Abstract

The objective was to determine if projections of single neurons to primary motor cortex preferentially terminate in several efferent zones that could form synergies for the execution of limb movements. Intracortical microstimulation was used to identify zones evoking hip flexion (HF), elbow flexion (EF), and both plantarflexion (PF) and dorsiflexion (DF) about the ankle. Histological examination showed that the zones from which some movements were evoked extended beyond the agranular cortex into granular cortex. Fluorogold, Fast blue, and propridium iodide or rhodamine-labeled dextran were injected into three of these four efferent zones in each rat. There was a virtual absence of multiple-labeled cells despite having an intermingling of different-colored cells of which 15% in frontal cortex were less than 1.2 mm away from a neighboring neuron that projected to a different efferent zone. This suggests that single neurons projecting to the motor cortex do not hard-wire specific synergies but rather project to single efferent zones in order to offer the greatest degree of freedom for the generation of movements. The distribution of ventral posterolateral and ventrolateral thalamic nucleus labeling depended on whether the injections were in granular or agranular cortex. Conversely, frontal cortex projections to motor efferent zones were made irrespective of their location in either granular or agranular cortex and thereby supporting their presumed role in the control of movements. Hindlimb motor cortex injections yielded retrograde labeling that extended into the more localised distribution of frontal cortex neurons retrogradely labeled from forelimb injections. This may allow hindlimb movements to be synchronized by forelimb movements during walking on challenging terrain.

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