of other primates. On the dorsal surface, the border of area 17 corresponds to the representation of the vertical meridian. Proceeding medially across the surface the location of receptive fields descends along the vertical meridian, while moving caudally receptive fields progress temporally. Most of the dorsolateral surface is devoted to central vision and corresponds to a well developed area centralis. Following HRP injections in striate cortex, columns of labeled cells were found in the dorsal lateral geniculate (dLGN) extending orthogonally across all six layers. These columns run in a general ventrodorsal and caudorostral direction, parallel to a line connecting the cellular discontinuities corresponding to the optic disc. These discontinuities are present in magnocellular layer 1 and parvocellualr layers 5 and 6, thus receiving from the nasal retina of the contralateral eye. The representation of the vertical meridian is situated in the ventromedial portion of the dLGN, and the monocular field is represented in the dorsal extremity. Anterior dLGN projects to the calcarine fissure (lower field). and posterior dLGN projects to the ventral surface of the cortex (upper field). Exptrgeniculate input to area 17 was found to originate from the pulvinar. HRP labeled cells were located in two distinct divisions of this nucleus, the cytoarchitecture of which is described. In addition, projections to occipital cortex were found to arise form the intralaminar nuclei.