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J Neurophysiol (November 2, 2005). doi:10.1152/jn.00880.2005
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Submitted on August 19, 2005
Accepted on October 27, 2005

Neonatal cortical ablation disrupts multisensory development in superior colliculus

Wan Jiang1, Huai Jiang1, and Barry E. Stein1*

1 Neurobiology and Anatomy, Wake Forest Univ. School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: bestein{at}wfubmc.edu.

The ability of cat superior colliculus (SC) neurons to synthesize information from different senses depends on influences from two areas of the cortex: the anterior ectosylvian sulcus (AES) and the rostral lateral suprasylvian sulcus (rLS). Reversibly deactivating the inputs to the SC from either of these areas in normal adults severely compromises this ability and the SC-mediated behaviors that depend on it. In the present study we found that removal of these areas in neonatal animals precluded the normal development of multisensory SC processes. At maturity there was a substantial decrease in the development of multisensory neurons, and those multisensory neurons that did develop were highly abnormal. Their cross-modal receptive field register was severely compromised, as was their ability to integrate cross-modal stimuli. Apparently, despite the impressive plasticity of the neonatal brain, it cannot compensate for the early loss of these cortices. Surprisingly, however, neonatal removal of either AES or rLS had comparatively minor consequences on these properties. At maturity multisensory SC neurons were quite common: they developed the characteristic spatial register among their unisensory receptive fields and exhibited normal adult-like multisensory integration. These observations suggest that during early ontogeny, when the multisensory properties of SC neurons are being crafted, AES and rLS may each have the ability to compensate for the loss of the cortico-collicular influences of the other, so that normal multisensory processes can develop in the SC.




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