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J Neurophysiol 91: 1510-1515, 2004. First published December 10, 2003; doi:10.1152/jn.01109.2003
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Synthesis of Multiwhisker-Receptive Fields in Subcortical Stations of the Vibrissa System

Elena Timofeeva, Philippe Lavallée, Dominique Arsenault and Martin Deschênes

Centre de Recherche Université Laval-Robert Giffard, 2601 de la Canardière, Québec G1J 2G3, Canada

Submitted 17 November 2003; accepted in final form 4 December 2003

This study addresses the origins of multiwhisker-receptive fields of neurons in the thalamic ventral posterior medial (VPM) nucleus of the rat. We sought to determine whether multiwhisker-receptive field synthesis occurs in VPM through convergent projections from the principalis (PrV) and interpolaris (SpVi) nuclei, or in PrV by intersubnuclear projections from the spinal trigeminal complex. We tested these hypotheses by recording whisker-evoked responses in PrV and VPM before and after electrolytic lesion of the SpVi in lightly anesthetized rats. Before the lesion PrV cells responded, on average, to 3.2 ± 1.2 whiskers but responsiveness was reduced to 1.07 ± 0.31 whisker after the lesion. A similar reduction of receptive field size was observed in VPM, where neurons responded, on average, to 2.94 ± 0.95 whiskers before the lesion and to 1.05 ± 0.22 whisker after the lesion. Thus one can conclude that intersubnuclear projections mediate surround whisker-receptive fields in PrV, and therefore in VPM. However, it has previously been shown that parasagittal brain stem transection, which severed ascending projections from SpVi, but left intersubnuclear connections intact, rendered VPM cells monowhisker responsive. We wondered whether midline brain stem lesion modified receptive field properties in SpVi. In normal rats SpVi cells responded, on average, to 7.52 ± 4.25 whiskers, but responsiveness was dramatically reduced to 1.47 ± 1.07 whisker after the lesion. Together these results indicate that the synthesis of surround receptive fields in subcortical stations relies almost exclusively on intersubnuclear projections from the spinal trigeminal complex to the PrV.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. Deschênes, Centre de Recherche Université Laval-Robert Giffard, 2601 de la Canardière, Québec City, Canada G1J 2G3 (E-mail: martin.deschenes{at}crulrg.ulaval.ca).




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