We previously showed that immunoreactivity to N-Methyl-D-aspartate
(NMDA) receptors in primary visual cortex of Callithrix
jacchus is regulated by visual activity during the
second and third postnatal months (Fonta et al., 1997).
The purpose of the present study was to show that the columnar
pattern of high and low NMDAR1 immunoreactivity observed
in monocularly deprived animals corresponds to ocular dominance
columns linked to the nondeprived and deprived eye, respectively.
We compared cortical distribution of NMDAR1 receptors and
the projection zones of thalamic afferents, revealed by
transneuronal transport of tritiated proline, in 2-month-old,
either monocularly deprived or control, marmosets. The
data show that ocular dominance columns exist in 2-month-old
marmosets and that a 2-week monocular deprivation by means
of eyelid suture leads to a modification of the thalamo-cortical
afferents organization. Experiments of neuronal tracing
and immunohistochemistry performed on the same animals
demonstrated that cortical domains with decreased NMDAR1
level correspond to the deprived eye columns. These investigations,
coupled to the previous results, strongly suggest that
the NMDA receptors, regulated by visual activity, are involved
in the refining of ocular dominance columns in the primary
visual cortex of juvenile marmoset.