Ap. Foerster et Mj. Holmes, Spontaneous regeneration of severed optic axons restores mapped visual responses to the adult rat superior colliculus, EUR J NEURO, 11(9), 1999, pp. 3151-3166
To test whether a spontaneous and functional regeneration of severed axons
could occur within the adult mammalian central nervous system, a long-term
recovery of microelectrode-mapped visual response was sought in the superio
r colliculus (SC) after its total or near-total abolition by a precise guil
lotine cut of the retinocollicular pathway. Recoveries were found 3 weeks o
r later in 15 of the 36 animals studied; in 10 of these recoveries, half or
more of the width of the SC was involved. The recovered responses were oft
en activated from within a normally small area of the visual field. Appropr
iate retinotopic maps were restored. Intraocular horseradish peroxidase tra
cing revealed a variety of novel optic trajectories, passing around lesions
even of totally cut pathways, which eventually terminated in normally reti
norecipient layers of those recovered SCs. Such detours could not be explai
ned by a mechanical reorientation of brain structures. When exactly compara
ble lesions were examined within a few days, there were no detours: severed
optic axons faced the cuts. In long-term animals where responsiveness rema
ined absent, optic axonal reorientations were observed near lesions but the
SC was not innervated. Extensive long-term recoveries were in marked contr
ast to the occasional rapid ones, found within a few days postlesion, which
involved only an outermost silenced border of SC. These were attributed to
a rapid reversal of conduction failure in spared, bordering, axons of this
topographically organized pathway. The findings support the conclusion tha
t, after they are cut, numbers of optic axons can regenerate to the SC and
restore appropriate circuitry therein.