Abstract
Recent studies in rodents have implicated the hippocampal formation in “path integration”: the ability to use self-motion cues (ideothesis) to guide spatial behavior. Such models of hippocampal function assume that self-motion information arises from the vestibular system. In the present study we used the retrograde tracer cholera toxin subunit B, the anterograde tracer biotinylated dextran amine, and standard extracellular recording techniques to investigate whether the hippocampal formation [which consists of the hippocampus proper and the area parahippocampalis (Hp/APH) in pigeons] receives information from the accessory optic system (AOS). The AOS is a visual pathway dedicated to the analysis of the “optic flow fields” that result from self-motion. Optic flow constitutes a rich source of ideothetic information that could be used for navigation. Both the nucleus of the basal optic root (nBOR) and nucleus lentiformis mesencephali of the AOS were shown to project to the area ventralis of Tsai (AVT), which in turn was shown to project to the Hp/APH. A smaller direct projection from the nBOR pars dorsalis to the hippocampus was also revealed. During extracellular recording experiments, about half of the cells within the AVT responded to optic flow stimuli. Together these results illustrate that the Hp/APH receives information about self-motion from the AOS. We postulate that this optic flow information is used for path integration. A review of the current literature suggests that an analogous neuronal circuit exists in mammals, but it has simply been overlooked.
- hippocampus
- optic flow
- self-motion
- path integration
- accessory optic system
- area ventralis of Tsai
- ideothesis
Recent studies have suggested that the hippocampal formation is involved in “path integration” (Foster et al., 1989; Wilson and McNaughton, 1993; McNaughton et al., 1995,1996; Whishaw et al., 1997; Whishaw and Maaswinkel, 1998). This is a mechanism in which an animal can determine spatial relations such as starting point, destination, and present location based on information from self-motion, or “ideothetic” cues, and in the absence of external or “allothetic” cues (Mittelstaedt and Mittelstaedt; 1980;Whishaw et al., 1997; Whishaw and Maaswinkel, 1998). Whishaw and Maaswinkel (1998) showed that the use of self-motion to solve spatial problems by path integration was impaired after lesions of the fimbria-fornix. McNaughton et al. (1996) and Sharp et al. (1995) have shown that the activity of hippocampal cells is reflective, at times, of ideothetic cues, and the establishment of “place cells” depends on self-motion (Foster et al., 1989).
Information about one’s self-motion through the environment can be conveyed by many sensorimotor systems, including the vestibular, somatosensory, and visual systems. That vision can serve as a proprioceptive sense was emphasized by Gibson (1950, 1954), who noted that because the environment consists of numerous stationary visual stimuli, self-motion results in “optic flow fields” across the retina. The accessory optic system (AOS), which is found in all vertebrate classes, is a distinct visual pathway dedicated to the analysis of optic flow fields (for review see, Simpson, 1984; Simpson et al., 1988a; Grasse and Cynader, 1990). Numerous electrophysiological studies have shown that neurons in the AOS exhibit direction selectivity in response to large visual stimuli moving in the contralateral visual field (Wylie and Frost, 1990a, 1996), and some neurons have binocular receptive fields that encode optic flow fields resulting from either self-translation or self-rotation (Graf et al., 1988; Leonard et al., 1988; Simpson et al., 1988b; Wylie and Frost, 1990b, 1991, 1993, 1999; Wylie et al., 1998a).
Studies implicating the hippocampal formation in path integration consider that self-motion arises from the vestibular system (McNaughton et al., 1996), but one might expect that the hippocampal formation receives optic flow input from the AOS. In pigeons, Casini et al. (1986) showed that the hippocampal formation [which in birds consists of the hippocampus proper (Hp) and area parahippocampalis (APH)] receives input from a group of cells in the ventral tegmentum in the vicinity of the third cranial nerve, a region known as the area ventralis of Tsai (AVT). We have reported previously that the nucleus of the basal optic root (nBOR) projects to the ventral tegmentum (Wylie et al., 1997). These terminals were not found in any clearly defined nucleus, but we ascribed some of these to the lateral extension of the AVT. In the present study we did a series of anterograde, retrograde, and double labeling studies to determine whether the region in the ventral tegmentum containing Hp/APH-projecting neurons receives input from the AOS. In addition, with extracellular recording techniques, we examined the responsiveness of neurons in the AVT to optic flow stimuli.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Surgery. The methods reported herein conformed to the guidelines established by the Canadian Council on Animal Care and were approved by the Biosciences Animal Care and Policy Committee at the University of Alberta. These guidelines ensured that efforts were made to minimize both animal discomfort and the number of animals used. Experiments were performed on Silver King pigeons anesthetized intramuscularly with a ketamine (90 mg/kg)/xylazine (15 mg/kg) mixture. Supplemental doses were administered as necessary. The animals were placed in a stereotaxic device with pigeon ear bars and beak adapter such that the orientation of the skull conformed with the atlas of Karten and Hodos (1967).
