Topographic organization of the projections of the retina to the pretectal region in the rat

Abstract
The pattern of projection of the retina to the pretectal region and its retinotopic organization were investigated in the rat by autoradiographic and silver impregnation techniques for axonal pathways. The endings of retinal axons form three terminal fields in the pretectum in: 1, olivary pretectal nucleus (PO), bilaterally; 2, posterior pretectal nucleus (PP), bilaterally; and 3, nucleus of the optic tract (NTO), contralaterally. The following retinotopic pattern was observed in rats surviving peripheral retinal lesions and injections of 3H‐proline in the same eye, when the positions occupied by terminal degeneration in Fink‐Heimer stained sections were matched with the corresponding areas deficient in radiolable in adjacent autoradiographic sections showing the surviving parts of the terminal fields. The nasal periphery of the retina maps along the adjoining edges of PO and PP, both of which extend obliquely, in a posterolateral direction, through the entire extent of the pretectum. Both nuclei map the line of representation of the anterior midline (in the temporal retina) along their opposite edges (anterolaterally, in PO; posteromedially, in PP). This mirror‐image symmetry is completed by the representation of the ventral peripheral retina separately in the rostral poles and the dorsal peripheral retina separately in the caudal poles of both nuclei. The map in NTO is vertically oriented, with the temporal retina, dorsally, the nasal retina, ventrally, the ventral retina, rostrally, and the dorsal retina caudally represented. The binocular area of the terminal field in PO is subdivided by a terminal‐free zone into two parts that may process separately events in the central and lateral visual field.