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Physiological characterization of a rare subpopulation of doublet-spiking neurons in the ferret lateral geniculate nucleus.

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Interest in exploring homologies in the early visual pathways of rodents, carnivores, and primates has recently grown. Retinae of these species contain morphologically and physiologically heterogeneous retinal ganglion cells that… Click to show full abstract

Interest in exploring homologies in the early visual pathways of rodents, carnivores, and primates has recently grown. Retinae of these species contain morphologically and physiologically heterogeneous retinal ganglion cells that form the basis for parallel visual information processing streams. Whether rare retinal ganglion cells with unusual visual response properties in carnivores and primates project to the visual thalamus and drive unusual visual responses among thalamic relay neurons is poorly understood. We surveyed neurophysiological responses among hundreds of LGN neurons in ferrets and observed a novel subpopulation of LGN neurons displaying doublet-spiking waveforms. Some visual response properties of doublet-spiking LGN neurons, like contrast and temporal frequency tuning, were intermediate to those of X and Y LGN neurons. Interestingly, most doublet-spiking LGN neurons were tuned for orientation and displayed direction selectivity for horizontal motion. Spatiotemporal receptive fields of doublet-spiking neurons were diverse and included center/surround organization, On/Off responses, and elongated separate On and Off subregions. Optogenetic activation of corticogeniculate feedback did not alter the tuning or spatiotemporal receptive fields of doublet-spiking neurons, suggesting that their unusual tuning properties were inherited from retinal inputs. The doublet-spiking LGN neurons were found throughout the depth of LGN recording penetrations. Together these findings suggest that while extremely rare (<2% of recorded LGN neurons), unique subpopulations of LGN neurons in carnivores receive retinal inputs that confer them with non-standard visual response properties like direction selectivity. These results suggest that neuronal circuits for non-standard visual computations are common across a variety of species, even though their proportions vary.

Keywords: visual response; doublet spiking; subpopulation; spiking neurons; lgn neurons

Journal Title: Journal of neurophysiology
Year Published: 2020

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