Abstract

Anterograde transport of horseradish peroxidase - wheat germ agglutinin (HRP-WGA) was used to examine the effect of unilateral neonatal ablation of the sensorimotor cortex on the remaining corticofugal projections to the midbrain in the rat. In unlesioned animals, the sensorimotor cortical efferents to the midbrain were entirely ipsilateral, terminal labeling being evident in the red nucleus, the midbrain reticular formation, the periaqueductal gray, the intermediate gray layer of the superior colliculus, the nucleus parafascicularis prerubralis and the perilemniscal area. Corticorubral fibers were seen to reach the midbrain through the thalamus or the cerebral peduncle. In the red nucleus, terminal labeling was essentially restricted to the parvocellular region. In neonatally lesioned adults, aberrant corticofugal fibers crossed the midline to terminate in the contralateral red nucleus, the midbrain reticular formation, the periaqueductal gray, the nucleus parafascicularis prerubralis and the intermediate gray layer of the superior colliculus. The aberrant projections maintained the topographic specificity of the normal ipsilateral projections. This was most evident in the corticorubral projection, where the aberrant contralateral fibers terminated in the parvocellular area of the red nucleus.

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