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XB-ART-28458
J Comp Physiol A 1986 Dec 01;1596:879-85. doi: 10.1007/bf00603741.
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The development of the static vestibulo-ocular reflex in the southern clawed toad, Xenopus laevis. II. Animals with acute vestibular lesions.

Horn E , Mack R , Lang HG .


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Acute hemilabyrinthectomized tadpoles of the Southern Clawed Toad (Xenopus laevis), younger than stage 47 (about 6 days old), perform no static vestibulo-ocular reflex (Fig. 1). Older acute lesioned animals respond with compensatory movements of both eyes during static roll. Their threshold roll angle, however, depends on the developmental stage. For lesioned stages 60 to 64, it is 75 degrees while stage 52 to 56 tadpoles respond even during a lateral roll of 15 degrees (Figs. 1 and 2). Selective destruction of single macula and crista organs revealed that the static vestibulo-ocular reflex is evoked by excitation of the macula utriculi (Figs. 3 and 4) even in young tadpoles. The results demonstrate that bilateral projections of the vestibular apparatus must have developed at the time of occurrence of the static VOR, that during the first week of life the excitation of a single labyrinth is subthreshold (Fig. 1). We discuss the possibility whether the loss of the static VOR during the prometamorphic period of life (Fig. 2) is caused by increasing formation of multimodal connections in the vestibular pathway.

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References [+] :
Ashton, Input from proprioceptors in the extrinsic ocular muscles to the vestibular nuclei in the giant toad, bufo marinus. 1984, Pubmed