Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 June 2009
Monocular deprivation in adult macaques produces a rapid down-regulation in GABA and GABAA receptor subunit immunoreactivity in deprived-eye columns of primary visual cortex (V1) but a significantly delayed GABA reduction in deprived layers of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN). These findings, suggesting that normal inhibitory neurotransmission persists in LGN at a time when V1 inhibitory mechanisms are greatly altered, are consistent with physiological studies that have demonstrated a greater degree of functional plasticity in V1 than in LGN. Nonetheless, functional adaptation to partial loss of visual input has been detected in the LGN, indicating that synaptic plasticity takes place in this nucleus. In the present study, evidence for early changes in inhibitory neurotransmission were examined with immunocytochemical methods to determine if, in the absence of early GABA regulation, GABAA receptor subunits in macaque LGN are affected by adult deprivation. Immunoreactivity for α1 and β2/3 subunits of the GABAA receptor was intense within the magnocellular layers and more modest in the parvocellular layers and intercalated layers. In all layers, immunoreactivity was present in the cytoplasm and along the surfaces of relatively large somata and in dense tangles of processes in the neuropil. Double-labeling experiments demonstrated that somata and processes immunoreactive for α 1 and β2/3 were surrounded by GABA terminals but no cell intensely immunoreactive for either subunit expressed immunoreactivity for GABA, itself. Following periods of monocular deprivation by tetrodotoxin (TTX) injection for 4 days or longer, layers deprived of visual activity displayed levels of α 1 and β2/3 immunoreactivity markedly lower than those displayed by the adjacent, normally active layers. Such changes were greater as the period of deprivation increased. The changes included a loss of immunostaining in and around somata and in many neuropil elements of deprived layers. These data indicate that GABA and GABAA receptor subunits α 1 and β2/3 are expressed by separate populations of neurons in macaque LGN that are differentially regulated by visual activity. The findings suggest that rapid, activity-dependent regulation of postsynaptic receptors represents one mechanism for altering synaptic strength in the adult macaque visual system.