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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 2 February 2000, pp. 895-906
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, Columbia University, and the New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York 10032
Martin, John H.,
Laura Donarummo, and
Antony Hacking.
Impairments in Prehension Produced by Early Postnatal Sensory
Motor Cortex Activity Blockade. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 895-906, 2000. This study examined the effects
of blocking neural activity in sensory motor cortex during early
postnatal development on prehension. We infused muscimol, either
unilaterally or bilaterally, into the sensory motor cortex of cats to
block activity continuously between postnatal weeks 3-7. After
stopping infusion, we trained animals to reach and grasp a cube of meat
and tested behavior thereafter. Animals that had not received muscimol
infusion (unilateral saline infusion; age-matched) reached for the meat
accurately with small end-point errors. They grasped the meat using
coordinated digit flexion followed by forearm supination on 82.7% of
trials. Performance using either limb did not differ significantly. In animals receiving unilateral muscimol infusion, reaching and grasping using the limb ipsilateral to the infusion were similar to controls. The limb contralateral to infusion showed significant increases in
systematic and variable reaching end-point errors, often requiring subsequent corrective movements to contact the meat. Grasping occurred
on only 14.8% of trials, replaced on most trials by raking without
distal movements. Compensatory adjustments in reach length and angle,
to maintain end-point accuracy as movements were started from a more
lateral position, were less effective using the contralateral limb than
ipsilateral limb. With bilateral inactivations, the form of reaching
and grasping impairments was identical to that produced by unilateral
inactivation, but the magnitude of the reaching impairments was less.
We discuss these results in terms of the differential effects of
unilateral and bilateral inactivation on corticospinal tract
development. We also investigated the degree to which these prehension
impairments after unilateral blockade reflect control by each
hemisphere. In animals that had received unilateral blockade between
postnatal weeks (PWs) 3 and 7, we silenced on-going activity (after PW
11) during task performance using continuous muscimol infusion. We
inactivated the right (previously active) and then the left (previously
silenced) sensory motor cortex. Inactivation of the ipsilateral (right)
sensory motor cortex produced a further increase in systematic error
and less frequent normal grasping. Reinactivation of the contralateral (left) cortex produced larger increases in reaching and grasping impairments than those produced by ipsilateral inactivation. This suggests that the impaired limb receives bilateral sensory motor cortex
control but that control by the contralateral (initially silenced)
cortex predominates. Our data are consistent with the hypothesis that
the normal development of skilled motor behavior requires activity in
sensory motor cortex during early postnatal life.
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