Abstract

Antibodies to glutamate (Glu) were used to study the effects of reduced afferent input on excitatory neurons in the somatic sensory cortex of adult monkeys. In each monkey, immunocytochemical staining was compared to thionin and cytochrome oxidase (CO) staining in adjacent sections. In the cervical spinal cord, dorsal column nuclei, ventroposterior thalamus, and primary somatic sensory cortex (SI), Glu immunoreactivity (Glu-ir) was analogous to that described in normal animals; regions with reduced or absent Glu-ir were never observed and no appreciable differences were noted between the experimental and normal side. There were also no differences in CO or thionin-stained sections from the affected hemisphere. In the insuloparietal operculum, sections in the hemisphere contralateral to the nerve cut showed that most cortical fields had a normal pattern of Glu-ir (pattern a), some exhibited a reduction of Glu-ir (pattern b), and that in the central portion of the upper bank of the central sulcus, which corresponds to the general location of the hand representation of the second somatic sensory cortex (SII), Glu-ir had virtually disappeared (pattern c). Adjacent sections processed for CO or stained with thionin showed that in the regions corresponding to those characterized by pattern c, CO was slightly decreased and that glial cells had increased in number. In the regions of SII characterized by pattern c, small intensely stained glial cells displayed Glu-ir. These findings indicate that Glu-ir is regulated by afferent activity and suggest that changes in Glu levels in neurons as well as in glial cells may trigger the biochemical processes underlying the functional and structural changes occurring during a slow phase of reorganizational plasticity in the cerebral cortex of adult monkeys.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call