Anterograde tracing studies. Anterograde tracing studies were performed by iontophoretically injecting biotinylated dextran amine (BDA) into either the nBOR (four birds) or the pretectal nucleus lentiformis mesencephali (LM) (five birds). The nBOR and LM are the two retinal-recipient nuclei of the avian AOS (Karten et al., 1977; Reiner et al., 1979; Fite et al., 1981; Gamlin and Cohen, 1988a). These nuclei were located using stereotaxic coordinates in Karten and Hodos (1967), and sections of bone and dura were removed to expose the penetration site. On initial penetrations, extracellular recordings were made with glass microelectrodes (4–5 μm tip diameter) filled with 2m NaCl. Sensitivity of isolated cells to optic flow stimuli was determined by moving a large (90° × 90°) hand-held stimulus, consisting of a pattern of random dark lines and dots on a light background. LM and nBOR neurons have large receptive fields in the contralateral eye. Most nBOR neurons prefer upward, downward, or backward (nasal to temporal) motion of such large-field stimuli (Wylie and Frost, 1990a), whereas most LM neurons prefer forward (temporal to nasal) motion (Winterson and Brauth, 1985; Wylie and Frost, 1996). Once cells sensitive to large-field motion were found, the recording electrode was replaced with a glass micropipette (tip diameter of 10–12 μm) filled with BDA (Molecular Probes; 10% in 0.1m PBS), which was injected iontophoretically (+3 μA, 1 sec ON, 1 sec OFF) for 2–5 min. Recordings were first made with the BDA electrode to ensure that the injection was within LM or nBOR. Subsequent to the injection the electrode was left undisturbed for 5 min. After a survival time of 3–6 d, the animals were given an overdose of sodium pentobarbitol (100 mg/kg) and immediately perfused with saline (0.9%) followed by 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1m phosphate buffer (PB). The brains were extracted, post-fixed for 2–6 hr (4% paraformaldehyde, 20% sucrose in 0.1m PB), and cryoprotected in sucrose overnight (20% in 0.1m PB), and frozen sections in the coronal plane (40 μm thick) were collected. The BDA protocol used was based on the procedure of Wild (1993). Sections were washed in PBS, incubated in 1% H2O2 with 25% methanol for 20 min, washed in 0.1 m PBS, incubated in ExtrAvidin peroxidase (Sigma, St. Louis, MO; 1:1000) with Triton X-100 (0.4%) for 1.5 hr at room temperature, washed in PBS, then visualized with diaminobenzidine (DAB) using cobalt chloride intensification. After 10 min in 0.025% DAB in 0.1 m PBS with 0.002% CoCl2, 0.005% H2O2 was added, and the tissue was reacted for up to 2 min. The sections were subsequently washed several times in PBS, mounted on gelatin-coated slides, dried, lightly counterstained with Neutral Red, and coverslipped with Permount.
