| Literature DB >> 30288557 |
Piotr Majka1,2, Marcello G P Rosa3,4, Shi Bai2,5, Jonathan M Chan5, Bing-Xing Huo6,7, Natalia Jermakow1, Meng K Lin6, Yeonsook S Takahashi6, Ianina H Wolkowicz5, Katrina H Worthy5, Ramesh Rajan2,5, David H Reser8, Daniel K Wójcik1, Hideyuki Okano6,9, Partha P Mitra10,11,12.
Abstract
Until the late twentieth century, it was believed that different sensory modalities were processed by largely independent pathways in the primate cortex, with cross-modal integration only occurring in specialized polysensory areas. This model was challenged by the finding that the peripheral representation of the primary visual cortex (V1) receives monosynaptic connections from areas of the auditory cortex in the macaque. However, auditory projections to V1 have not been reported in other primates. We investigated the existence of direct interconnections between V1 and auditory areas in the marmoset, a New World monkey. Labelled neurons in auditory cortex were observed following 4 out of 10 retrograde tracer injections involving V1. These projections to V1 originated in the caudal subdivisions of auditory cortex (primary auditory cortex, caudal belt and parabelt areas), and targeted parts of V1 that represent parafoveal and peripheral vision. Injections near the representation of the vertical meridian of the visual field labelled few or no cells in auditory cortex. We also placed 8 retrograde tracer injections involving core, belt and parabelt auditory areas, none of which revealed direct projections from V1. These results confirm the existence of a direct, nonreciprocal projection from auditory areas to V1 in a different primate species, which has evolved separately from the macaque for over 30 million years. The essential similarity of these observations between marmoset and macaque indicate that early-stage audiovisual integration is a shared characteristic of primate sensory processing.Entities:
Keywords: Audiovisual integration; Auditory cortex; Connections; Primate; Striate cortex
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30288557 PMCID: PMC6373361 DOI: 10.1007/s00429-018-1764-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Struct Funct ISSN: 1863-2653 Impact factor: 3.270
Animals and injections
| Animal | Age (months) | Sex | Weight (g) | Hemisphere injected | Survival time (days) | Tracer | Area(s) injected | Layers injected | White matter involved | Injection volume (mm3)a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CJ82 | 28 | F | 375 | L | 15 | FE | V1 | 3–4 | N | 0.14 |
| FR | V1 | 2–6 | N | 0.10 | ||||||
| DY | V2, V1 | 1–3 | N | 0.11 | ||||||
| CJ174 | 30 | F | 342 | R | 17 | CTB (g) | V1 | 1–3 | N | 0.11 |
| CTB (r) | V1 | 1–3 | N | 0.03 | ||||||
| FB | V1 | 1–6 | H | 1.19 | ||||||
| CJ178 | 26 | F | 344 | R | 18 | FB | V1 | 1–6 | C | 0.49 |
| M820 | 83 | F | 400 | L | 30 | FB | V1 | 1–6 | H | 0.63 |
| M822 | 85 | F | 355 | L | 29 | FB | V1, V2 | 1–6 | N | 0.81 |
| M1146 | 85 | F | 394 | L | 21 | FB | V1 | 1–3 | N | 0.05 |
| CJ64 | 16 | M | 303 | R | 14 | FR | CM, A1 | 1–5 | N | 0.17 |
| FE | AL, ML | 1–5 | N | 0.17 | ||||||
| CJ75 | 16 | M | 356 | R | 10 | FR | A1 | 1–6 | N | 0.12 |
| CJ122 | 34 | M | 318 | R | 14 | DY | RT, AL | 1–6 | H | 0.17 |
| FR | CPB, AL | 1–4 | N | 0.05 | ||||||
| CJ180 | 32 | M | 374 | R | 11 | FB | RT, AL, RTL | 1–6 | C | 0.99 |
| CTB (g) | ML, CPB | 1–6 | N | 0.11 | ||||||
| CJ802 | 43 | M | 352 | R | 22 | CTB (g) | ML, CL, CPB | 1–6 | N | 0.17 |
L left, R right, CTB(g) cholera toxin subunit B, conjugated with Alexa 488, CTB(r) cholera toxin subunit B, conjugated with Alexa 594, DY diamidino yellow dihydrochloride, 2% in dH2O, FB fast blue, 2% in dH2O, FE fluoroemerald (fluorescein dextran-amine, MW 10 000), 10% in dH2O, FR fluororuby (tetramethylrhodamine dextran-amine MW 10 000), 10% in dH2O, C core, H halo, N no involvement
aInjection site volume estimated across multiple histological sections, using the criteria proposed by Condé (1987) and Schmued et al. (1990). Measurements uncorrected for shrinkage due to histological processing
Abbreviations of names of cortical areas
| 1/2: areas 1 and 2 of somatosensory cortex |
| 6DR: cytoarchitectural area 6 of cortex, dorsorostral part |
| 8aV: cytoarchitectural area 8a of cortex, ventral part |
| 8b: cytoarchitectural area 8b of cortex |
| 10: cytoarchitectural area 10 of cortex (frontopolar cortex) |
| 11: cytoarchitectural area 11 of cortex |
| 12L: cytoarchitectural area 12 of cortex (area 47), lateral part |
| 12M: cytoarchitectural area 12 of cortex (area 47), medial part |
| 13L: cytoarchitectural area 13 of cortex, lateral part |
| 13M: cytoarchitectural area 13 of cortex, medial part |
| 19M: cytoarchitectural area 19 of visual cortex, medial part |
| 23a: cytoarchitectural area 23a of cortex |
