In the Royal College of Surgeons, rat photoreceptor degeneration
occurs over the first several months of life, causing deterioration of
visual cortical responsiveness seen as greater numbers of cells being
nonresponsive to visual stimulation, poor tuning of those cells that do
respond, and an overall tendency for domination by the contralateral
visual input. If the progress of degeneration in one eye is slowed by
intraretinal cell transplantation, cortical responses to stimulation of
the remaining, untreated, eye are much stronger, better tuned and
histograms of ocular dominance resemble more those in normal rats. This
suggests that the rescued eye is able to enhance performance in the
untreated eye by some form of postsynaptic mechanism.