Retrograde tracing studies of the AVT. To confirm these anterograde studies, unilateral injections of the retrograde tracer cholera toxin subunit B (CTB) were made in the AVT in three animals. The AVT was located stereotaxically, and extracellular recordings were used to locate optic flow-sensitive cells for injection, as described for anterograde tracing procedures. In two birds, CTB (Sigma; 1% in Tris buffer) in glass micropipettes (tip diameter 16–20 μm) was pressure-injected using a PicoSpritzer II (General Valve Corp.). For the remaining bird, an iontophoretic injection of CTB was made (+3 μA, 7 sec ON, 7 sec OFF, 2–5 min) to allow for a smaller injection in the AVT and prevent inclusion of the nearby nucleus ruber (Ru), which also receives projections from nBOR and LM (Gamlin and Cohen, 1988b; Wylie et al., 1997). A buffer exchange was necessary to use CTB for iontophoresis and was performed as described by Luppi et al. (1990)to yield a 1% CTB in 0.1 m PB, which was injected iontophoretically. The electrode was left undisturbed for 5 min after injection. The CTB visualization protocol we used was based on Wild (1993). After a survival period of 2–5 d, the birds were perfused, and the brain was sectioned as described above for BDA processing. Sections were washed in PBS (three times for 10 min), incubated in 1% H2O2 with 25% methanol for 20 min, and then washed in 0.1 m PBS. The tissue was then incubated for 30 min in 4% rabbit serum (Sigma; in PBS) with 0.4% Triton X-100, followed by goat anti-CHB (List Biological Laboratories; 1:20000 in PBS) with 0.4% Triton X-100 for 20–24 hr at 4°C. The tissue was washed with 0.1 m PBS and then placed in biotinylated rabbit anti-goat (Vector Laboratories; 1:600 in PBS) with 0.4% Triton X-100 for 1 hr, washed with PBS, placed in ExtrAvidin with 0.4% Triton X-100 for 1.5 hr, rinsed with PBS, and visualized with DAB as described for the BDA procedure. The sections were mounted on gelatin-coated slides, dried, lightly counterstained with Geimsa, and coverslipped with Permount.
Retrograde tracing studies of the Hp/APH. To verify previous studies showing a projection from the AVT to the hippocampal formation (Casini et al., 1986), two birds received bilateral pressure injections of CTB that included the Hp and APH. The Hp/APH was located using stereotaxic coordinates in Karten and Hodos (1967). The tissue was processed for CTB as described above.
Double labeling studies. Two birds were used for double labeling experiments involving a unilateral BDA injection into the nBOR and bilateral CTB pressure injections in the Hp/APH. The surgery and injection procedures used were identical to those described above. The visualization process we used was based on the protocol described byWild (1993). The tissue was first processed for BDA and visualized using the cobalt chloride-intensified DAB reaction described above. Subsequently the tissue was processed for CTB as described above, but was visualized using DAB without cobalt chloride. The resulting reactions turned BDA anterograde labeling from nBOR dark brown or black, whereas the retrogradely labeled cells from the Hp/APH were light brown.
Extracellular recording studies. In three animals, using tungsten microelectrodes, extracellular recording studies investigated the responses of cells in the nBOR and AVT to optic flow stimuli. Using the stereotaxic atlas as a guide, we first penetrated the nBOR and recorded from isolated neurons. Subsequent tracks were made at more medial locations such that we could access the AVT. In some instances the penetration was performed with the electrode oriented 5° to the midline to permit easier access to the AVT. (For detailed descriptions of our electrophysiological methods see Wylie and Frost, 1990a,b, 1991, 1993, 1999; Wylie et al., 1998a). Single units were initially tested for optic flow sensitivity using the large hand-held stimulus. Both the ipsilateral and contralateral receptive fields were tested. The responses of cells with monocular–contralateral receptive fields to large-field motion (velocity 0.6–20°/sec) in various directions in the contralateral hemifield were measured. Those cells found to be sensitive to large-field motion in both hemifields were studied further using the “translator” and “planetarium” projectors described by Wylie et al. (1998a) and Wylie and Frost (1993, 1999). These projectors cast patterns of dots on the walls, ceiling, and floor of the room and simulated translational (translator) and rotational (planetarium) optic flow fields. The axis of translation or rotation could be adjusted to any orientation within three-dimensional space. The speed of the dots in the flow fields was in the range of 0.3–10°/sec. Peristimulus time histograms (PSTHs) were summed from 5–20 sweeps using Spike 2 software (Cambridge Electronic Designs). Marking lesions were made at some recording sites (30 μA, electrode negative, 5–10 sec). To verify the lesion sites, the birds were perfused at the end of the recording session, the brains were extracted, and frozen sections were collected through the AVT. These sections were mounted on gelatin-coated slides, stained, coverslipped in Permount, and examined using light microscopy.
Nomenclature. The pigeon nBOR is located at the base of the brain at the mesodiencephalic border and receives direct retinal input from the displaced ganglion cells (Karten et al., 1977; Reiner et al., 1979; Fite et al., 1981). Brecha et al. (1980) divided the nBOR into three subgroups based on cell morphology and spatial location. The bulk of the nucleus, nBOR proper (nBORp), consists mainly of large- and medium-sized round cells and a smaller number of small spindly cells. The nBOR dorsalis (nBORd), consisting of a thin layer of small spindly cells, lines the caudal and dorsal margins of the nBORp. The nBOR lateralis (nBORl) is a small group of cells located dorsal to the stratum opticum (Sop) and lateral to the rest of the nucleus. McKenna and Wallman (1981, 1985a) showed that the nBORl is contiguous with and functionally similar to the LM.
