Abstract

Functional development of the rat whisker somatosensory system was studied by using the (14C) 2-deoxyglucose (2DG) metabolic mapping technique. Restrained rat pups had their left mystacial vibrissae stroked for 30 minutes and their brains harvested, sectioned, and autoradiographed from the level of the lower medulla to the frontal cortex. Subjects were tested at postnatal days (PNDs) 0-9 and 21. At birth, all subjects exhibited a significant increase of 2DG uptake in the left spinal trigeminal nuclei, the principal trigeminal sensory nucleus, and a portion of the right ventral posteromedial thalamic nucleus. The primary somatosensory cortex exhibited significant 2DG uptake contralateral to stimulation by PND 6, followed by the secondary somatosensory cortex at PND 7. The pattern of 2DG uptake in the somatosensory cortices became more intense and well defined by PND 9. Given that the somatosensory system develops in an orderly fashion from the periphery to higher brain structures, the present results show that brain structures mediating whisker sensory input are not metabolically active until projections from lower somatosensory centers are established. Neurons become responsive to whisker stimulation in the subcortical structures at birth and in the somatosensory cortex a few days later. This cortical activity follows the organization of the upper tier of thalamocortical fibers into a "barrelfield." Moreover, there is a gradual enhancement in functional activity of the vibrissa neurons at different somatosensory nuclei as rats mature. The present study elucidates the time course of functional development in the rat somatosensory system.

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