In the kitten, as little as a week of monocular
lid suture during early life causes a remarkable remodeling
of the geniculocortical projections serving the deprived
eye (Antonini & Stryker, 1993a, 1996). While
the physiological effects of monocular deprivation have
been shown to be due to competitive interactions between
the projections serving the two eyes, it is not known whether
these morphological changes are due to competitive interactions
or to sensory disuse. We addressed this question by analyzing
the morphology of geniculocortical arbors in kittens deprived
of patterned vision by binocular lid suture for 1 week
or 2 weeks ending at 6 weeks of age. Such deprivation would
be expected to affect the afferents serving the two eyes
equally, giving neither eye a competitive advantage. The
arbors were anterogradely filled with Phaseolus lectin
iontophoretically injected into lamina A of the lateral
geniculate nucleus. The lectin was visualized immunohistochemically,
and single geniculocortical arbors were serially reconstructed
in three dimensions. Arbors reconstructed in binocularly
deprived animals were compared with arbors serving the
deprived and nondeprived eye in animals monocularly deprived
by lid suture of one eye for a week and with arbors obtained
in age-matched normal controls. Geniculocortical arbors
in binocularly deprived animals did not suffer the drastic
remodeling of the deprived arbors in monocularly deprived
animals. Indeed, arbors in binocularly deprived animals
were indistinguishable from arbors in normal kittens or
nondeprived arbors in short-term monocularly deprived animals.
These results support the notion that competitive mechanisms
rather than sensory disuse are responsible for gross morphological
remodeling of geniculocortical arbors.