In pigeons, the pretectum consists of numerous nuclei, the borders of which are difficult to define. We use the description by Gamlin and Cohen (1988a). The LM consists of two subnuclei, the LM pars lateralis (LMl) and the LM pars medialis (LMm). Medial to the LMm is a strip of small cells, the nucleus laminaris precommissuralis (LPC), which appears contiguous with the internal lamina of the nucleus geniculatus lateralis, pars ventralis (GLv). Medial to the LPC is the nucleus principalis precommissuralis (PPC), which resides lateral to the nucleus rotundus (Rt). Ventrally, the LMm, LMl, and LPC course ventral to the nucleus subpretectalis (SP) and posterior to the GLv. The LMm and LMl, although virtually indistinguishable at this point, continue medially as a strip of cells that becomes the nBORl.
RESULTS
Retrograde studies of the Hp/APH
In two birds the hippocampal formation (Hp/APH) received a bilateral pressure injection of CTB (cases HF1 and HF2). The distribution of retrogradely labeled cells was similar to that reported by Casini et al. (1986). Figure 1 shows drawings of serial sections from case HF2, illustrating the injection site and retrograde labeled cells in the AVT. Labeled cells were found throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the AVT, most heavily adjacent to the third cranial (oculomotor) nerve (Fig.2A,B, III). In both cases several cells were also found in nBORd. This previously unreported result suggests a small direct link between the nBOR complex and the hippocampal formation (Figs. 1C,2B).
Anterograde tracing studies
Previous studies have described projections of the nBOR and LM. The most extensive projection of the nBOR is to the ipsilateral LM, but nBOR projects to numerous other structures including the cerebellum, vestibular nuclei, inferior olive, pontine nuclei, contralateral nBORd, oculomotor complex, mesencephalic reticular formation (RF), nucleus ruber (Ru), accessory oculomotor nuclei [nucleus Darkschewitsch (D), the interstitial nucleus of Cajal (IC), and central gray (CtG)], and dorsal thalamus (Brecha et al., 1980; Wylie and Linkenhoker, 1996;Wylie et al., 1997, 1998b). The most extensive projection of the LM is to the ipsilateral nBOR, and previous studies have reported that LM also projects to the cerebellum, inferior olive, pontine nuclei, D, IC, CtG, Ru, and dorsal thalamus (Clarke, 1977; Gamlin and Cohen, 1988a;Wild, 1989; Wylie et al., 1998b). For the present study we describe only projections of the LM and nBOR to the hippocampal projection area in the ventral tegmentum.
The LM was injected with BDA in five cases. All five injections were centred on LMl but also included the LMm. Injection LM1 was centered on ventral LM and also included LPC and PPC. Injection LM2 was centered on and confined to dorsal LM. Injection LM3 was also dorsal and included LPC, PPC, and the tectal gray. LM4 was located in rostral ventral LM and also included the tectal gray, LPC, and PPC. Injection LM5 was again centered on ventral LM and encroached slightly on the tectal gray. Figure 3 shows a series of sections illustrating the injection site and terminal labeling in the AVT from case LM5. The injection site in the ventral LM is shown by the blackened area in A and B. In these sections terminal labeling was found throughout the pretectum, and some terminal labeling was found in the optic tectum (TeO), RF, D, CtG, the lateral division of the anterior dorsolateral thalamus (DLL), and adjacent to nucleus subpretectalis (SP), and the medial and lateral spiriform nuclei (SpL/M). The majority of the labeling in these sections resulted from a massive fiber bundle that coursed medially from the injection site along the top of the optic tract (TrO) and traveled just posterior to the GLv. Terminals from these fibers were seen in the ventromedial portion of LM (A–C), GLv (A, B), and the RF just dorsal to the nBOR complex (E–H). Terminal labeling was found in nBORp but was especially heavy in nBORl and nBORd (C–H). Some of these fibers continued medially and terminated in the AVT (E–H). This pattern of terminal labeling was common to all five cases. In case LM5, terminal labeling was absent from the Ru, but sparse labeling was found here in other cases. In other cases a few terminals in the AVT arose from fibers that descended through the RF (Fig.4B). Terminals in the AVT were most abundant ventrally, just medial to the nBOR and lateral to III, but very few terminals were found adjacent to the dorsal margin of III. Overall, labeling within the AVT was heavier when the injection was located in the ventral rather than dorsal LM, and terminal labeling in the AVT was less from the LM injections compared with the nBOR injections (see below). Figure 4A,B shows the terminal fields of fibers, from cases LM3 and LM4, respectively, that were reconstructed from serial sections with the aid of a drawing tube. The fiber shown in A was more typical of the fibers projecting from the LM to the AVT. This fiber terminated in the nBORp and nBORd and continued medially and terminated in the AVT. The fiber in B descended from the injection site through the RF, lateral to the Ru, and medial to the tractus quintofrontalis (QF) and terminated in the AVT. Numerous terminals were also seen in the RF from this fiber.
