Abstract

Connections between motor cortical neurons receiving somatosensory inputs from area 2 and large pyramidal cells in layer V were examined in the cat via intracellular injection of biocytin and immunohistochemistry of nonphosphorylated neurofilament proteins (npNFP). Biocytin was injected into pyramidal cells in layers II/III of the motor cortex that responded monosynaptically and polysynaptically to microstimulation of the somatosensory cortex and subsequently stained black by the avidin-biotinylated peroxidase complex method with diaminobenzidine (DAB) and nickel. By using a monoclonal antibody SMI-32 and a modified peroxidase-antiperoxidase method with Tris-aminophenyl-methane (TAPM) and p-cresol as a chromogen, pyramidal cells in layers III and V of the motor cortex were stained red for npNFP. In particular, all the large pyramidal cells in layer V, Betz cells, displayed intense npNFP immunoreactivity not only in the perikarya but also in the dendrites. Double staining with DAB/nickel and TAPM/p-cresol showed that biocytin-filled axon varicosities of the pyramidal cells, which were thought to receive monosynaptic inputs from area 2, made contacts with npNFP-positive dendrites in layers I-III around the biocytin-injected cell and in layers V-VI beneath the cell. The present results suggest that the corticocortical input from area 2 to pyramidal cells in layers II/III of the motor cortex is transferred to layer V pyramidal cells, including Betz cells, as well as to neighboring layer II/III pyramidal cells. Since tetanic stimulation of the somatosensory cortex reportedly produces long-term potentiation in layer II/III cells of the motor cortex, it seems reasonable to assume that a given area of the somatosensory cortex can produce a long-lasting change in the activity of a given group of output cells in the motor cortex.

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