Abstract

Somatotopic arrangements of axon terminals of primary afferent fibers innervating follicles of the mystacial vibrissae were examined in the cat by the transganglionic horseradish peroxidase (HRP) method. Forty to 60 hours after injecting HRP into a single or a group of vibrissal follicles, transported HRP was visualized by the tetramethylbenzidine technique. HRP-labeled axon terminals were distributed in the ventral subnucleus of the principal sensory trigeminal nucleus (ventral Vp), in the oral and interpolar spinal trigeminal nuclei (Vo and Vi), and in the caudal spinal trigeminal nucleus (Vc) (layer I, deep part of layer II, layers III-V) with its spinal extension into the dorsal horn of the first cervical cord segment (rostral C1). In cross sections through the caudal parts of the ventral Vp, Vi, and layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1, a single mystacial vibrissa was represented in a one-to-one fashion by a patch of dense terminal arbors of primary afferent fibers. The more dorsally a horizontal row of the mystacial vibrissae was located, the more ventrally was it represented in the ventral Vp, the more ventrolaterally in the Vi, and the more ventrally in layer IV of the Vc and the rostral C1. In addition, the more anteriorly a vibrissa was located in a horizontal row of the mystacial vibrissae, the more medially was it represented in the ventral Vp, the more ventromedially in the Vi, and the more laterally in layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1; the most posteriorly located vibrissae in the horizontal rows of the mystacial vibrissae were represented along the lateral border of the ventral Vp and Vi, and most medially in layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1. Thus, the representation pattern in the ventral Vp was rotated clockwise at about 45 degrees angle in the Vi, and projected as a mirror image in layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1. It was also indicated that the anterior-posterior arrangement of the mystacial vibrissae was represented in a rostral-caudal organization within layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1. It was also indicated that the anterior-posterior arrangement of the mystacial vibrissae was represented in a rostral-caudal organization within layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1. Patchy patterns probably replicating the distribution of the vibrissae on the face of the cat were also revealed by the cytochrome oxidase histochemical staining in cross sections through the caudal parts of the ventral Vp, Vi, and layer IV of the Vc and rostral C1.

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