The nBOR was injected in four pigeons. In each case a group of fibers traveled dorsally and medially along the lateral edge of the AVT, providing massive input to the ipsilateral Ru and accessory oculomotor areas, as described previously by Wylie et al. (1997). In all cases, some of these fibers gave off collaterals to the AVT. In two cases collaterals of axons, which crossed the midline either via the posterior commissure or dorsal to the AVT, terminated in the nBORd and AVT contralateral to the injection site. In case nBOR1, the injection site was located in the ventral portion of nBORp and did not include any of nBORd. Labeling in the AVT in this case was heaviest ventrally, just medial to nBOR and lateral to the ventral margin of III. A few terminals were also seen slightly dorsal to these and in the contralateral AVT dorsomedial to nBOR. Overall case nBOR1 showed the least AVT labeling of all nBOR injections. In case nBOR2, the injection site was centered on dorsal nBORp and included but did not extend beyond nBORd. Labeling within the AVT in this case was again seen ventrally but extended dorsally and medially throughout the AVT and bordered III medially and dorsally. Two sets of terminals were also found medial to III at the midline; however, none was found in the contralateral AVT. Overall, case nBOR2 showed the most AVT labeling. In cases nBOR3 and nBOR4, the injections were centered on the middle of nBORp and may have encroached on nBORd as well. Labeling in these cases showed a pattern similar to that seen in case nBOR2, although the extent of labeling was less. Terminals were again found in the contralateral AVT in case nBOR3, dorsomedial to nBOR. In summary, all cases of BDA injections in the nBOR showed anterogradely labeled terminals within the AVT, the majority of which were located immediately lateral to III. The greatest amount of labeling in the AVT occurred when the injection included nBORd, as in case nBOR2. Terminals were also seen, although much less frequently, in the contralateral AVT as well. Figure 4C shows a fiber reconstructed from serial sections from case nBOR4. This fiber terminated in IC and CtG, but a collateral gave off terminals in the AVT just dorsal to III.
Retrograde tracing studies of the AVT
The AVT was injected with CTB in three animals. In two cases, pressure injections were made, but in case AVT3 a small iontophoretic injection was made. Figure5 shows drawings of serial sections through the nBOR and LM from this case. The dark shaded areas inA and B indicate the injection site, and dots indicate the position of retrogradely labeled cells. Retrograde labeling was found bilaterally (but heavier ipsilaterally) in the nBOR and in the ipsilateral LM, confirming results of anterograde tracing studies discussed above. Most labeling within the nBOR was located in the dorsal portions of nBORp and in nBORd (Fig.2D,E), confirming previous observations that the BDA injection that included nBORd provided the most labeling within the AVT. Most of the labeling in the LM was found in LMl (Figs.2C, 5E,F).
Labeling within the AOS nuclei in cases AVT1 and AVT2 was similar to that seen in AVT3, except that both injections were much larger and resulted in massive labeling of many brainstem and cortical structures as well as the AOS nuclei, indicating that the injection had included structures outside the AVT. Most problematic was the apparent inclusion of Ru, which also receives projections from the nBOR (Wylie et al., 1997) and LM (Gamlin and Cohen, 1988b). Labeling in the external cuneate, lateral cerebellar nucleus, caudal PPC, medial spiriform nucleus, and hyperstriatum accessorium suggested that the Ru was included in the injection in both of these cases (Wild, 1992). This labeling was absent in case AVT3, and thus we are confident that the Ru was spared.