| 23V: cytoarchitectural area 23 of cortex, ventral part |
| 32: cytoarchitectural area 32 of cortex |
| 36: cytoarchitectural area 36 of cortex |
| 45: cytoarchitectural area 45 of cortex |
| A1: primary auditory area |
| AL: anterolateral auditory area |
| CL: caudolateral auditory area |
| CM: caudomedial auditory area |
| CPB: caudal parabelt auditory area |
| DM: dorsomedial visual area (V6) |
| FST: fundus of superior temporal sulcus area |
| GI: granular insular cortex |
| LIP: lateral intraparietal area |
| ML: middle lateral auditory area |
| MST: medial superior temporal area |
| MT: middle temporal area (V5) |
| MTc: middle temporal crescent area (V4T) |
| PaIM: parainsular cortex, medial part |
| PFG: cytoarchitectural area PFG |
| PG: cytoarchitectural area PG |
| PGa/IPa: cytoarchitectural areas PGa and IPa |
| PR: parietal rostral area (somatosensory) |
| ProSt: area prostriata |
| PV: parietal ventral area (somatosensory) |
| R: rostral auditory area |
| ReI: retroinsular area |
| RM: rostromedial auditory area |
| RPB: rostral parabelt auditory area |
| RT: rostrotemporal auditory area |
| RTL: rostrotemporal lateral auditory area |
| S2: secondary somatosensory cortex |
| TE1: cytoarchitectural area TE, part 1 |
| TE3: cytoarchitectural area TE, part 3 |
| TEO: cytoarchitectural area TE, occipital transition part |
| TF: cytoarchitectural area TF |
| TFO: cytoarchitectural area TF, occipital transition part |
| TH: cytoarchitectural area TH |
| TL: cytoarchitectural area TL |
| TLO: cytoarchitectural area TL, occipital transition part |
| TPO: temporo-parieto-occipital association area (superior temporal polysensory cortex, STP) |
| TPOc: temporo-parieto-occipital association area, caudal subdivision |
| TPPro: temporopolar proisocortex |
| TPt: temporoparietal transitional area |
| V1: primary visual cortex |
| V2: visual area 2 |
| V3: visual area 3 (ventrolateral posterior area, VLP) |
| V3a: visual area 3a (dorsoanterior area, DA) |
| V4: visual area 4 (ventrolateral anterior area, VLA) |
| V6a: visual area 6a (posterior parietal medial area) |
| VIP: ventral intraparietal area |
Fig. 5Results from case M820. A Location of the FB injection site in V1, visualised in a Nissl stained section. Scale bar: 1 mm. B Pattern of label in the lateral geniculate nucleus, confirming placement in V1, away from the representation of the vertical meridian (White et al. 1998). Label resulting from an injection of anterograde tracer in V1 is also visible (green). Scale bar: 500 µm. C Example FB-labelled neurons (arrows) in auditory areas, visualised in digital images obtained at various magnifications (scale bars: 20 µm). The top left image shows a single cell in caudal parabelt cortex, the top right panel shows a small cluster of labelled neurons in area CL, and the bottom panel illustrates a line of layer 6 cells crossing the border between CL and CM
Fig. 1Locations of 18 tracer injections analysed in the present study, plotted on a template of the marmoset cortex (reconstructed by Majka et al. 2016, from data published by; Paxinos et al. 2012). The template can be freely downloaded from http://www.marmosetbrain.org/reference. Top: Unfolded reconstruction of the cortex (left hemisphere representation; rostral to the left, medial to the top) showing the location of each injection registered to the template. The colours of each circle represent the tracer used (blue-FB; yellow-DY; red-FR; green-FE; pink-CTBr; teal-CTBg), and their radius is proportional to that of a sphere with equal volume to the injection site reconstructed across histological sections (Table 1). The boundaries of cortical areas are indicated by thin lines. The auditory cortex (shaded in grey) is shown magnified in the insert. Arrowheads and asterisks indicate three points along the perimeter of the map where discontinuities were made to minimise distortions (fundus of the calcarine sulcus in purple, boundary between orbitofrontal cortex and medial frontal cortex in orange, piriform cortex in blue). For abbreviations, see Table 2. Bottom: 3-dimensional views of the marmoset brain from dorsolateral (left) and medial (right) perspectives, showing the locations of the injections in a reconstruction of the cortex at the level of its mid-thickness (for this reason, injections located in the supragranular layers appear to “float” above the cortex). Scale bar: 5 mm
