4.6 Article

Unidirectional monosynaptic connections from auditory areas to the primary visual cortex in the marmoset monkey

Journal

BRAIN STRUCTURE & FUNCTION
Volume 224, Issue 1, Pages 111-131

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00429-018-1764-4

Keywords

Striate cortex; Auditory cortex; Connections; Primate; Audiovisual integration

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP140101968, CE140100007]
  2. International Neuroinformatics Coordinating Facility Seed Funding Grant
  3. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development [JP17dm0207001]
  4. Cod Spring Harbor Laboratory
  5. Crick-Clay Professorship
  6. Indian Institute of Technology Madras
  7. H N Mahabala Chair

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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 30million 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.

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