Double labeling studies
In two birds, BDA was injected unilaterally into nBOR, and CTB was injected bilaterally in the Hp/APH. In the first double labeling case (DL1), the BDA injection was centered on nBORp and included some of nBORd. The pressure injection of CTB appeared slightly smaller than previous Hp/APH injections but did include both the Hp and APH bilaterally. In the second double labeling case (DL2), the BDA injection was larger, centered on dorsal nBORp, and included a substantial portion of nBORd, and there was some inclusion of the adjacent RF. The Hp/APH injections of CTB were also larger, and as a consequence both anterograde and retrograde labeling in the AVT in case DL2 was much greater than in DL1. In both cases, retrograde-labeled cells from the hippocampal injections were found intermingled with anterograde-labeled fibers from the nBOR throughout the ipsilateral AVT, but to a much greater extent in case DL2. Figure6 shows a series of sections through the AVT from case DL2. The BDA injection site in nBOR is shown by the blackened area, and the locations of anterograde terminals are indicated by the small gray dots. Retrogradely labeled cells from the CTB injection into Hp/APH (injection site not shown) are indicated by the larger black dots. In addition to the AVT, anterograde-labeled terminals and retrograde-labeled cells were intermingled in the contralateral AVT and nBORd, the ipsilateral CtG, D, stratum cellulare internum/externum (SCI/SCE), and RF. Figure 2F,Gshows photomicrographs of anterogradely labeled terminals near labeled cells in the AVT and medial mesencephalic reticular formation (FRM), respectively.
Electrophysiological studies
The remaining three birds were used in extracellular recording studies to investigate responses of cells in the AVT to optic flow stimuli. Previous electrophysiological studies have shown that nuclei of the AOS are ideally suited for the analysis of optic flow resulting from self-motion. Neurons in the LM and nBOR have large monocular receptive fields and respond best to large-field visual stimuli moving in a particular direction in the contralateral eye (Burns and Wallman, 1981; Winterson and Brauth, 1985; Wylie and Frost, 1990a). Some neurons in nBORd have large binocular receptive fields and respond best to visual flow fields simulating either self-translation along or self-rotation about a particular axis in three-dimensional space (Wylie et al., 1998a; Wylie and Frost, 1990b, 1999).
Figure 7 shows results from one of the recording experiments. In this experiment, we first recorded from nBOR, and subsequent penetrations were placed more medially to access the AVT. Two sections through the basal mesencephalon are shown indicating the locations of four isolated neurons that were responsive to optic flow stimulation. The upper section was located ∼0.5 mm caudal to the lower section. The cell in B was located in nBORp and had a monocular–contralateral receptive field. A PSTH in response to oscillating upward and downward whole-field motion is shown (averaged from 20 sweeps). The cell was excited by upward large-field motion and inhibited by downward motion. The movement velocity was 5°/sec, which was the preferred velocity, but the cell was modulated over the entire range tested (0.6–20°/sec). The cell in A was located in nBORd and had a binocular receptive field. In response to the hand-held stimulus, this neuron was excited by backward motion in both hemifields, which normally results from forward translation of the bird. This cell was tested with the translator projector that simulated translational optic flow fields (Wylie et al., 1998a). The PSTH shows the response to translation along the z-axis (i.e., the flow fields resulting from forward and backward self-translation) (averaged from five sweeps). Just above the PSTH is a schematic illustration of the flow field that results from backward translation along thez-axis. It is best described as forward optic flow in both hemifields that converges to a point in front of the observer. The sequence for each sweep was as follows: (1) ∼5 sec of backward optic flow, (2) a 5 sec pause, (3) 5 sec of forward optic flow, and (4) a 5 sec pause. This cell was excited in response to backward optic flow and inhibited by forward optic flow. This cell preferred the higher velocities (>5°/sec) but responded across the entire range tested (0.3–10°/sec; 10°/sec is shown).
The cells in C and D were localized to the caudolateral AVT and rostral AVT, respectively. Our retrograde tracing studies showed that cells in these areas project to the Hp/APH (Figs.1B,E, 6A,F). Like the cell in A, the cell in C had a binocular receptive field but had the opposite direction preference. PSTHs in response to flow fields along the z-axis are shown for binocular as well as monocular viewing for each hemifield (each averaged from five sweeps). For both the ipsilateral and contralateral hemifields, forward optic flow resulted in excitation and backward optic flow resulted in inhibition. Thus, this neuron would respond best to the flow field resulting from backward translation. Clearly there was greater modulation in response to binocular stimulation compared with monocular stimulation of either eye alone. This cell preferred velocities >5°/sec but was responsive across the entire range tested (0.3–10°/sec; 10°/sec is shown). The cell in D had a monocular–contralateral receptive field and preferred downward motion. The PSTH shows the response to alternating upward and downward large-field motion at 5°/sec (averaged from 15 sweeps). This cell preferred velocities <5°/sec but showed substantial modulation across the entire range tested (0.6–20°/sec).
