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Publication : Alignment of multimodal sensory input in the superior colliculus through a gradient-matching mechanism.

First Author  Triplett JW Year  2012
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  32
Issue  15 Pages  5264-71
PubMed ID  22496572 Mgi Jnum  J:184449
Mgi Id  MGI:5424055 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0240-12.2012
Citation  Triplett JW, et al. (2012) Alignment of multimodal sensory input in the superior colliculus through a gradient-matching mechanism. J Neurosci 32(15):5264-71
abstractText  The superior colliculus (SC) is a midbrain structure that integrates visual, somatosensory, and auditory inputs to direct head and eye movements. Each of these modalities is topographically mapped and aligned with the others to ensure precise behavioral responses to multimodal stimuli. While it is clear that neural activity is instructive for topographic alignment of inputs from the visual cortex (V1) and auditory system with retinal axons in the SC, there is also evidence that activity-independent mechanisms are used to establish topographic alignment between modalities. Here, we show that the topography of the projection from primary somatosensory cortex (S1) to the SC is established during the first postnatal week. Unlike V1-SC projections, the S1-SC projection does not bifurcate when confronted with a duplicated retinocollicular map, showing that retinal input in the SC does not influence the topography of the S1-SC projection. However, S1-SC topography is disrupted in mice lacking ephrin-As, which we find are expressed in graded patterns along with their binding partners, the EphA4 and EphA7, in both S1 and the somatosensory recipient layer of the SC. Together, these data support a model in which somatosensory inputs into the SC map topographically and establish alignment with visual inputs in the SC using a gradient-matching mechanism.
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