Trigeminothalamic barrelette neurons: natural structural side asymmetries and sensory input-dependent plasticity in adult rats
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Publication date
2009
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Elsevier
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Negredo P, Martin YB, Lagares A, Castro J, Villacorta JA, Avendaño C. Trigeminothalamic barrelette neurons: natural structural side asymmetries and sensory input-dependent plasticity in adult rats. Neuroscience. 2009 Nov 10;163(4):1242-54. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2009.07.065. Epub 2009 Aug 5. PMID: 19664693.
Abstract
In the rodent trigeminal principal nucleus (Pr5) the barrelette thalamic-projecting neurons relay information from individual whiskers to corresponding contralateral thalamic barreloids. Here we investigated the presence of lateral asymmetries in the dendritic trees of these neurons, and the morphometric changes resulting from input-dependent plas- ticity in young adult rats. After retrograde labeling with dex- tran amines from the thalamus, neurons were digitally recon- structed with NeurolucidaTM, and metrically and topologically analyzed with NeuroExplorerTM. The most unexpected and remarkable result was the observation of side-to-side asym- metries in the barrelette neurons of control rats. These asym- metries more significantly involved the number of low-grade trees and the total dendritic length, which were greater on the left side. Chronic global input loss resulting from infraorbital nerve (IoN) transection, or loss of active touch resulting from whisker clipping in the right neutralized, or even reversed, the observed lateral differences. While results after IoN tran- section have to be interpreted in the context of partial neuron death in this model, profound bilateral changes were found after haptic loss, which is achieved without inflicting any nerve damage. After whisker trimming, neurons on the left side closely resembled neurons on the right in controls, the natural dendritic length asymmetry being reversed mainly by a shortening of the left trees and a more moderate elongation of the right trees. These results demonstrate that dendritic morphometry is both side- and input-dependent, and that unilateral manipulation of the sensory periphery leads to bilateral morphometric changes in second order neurons of the whisker-barrel system. The presence of anatomical asym- metries in neural structures involved in early stages of so- matosensory processing could help explain the expression of sensory input-dependent behavioral asymmetries