4.7 Article

Sensory cortex limits cortical maps and drives top-down plasticity in thalamocortical circuits

Journal

NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 16, Issue 8, Pages 1060-1067

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/nn.3454

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Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health [R01 NS31558, R01 MH086147]
  2. Vincent J. Coates Chair of Molecular Neurobiology

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The primary somatosensory cortex (S1) contains a complete body map that mirrors the subcortical maps developed by peripheral sensory input projecting to the sensory hindbrain, the thalamus and then S1. Peripheral changes during development alter these maps through 'bottom-up' plasticity. Unknown is how S1 size influences map organization and whether an altered S1 map feeds back to affect subcortical maps. We show that the size of S1 in mice is significantly reduced by cortex-specific deletion of Pax6, resulting in a reduced body map and loss of body representations by an exclusion of later-differentiating sensory thalamocortical input. An initially normal sensory thalamus was repatterned to match the aberrant S1 map by apoptotic deletion of thalamic neurons representing body parts with axons excluded from S1. Deleted representations were rescued by altering competition between thalamocortical axons using sensory deprivation or increasing the size of S1. Thus, S1 size determined the resolution and completeness of body maps and engaged 'top-down' plasticity that repatterned the sensory thalamus to match S1.

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