We have previously shown that most of the reorganization that typically follows median nerve transection in adult squirrel monkeys is dependent on normally functioning N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. Here, we have evaluated two additional hypotheses: (1) is the immediate "unmasking" found aft
NMDA receptors and plasticity in adult primate somatosensory cortex
โ Scribed by Garraghty, Preston E.; Muja, Naser
- Book ID
- 102645842
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 919 KB
- Volume
- 367
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9967
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Topographic maps in adult primate somatosensory cortex are capable of dramatic reorganizations after peripheral nerve injuries. In the present experiments, we have deprived a circumscribed portion of the hand map in somatosensory cortex of four adult squirrel monkeys by transecting the median nerve to one hand, and evaluated the hypothesis that N-methyl-daspartate (NMDA) glutamatergic receptors are necessary for the reorganization that follows within four weeks. In one monkey, we confirm previous results demonstrating that the deprived cortex has regained responsiveness in its expanse four weeks after median nerve transection. However, in three monkeys in which NMDA receptors were concurrently blocked, most of the deprived cortex remained unresponsive. Thus, much of the cortical "recovery" that typically follows peripheral nerve injury in adult monkeys is apparently dependent on NMDA receptors and may well be due to Hebbian-like changes in synaptic strength. Perhaps the elimination of the normally dominant inputs to "median nerve cortex" permits the gradual strengthening of correlations between the activity of the formally impotent presynaptic and deprived postsynaptic elements. These enhanced correlations may also have been made possible by reductions in intracortical inhibition as a necessary but not sufficient condition.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Inferences about how the complex somatosensory systems of anthropoid primates evolved are based on comparative studies of such systems in extant mammals. Experimental studies of members of the major clades of extant mammals suggest that somatosensory cortex of early mammals consisted of