Fig. 2Summary of results of a FB injection in animal CJ174. A–C Extent of the injection site, in coronal sections through the right hemisphere of a marmoset brain [anteroposterior (AP) levels − 8.6 mm to − 9.0 mm; section A is the most rostral; lateral to the right]. Scale bar: 1 mm. The red arrows point to the main injection site in the dorsal bank of the calcarine sulcus, and the yellow arrow points to the slight invasion of the ventral bank. At these levels, the entire section is formed by V1. Blue symbols represent labelled neurons forming intrinsic connections within V1. D Unfolded reconstruction of the cortex showing the locations of neurons labelled by the tracer injection (black squares) following registration to the template. The injection site is indicated by the blue circle. In this and following figures, “flat” maps are oriented in the convention adopted for the Marmoset Brain Architecture Project (http://marmosetbrain.org), which represent a left hemisphere (rostral to the left, medial to the top), to facilitate comparison across cases (e.g. Paxinos et al. 2012; Majka et al. 2016), and the auditory cortex corresponds to a cluster of areas indicated in tones of red and orange. For the actual hemisphere injected, see Table 1. For orientation, the locations of several cortical areas are indicated
Fig. 3Coronal sections through auditory cortex in case CJ174-FB, showing the locations of some of the neurons labelled by the V1 injection shown in Fig. 2 (red squares). The AP level of each section is indicated. Scale bar (top left): 1 mm
Fig. 4Summary of results in case CJ178-FB. A Coronal section through the centre of the FB injection site. In this case there was damage to the cortex overlying the calcarine sulcus subsequent to the injection. The injection site is indicated by the red arrow. Scale bar: 1 mm. B Unfolded reconstruction of the cortex showing the locations of neurons labelled by the tracer injection (black squares) following registration to the template. The injection site is indicated by the blue circle. C Examples of coronal sections containing labelled neurons in auditory cortex, with their locations indicated by red squares. Conventions as in Figs. 2 and 3
Fig. 6Examples of the locations of labelled neurons in auditory and adjacent areas in case M820. Scale bar (top left): 1 mm
Fig. 7Summary of the location of labelled neurons in auditory and adjacent areas, following V1 injections in 4 animals. The main panel is an expanded version of the caudal superior temporal cortex in the unfolded reconstruction of the cortex (magnified region is indicated in grey). The results obtained in animals CJ174 (blue circles) and CJ178 (red circles) were computationally registered to an unfolded reconstruction of the Paxinos et al. (2012) cortex template. Results from animals M820 (green) and M822 (orange points with black outlines) were approximately plotted onto the same reconstruction by a procedure involving identifying the location of neurons relative to histological borders (Nissl and myelin stains) in the native brains, and manually mapping these locations to the most similar sections in CJ174 or CJ178
Fig. 8A–E Unfolded reconstructions of the cortex showing the locations of labelled neurons following tracer injections which did not result in any labelled neurons in auditory cortex. The cases illustrated in A, B, D and E correspond to injections that were entirely contained within V1, while the one illustrated in C was centred in V2, with slight V1 invasion. Conventions as in Fig. 2. Several cortical areas where long-range projection neurons were labelled are indicated for orientation. For abbreviations, see Table 2
Fig. 9A–D Unfolded reconstructions of the cortex showing the locations of labelled neurons in 4 injections in auditory cortex. The injections illustrated in panels A–C were centred in auditory core areas (with the invasion of adjacent areas in B, C), while the one illustrated in D was centred in caudal belt area CM, with likely involvement of A1. None of these injections resulted in retrogradely labelled neurons in V1. Several cortical areas where long-range projection neurons were labelled are indicated for orientation. For abbreviations, see Table 2
Fig. 10A–D Unfolded reconstructions of the cortex showing the locations of labelled neurons in 4 injections in auditory cortex. A–C Are injections involving area ML, and D is an injection centred in the caudal parabelt. Several cortical areas where long-range projection neurons were labelled are indicated for orientation. For abbreviations, see Table 2
Fig. 11A proposal for parcellation of marmoset area MST in two sectors, based on the present data and comparison with results obtained in the macaque monkey (Falchier et al. 2002). Left: original parcellation of the cortex near the tip of the superior temporal sulcus, according to the architectural study of Paxinos et al. (2012). The diagram follows the orientation of Fig. 2. Right: The sector of MST where most labelled neurons are observed following auditory cortex injections could be a homologue of the caudal subdivision of area TPO (TPOc; Padberg et al. 2003), bringing in line the results obtained in macaque and marmoset monkeys