Abstract

The effect of altering neural activity on the development of the central projections of cutaneous and muscle sensory neurons was studied in the embryonic chick spinal cord. Animals were treated chronically with MK-801, a non-competitive N- methyl- d-aspartate receptor antagonist, during the period when both cutaneous and muscle sensory afferents form connections in the spinal cord. Daily applications of MK-801 began on embryonic day 5, 1 day before sensory collaterals penetrate the spinal cord gray matter, and continued until the animals were analyzed (at embryonic day 14). The patterns of cutaneous and muscle sensory nerve projections were determined by applying fluorescent tracers to individual, identified peripheral nerves. MK-801 treatment did not overtly alter the pattern of muscle afferent projections. However, in the MK-801-treated embryos, the somatotopic organization of cutaneous afferent projections was dramatically altered. Normally, the projections formed by the lateral femoral cutaneous and the medial femoral cutaneous nerves are located immediately adjacent to one another in the lumbar dorsal horn, with little overlap. In the MK-801-treated embryos, the projections from these two cutaneous nerves both expanded significantly within dorsal horn laminae to become almost completely superimposed. These data suggest that MK-801 disrupts the development of the somatotopic organization of cutaneous afferent projections in the spinal cord.

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