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タイトル: Contribution of the Pulvinar and Lateral Geniculate Nucleus to the Control of Visually Guided Saccades in Blindsight Monkeys
著者: Takakuwa, Norihiro
Isa, Kaoru
Onoe, Hirotaka
Takahashi, Jun  kyouindb  KAKEN_id
Isa, Tadashi  kyouindb  KAKEN_id
著者名の別形: 高桑, 徳宏
伊佐, かおる
尾上, 浩隆
髙橋, 淳
伊佐, 正
キーワード: blindsight
lateral geniculate nucleus
monkey
pulvinar
saccadic eye movement
発行日: Feb-2021
出版者: Society for Neuroscience
誌名: The Journal of Neuroscience
巻: 41
号: 8
開始ページ: 1755
終了ページ: 1768
抄録: After damage to the primary visual cortex (V1), conscious vision is impaired. However, some patients can respond to visual stimuli presented in their lesion-affected visual field using residual visual pathways bypassing V1. This phenomenon is called "blindsight." Many studies have tried to identify the brain regions responsible for blindsight, and the pulvinar and/or lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) are suggested to play key roles as the thalamic relay of visual signals. However, there are critical problems regarding these preceding studies in that subjects with different sized lesions and periods of time after lesioning were investigated; furthermore, the ability of blindsight was assessed with different measures. In this study, we used double dissociation to clarify the roles of the pulvinar and LGN by pharmacological inactivation of each region and investigated the effects in a simple task with visually guided saccades (VGSs) using monkeys with a unilateral V1 lesion, by which nearly all of the contralesional visual field was affected. Inactivating either the ipsilesional pulvinar or LGN impaired VGS toward a visual stimulus in the affected field. In contrast, inactivation of the contralesional pulvinar had no clear effect, but inactivation of the contralesional LGN impaired VGS to the intact visual field. These results suggest that the pulvinar and LGN play key roles in performing the simple VGS task after V1 lesioning, and that the visuomotor functions of blindsight monkeys were supported by plastic changes in the visual pathway involving the pulvinar, which emerged after V1 lesioning.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Many studies have been devoted to understanding the mechanism of mysterious symptom called "blindsight, " in which patients with damage to the primary visual cortex (V1) can respond to visual stimuli despite loss of visual awareness. However, there is still a debate on the thalamic relay of visual signals. In this study, to pin down the issue, we tried double dissociation in the same subjects (hemi-blindsight macaque monkeys) and clarified that the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) plays a major role in simple visually guided saccades in the intact state, while both pulvinar and LGN critically contribute after the V1 lesioning, suggesting that plasticity in the visual pathway involving the pulvinar underlies the blindsight.
著作権等: Copyright © 2021 the authors
Beginning six months after publication the Work will be made freely available to the public on SfN’s website to copy, distribute, or display under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license. The user may not create, compile, publish, host, enable or otherwise make available a mirror site of The Journal of Neuroscience site.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2433/276953
DOI(出版社版): 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2293-20.2020
PubMed ID: 33443074
出現コレクション:学術雑誌掲載論文等

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