Of a total of 26 cells tested within the AVT, 12 showed modulation similar to that described above. Six of these cells had monocular–contralateral receptive fields. Of these six monocular cells, three preferred backward (nasal to temporal) motion, two preferred upward motion, and one preferred downward motion. The other six cells had binocular receptive fields and responded best to optic flow patterns resulting from self-translation along a particular axis. Four cells preferred translational optic flow along axes that were in the horizontal plane, and two preferred the vertical axis. Although our investigations were not systematic, the 14 cells in the AVT that were unresponsive to optic flow stimuli were also unresponsive to the movement of small visual stimuli. We also casually presented somatosensory and auditory stimuli (noise bursts), but we were unable to modulate these cells.
DISCUSSION
In the present study, using both anterograde and retrograde tracers, we have shown that the hippocampal formation receives input from the AOS, a visual pathway dedicated to the analysis of optic flow resulting from self-motion. We showed that the AVT receives input from both LM and nBOR (primarily nBORd) and projects to the Hp/APH. The nBORd also provides a smaller, direct input to the Hp/APH. This pattern of connectivity suggests that the AVT is conveying optic flow information from the AOS to the Hp/APH in pigeons. Moreover, our electrophysiological experiments showed that some cells in AVT respond to optic flow stimuli. Although our recording studies were hardly exhaustive, we did find that approximately half of those neurons tested were modulated in response to large-field visual stimuli. Of those visually sensitive neurons, half had monocular receptive fields in the contralateral eye and, as such, have visual responses similar to most neurons in the LM and nBOR (Winterson and Brauth, 1985; Wylie and Frost, 1990a, 1996). The other visually sensitive neurons had binocular receptive fields and responded best to flow fields resulting from self-translation along a particular axis in three-dimensional space. Such receptive field properties have been observed for neurons in the vestibulocerebellum [a projection site of the AOS (Clarke, 1977; Brecha et al., 1980)] and a subset of cells localized to nBORd (Wylie and Frost, 1990b, 1999; Wylie et al., 1998a). Thus, it is possible that some cells in the nBORd and adjacent AVT are conveying highly processed optic flow information to the Hp/APH. It is also possible that these cells are multimodal. In a 2-deoxyglucose experiment, Telford and Frost (1989) showed that nBORd, but not nBORp, responds to rotation of the pigeon in darkness. This vestibular input might arise from the lateral cerebellar nucleus, which projects heavily to nBORd but less to nBORp (Arends and Zeigler, 1991).
We must emphasize that our findings should not be reduced to a simple demonstration of a visual input to the hippocampus. The input is from the AOS, a highly conserved visual pathway found in all vertebrates (Fite, 1985; McKenna and Wallman, 1985b; Weber, 1985) that is much neglected in the popular literature. The retinal recipient nuclei of the AOS, unlike other visual structures, are dedicated to the analysis of optic flow that result from self-motion (Frost, 1982, 1985;Frost et al., 1990, 1994). Optic flow neurons have been found in the extrastriate areas of primate visual cortex (Duffy and Wurtz, 1991), although such findings are predated by similar findings in the AOS by more than a decade (Simpson and Alley, 1974). Generally the AOS is described in reference to its importance to oculomotor function (Simpson, 1984). We suggest additional roles for the AOS: spatial cognition, navigation, and path integration.
Does the AOS provide input to the hippocampal formation in mammals?
