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The Journal of Neuroscience logoLink to The Journal of Neuroscience
. 1986 Jun 1;6(6):1635–1642. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.06-06-01635.1986

Age-related fiber order in the ferret's optic nerve and optic chiasm

C Walsh
PMCID: PMC6568708  PMID: 3712001

Abstract

Although the mammalian optic tract shows a grouping of fibers by age, with newer fibers nearer the pial surface, the possible rules for fiber ordering in the mammalian optic nerve have not been well defined. In this study, preferential labeling of the older retinal fibers in the ferret, a close relative of the cat, shows that the age-related fiber order in the ferret's optic tract reflects a systematic sorting of fibers by age that occurs in the optic nerve, and that is maintained through the optic chiasm. The older retinofugal fibers, dispersed throughout the nerve near the retina, come to be limited to the perimeter of the nerve as it passes through the optic foramen, while newer fibers come to lie nearest the center of the nerve. These newest fibers approach the ventral surface of the brain nearer the optic chiasm. In the chiasm, as in the tract, the oldest fibers lie furthest from the pial surface of the brain, while newer fibers lie nearer the surface. The age-related fiber ordering in the ferret's optic nerve, with the newest fibers initially being furthest from the surface at the optic foramen, differs from age-related orderings seen in nonmammalian vertebrates, where the newest fibers are always nearest the surface. The changing patterns of fiber ordering along the ferret's optic nerve may relate to changes in the underlying glial structure of the developing nerve.


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