Recovery from retinal lesions: Molecular plasticity mechanisms in visual cortex far beyond the deprived zone

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Abstract

In cats with central retinal lesions, deprivation of the lesion projection zone (LPZ) in primary visual cortex (area 17) induces remapping of the cortical topography. Recovery of visually driven cortical activity in the LPZ involves distinct changes in protein expression. Recent observations, about molecular activity changes throughout area 17, challenge the view that its remote nondeprived parts would not be involved in this recovery process. We here investigated the dynamics of the protein expression pattern of remote nondeprived area 17 triggered by central retinal lesions to explore to what extent far peripheral area 17 would contribute to the topographic map reorganization inside the visual cortex. Using functional proteomics, we identified 40 proteins specifically differentially expressed between far peripheral area 17 of control and experimental animals 14 days to 8 months postlesion. Our results demonstrate that far peripheral area 17 is implicated in the functional adaptation to the visual deprivation, involving a meshwork of interacting proteins, operating in diverse pathways. In particular, endocytosis/exocytosis processes appeared to be essential via their intimate correlation with long-term potentiation and neurite outgrowth mechanisms. © 2011 The Author.

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Hu, T. T., Van Den Bergh, G., Thorrez, L., Heylen, K., Eysel, U. T., & Arckens, L. (2011). Recovery from retinal lesions: Molecular plasticity mechanisms in visual cortex far beyond the deprived zone. Cerebral Cortex, 21(12), 2883–2892. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhr079

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