In mammals, the AOS consists of the medial and lateral terminal nuclei (MTN, LTN), which are functionally similar to the avian nBOR, and the dorsal terminal nucleus and pretectal nucleus of the optic tract (collectively referred to as NOT/DTN), which are homologous to the avian LM (for review, see Simpson, 1984; Simpson et al., 1988b;Grasse and Cynader, 1990). The MTN, LTN, and DTN project to an area in the ventral tegmentum known as the visual tegmental relay zone (VTRZ) (Giolli et al., 1984, 1988). Cells in the VTRZ of rabbits respond to optic flow stimuli but have higher order properties than cells in the NOT/DTN, LTN, and MTN. Like cells in the LM and nBORp, cells in the NOT/DTN, MTN, and LTN respond to large-field stimuli moving in a particular direction in the contralateral visual field (Soodak and Simpson, 1988). Like cells in the avian nBORd, some cells in the VTRZ have binocular receptive fields and encode rotational flow fields (Simpson et al., 1988a). The VTRZ, now recognized in the rat stereotaxic atlas (Paxinos and Watson, 1986), is a thin layer of cells that resides in the dorsal part of the ventral tegmental area (VTA; AVT in birds), just ventral to the Ru. The VTRZ is distinguished as the area that provides a massive input to the optic flow-sensitive areas of the inferior olive (Giolli et al., 1985; Simpson et al., 1988a,b). In birds, the major input to the optic flow areas of the inferior olive is from nBORd (Brecha et al., 1980).
In mammals, the VTA projects to the hippocampus, but does part of this projection originate from the VTRZ? In a recent retrograde tracing study, Gasbarri et al. (1994) showed that both dopaminergic and nondopaminergic neurons were labeled throughout VTA after injections into the CA1 region of the hippocampus. Gasbarri et al. (1994) did not distinguish VTRZ from the rest of the VTA in their drawings, but there was heavy labeling in the dorsal VTA just ventral to the red nucleus (Gasbarri et al., 1994, their Figs. 1A,B, 2A,B). We are certain that these cells are within the VTRZ. Thus, it seems that the nBORd to Hp/APH pathway revealed in the present study exists in mammals, but it has simply been overlooked. A double labeling study like the one we have performed here is necessary to confirm this pattern of connectivity in mammals.
The hippocampus, spatial memory, and path integration
Lesion studies of the Hp resulting in performance deficits in tasks such as the Morris water maze in rats and homing behavior in pigeons have implicated the Hp in spatial memory processes, including navigation (Morris et al., 1982; Sutherland et al., 1982; Bingman et al., 1990; Nadel, 1991; Bingman and Yates, 1992; Sherry et al., 1992;Poucet, 1993). However, the answer to the question of how the representation of space is established in the Hp remains elusive.O’Keefe and Nadel (1978) postulated that the Hp forms a “cognitive map” of the environment. Central to this idea was the discovery of “place cells” that are selectively active when an animal is in a particular location (O’Keefe and Dostrovsky, 1971; O’Keefe, 1979;Muller, 1996; O’Keefe and Burgess, 1996). A substantial body of research emphasizes how the relationship of external landmarks, i.e., allothetic cues, is represented by the activity of place cells (O’Keefe and Nadel, 1978; for review, see Poucet, 1993; McNaughton et al., 1996; Whishaw et al., 1997). More recently, studies have emphasized that self-motion or ideothetic information is also important for place-cell activity (Foster et al., 1989; Wilson and McNaughton, 1993; McNaughton et al., 1995, 1996), and as such it is thought that the Hp is involved in path integration (Whishaw et al., 1997; Whishaw and Maaswinkel, 1998).
In the hippocampal formation and afferent structures, many neurons are tuned to the directional heading in the horizontal plane. These “head direction cells” have been found in the postsubiculum (Taube et al., 1990a) and posterior cortex (Chen et al., 1994) as well the anterior thalamus (Taube, 1995) and lateral dorsal thalamus (Mizumori and Williams, 1993). Both allothetic and ideothetic cues affect the firing of head direction cells (Taube et al., 1990b; Chen et al., 1994;Knierim et al., 1995; Blair and Sharp, 1996), and it is thought that the ideothetic information arises from the vestibular system (McNaughton et al., 1995, 1996; Muller et al., 1996).
The results of the present study are consistent with the idea that the hippocampal formation is involved in path integration by the analysis of ideothetic cues resulting from self-motion, but we propose an additional ideothetic cue: optic flow. The optic flow reaches the hippocampal formation from the AOS. Until now, the AOS has not been considered a player in spatial cognition but is generally regarded as a slave to the oculomotor system.
Footnotes
This research was supported by grants from National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and the Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research (AHFMR) to D.R.W. We thank Drs. D. Treit and I. Q. Whishaw for their comments on an earlier version of this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Douglas R. Wong-Wylie, Department of Psychology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2E1.