Axonal branching is thought to be regulated not only by genetically defined programs but also by neural activity in the developing nervous system. Here we investigated the role of pre-and postsynaptic activity in axon branching in the thalamocortical (TC) projection using organotypic coculture preparations of the thalamus and cortex. Individual TC axons were labeled with enhanced yellow fluorescent protein by transfection into thalamic neurons. To manipulate firing activity, a vector encoding an inward rectifying potassium channel (Kir2.1) was introduced into either thalamic or cortical cells. Firing activity was monitored with multielectrode dishes during culturing. We found that axon branching was markedly suppressed in Kir2.1-overexpressing thalamic cells, in which neural activity was silenced. Similar suppression of TC axon branching was also found when cortical cell activity was reduced by expressing Kir2.1. These results indicate that both preand postsynaptic activity is required for TC axon branching during development.D uring development, axons navigate to their target regions and form elaborate branches when they make synaptic connections with multiple target cells. It has been demonstrated that axon guidance to the target region is regulated by attractive and repulsive molecular cues that are expressed in particular spatiotemporal patterns (1). Similar molecular mechanisms are thought to influence axon branching (2). In addition, neural activity such as firing and synaptic activity can also affect branch formation (3-5). An intriguing and unanswered problem is how neural activity regulates axonal branching.The thalamocortical (TC) projection in the mammalian cortex is a well-characterized system in which to investigate activity-dependent axon branching. In the developing sensory cortices, TC axons form elaborate terminal arbors, whose size and complexity are altered by neural activity. In the primary visual cortex of higher mammals such as cats, ferrets, and monkeys, TC axons serving left and right eyes are segregated into eye-specific stripes (6). This segregation is established during development (7), but is disrupted by blockade of retinal activity (8, 9). Regarding individual axon arbors, it is known that after monocular deprivation, TC axons serving the deprived and nondeprived eyes shrink and expand their arbors, respectively (10, 11). A recent study in which monocular deprivation was combined with silencing cortical activity has further suggested that correlations between pre-and postsynaptic activity play a dominant role in segregation of axon arbors (12). In accordance with this view, molecular machinery in pre-and postsynaptic sites has also been shown to affect arbor formation of TC axons in the somatosensory cortex (13-15). However, the relative role of pre-and postsynaptic activity in TC axon branching remains unclear.To address this issue, we investigated TC axon branching in cocultures of the thalamus and cortex by manipulating the firing activity of thalamic (presynaptic) and cortical (...