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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Patterned activity via spinal dorsal quadrant inputs is necessary for the formation of organized somatosensory maps.

TLDR
The results show that a lack of normal sensory inputs via ascending pathways in the dorsal spinal cord during early development results in massive anatomical and neurophysiological abnormalities in the cortex.
Abstract
The normal development of the somatosensory system requires intact sensory inputs from the periphery during a critical window of time early in development. Here we determined how the removal of only part of the ascending spinal inputs early in development affects the anatomical and neurophysiological development of the somatosensory system. We performed spinal overhemisections in rat pups at C3/C4 levels on the third day after birth. This procedure hemisects the spinal cord on one side and transects the dorsal funiculus on the other side. When the rats were 6-8 months old, the responsiveness and somatotopy of the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) contralateral to the hemisection were determined using standard multiunit mapping techniques. Sections of the flattened cortex were processed for cytochrome oxidase activity, Nissl substance, or myelin. We found that histologically apparent modules that are normally present in the regions of the forepaw and the hindpaw representations were absent, whereas the lateral barrel field representing the face was completely normal. The neurons in the forepaw regions of S1 either did not respond to the stimulation of the skin of any region of the body or responded to the stimulation of the upper arm afferents that enter the spinal cord rostral to the site of the lesion. The results show that a lack of normal sensory inputs via ascending pathways in the dorsal spinal cord during early development results in massive anatomical and neurophysiological abnormalities in the cortex. Intact crossed spinothalamic pathways are unable to support the normal development of the forepaw barrels.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Early motor activity drives spindle bursts in the developing somatosensory cortex.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the interaction between movement-triggered sensory feedback signals and self-organized spindle oscillations shapes the formation of cortical connections required for sensorimotor coordination.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cortical and subcortical plasticity in the brains of humans, primates, and rats after damage to sensory afferents in the dorsal columns of the spinal cord

TL;DR: The anatomical, physiological and behavioral changes that take place in response to injury-induced plasticity after damage to the dorsal column pathway in rats and monkeys are discussed and functional collateral sprouting has been promoted by the post-lesion digestion of the perineuronal net in the cuneate nucleus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional brain reorganization after spinal cord injury: Systematic review of animal and human studies

TL;DR: This review will focus on delineating the pathophysiological mechanisms of the brain plasticity changes following SCI, based on the existing neuroimaging and neurophysiological evidence in experimental models and humans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cortical sensory map rearrangement after spinal cord injury: fMRI responses linked to Nogo signalling.

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that cortical neurons react to sensory deprivation by decreasing transcriptional activities of genes encoding the Nogo receptor components in the sensory deprived and the anatomically adjacent non-deprived area, suggesting an involvement of Nogo signalling in cortical activity-dependent plasticity in the somatosensory system.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The structural organization of layer IV in the somatosensory region (SI) of mouse cerebral cortex. The description of a cortical field composed of discrete cytoarchitectonic units.

TL;DR: The author describes how his methods of investigation with celloidin embedded material prepared with the Golgi method and Nissl staining revealed for the first time the “barrel fields” of the mouse cerebral cortex that are activated by stimulation of the facial vibrissae (whiskers).
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in the visual system of monocularly sutured or enucleated cats demonstrable with cytochrome oxidase histochemistry

TL;DR: The results indicated that the deprivation caused by monocular suture produced a decrease in the cytochrome oxidase staining of the binocular segment of the deprived geniculate laminae of kittens, leading to a significant decreases in the level of oxidative enzyme activity one to several synapses away.
Book

Sensory mechanisms of the spinal cord

TL;DR: A low profile keyboard unit including an etched circuit board and a plurality of keyboard switches mounted on one surface thereof and housings configured to carry in self-contained fashion up to ten diodes plus a resistor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mapping the body representation in the SI cortex of anesthetized and awake rats

TL;DR: The cytoarchitectonic zones within the rat SI were divided into the following main categories: granular zones (GZs)–areas exhibiting koniocortical cy toarchitecture (i.e., containing dense aggregates of layer IV granule cells), perigranular zones [PGZs]–narrow strips of less granular cortex surrounding the GZs, and (3) dysgranular zones
Journal ArticleDOI

Receptive fields of barrels in the somatosensory neocortex of the rat.

TL;DR: Peripheral receptive fields of “barrels” in the somatosensory neocortex (SmI) of rats were determined with microelectrode recording and anatomical techniques to indicate that each barrel receives information from one sinus hair.
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