Based on previous evidence that acetylcholine (ACh)
and noradrenaline (NA) play a permissive role in developmental
plasticity in the kitten visual cortex, we reinvestigated
this topic in the postnatal visual cortex of rats with
normal vision. In rats, the functional properties of visual
cortical cells develop gradually between the second and
the sixth postnatal week (Fagiolini et al., 1994). Cortical
cholinergic depletion, by basal forebrain (BF) lesions
at postnatal day (PD) 15 (eye opening), leads to a transient
disturbance in the distribution of ocular dominance (Siciliano
et al., 1997). In the present study, we investigated the
development of visual cortical response properties following
cytotoxic lesions of the locus coeruleus (LC) alone or
in combination with lesions of cholinergic BF. The main
result is that early NA depletion impairs the orientation
selectivity of cortical neurons, causes a slight increase
of their receptive-field size, and reduces the signal-to-noise
ratio of cell responses. Similar effects are obtained following
NA depletion in adult animals, although the effects of
adult noradrenergic deafferentation are significantly more
severe than those obtained after early NA depletion. Additional
cholinergic depletion causes an additional transient change
in ocular-dominance distribution similarly to that obtained
after cholinergic deafferentation alone. Comparisons between
depletion of NA on the one hand and depletion of both NA
and ACh on the other suggest that the effects of combined
deafferentation on the functional properties studied result
from simple linear addition of the effects of depleting
each afferent system alone.