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XB-ART-30950
J Embryol Exp Morphol 1981 Oct 01;65:199-217.
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Factors involved in the development of ipsilateral retinothalamic projections in Xenopus laevis.

Kennard C .


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The extent, and the development, of the ipsilateral retinothalamic projection in the frog Xenopus laevis have been studied using terminal degeneration and autoradiographic techniques. This ipsilateral projection derives only from those retinal areas receiving visual information from the binocular portion of the visual field. In Xenopus, the ipsilateral retinothalamic projection arises from a larger area of the retina than was found to be the case in earlier studies on Rana. This correlates with the fact that Xenopus has a larger binocular visual field than does Rana. The ipsilateral retinothalamic projection is just detectable at about stage 56 of larval life, considerably later than its contralateral counterpart. Experimental manipulation of the developing eye vesicle at early larval stages followed by histological studies of the ipsilateral retinothalamic projections showed, however, that the retinal areas which give rise to this projection are determined by stage 32 of larval life. Further studies, in which monocular enucleation was performed at different larval stages with subsequent examination of the retinothalamic projections from the remaining eye, indicated that the selective pattern of decussation and non-decussation of retinothalamic fibres at the optic chiasma does not require interactions, at the chiasma, between optic fibres from the two eyes.

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