The purpose of this project was to study the role of somatosensory inf
ormation in the performance of a constrained locomotor task by rats an
d to further examine the influence of structural recovery in the somat
osensory thalamus, specifically the ventral posterolateral nucleus (VP
L). Groups of rats were trained to traverse an elevated, one inch bar
for a reward. The time taken to run across the bar (run time) was used
as a measure of the success of the goal-directed behavior. The moveme
nt pattern of the hindlimb during the swing phase of the locomotor tas
k was quantified from videotape on Preoperative (PRE) Day 15 and durin
g the 46-day postoperative period. The movement pattern was characteri
zed using six different parameters: the area, the X and Y values of th
e centroid under the normalized curve of the hindlimb trajectory, the
vertical displacement of the hindlimb in the flexion and extension pha
ses of the swing cycle, the maximum instantaneous hindlimb velocity, a
nd the proportion of time spent in the acceleration versus deceleratio
n phases of the swing cycle. In order to disrupt the central pathways
for somatosensory information, lesions were made in (i) the right grac
ile nucleus (GN) (n = 18), (ii) bilateral GN(n = 7), (iii) the right G
N and the left VPL (n = 6), and (iv) bilateral VPL (n = 8), and (v) sh
am-operated animals (n = 5). The run time and the pattern of the hindl
imb swing cycle were used as measures of loss and recovery of function
. Only the bilateral VPL group showed an impairment in run time and th
ey recovered by Postoperative (POST) Week 4. All groups demonstrated a
n impairment in initial flexion of the hindlimb during the swing cycle
that recovered in the right GN group only. On POST Day 49, the right
GN, bilateral GN, and the sham groups received injections of 5% WGA-HR
P into both CN to determine the location of these projections in VPL.
The CN projections were not redistributed into the gracile area of VPL
after GN lesions. Since our previous study (24) had shown the number
of synapses in VPL returned to normal after dorsal column nuclei (DCN)
lesions by POST Day 50, the recovery of the number of synapses alone
was not sufficient to restore the normal gait pattern, while the recov
ery of the run time preceded the complete recovery of the number of sy
napses. The recovery of the hindlimb movement pattern during this cons
trained locomotor task may require the central processing of specific
lemniscal information bilaterally by the VPL while behavioral recovery
may be subserved by other neural mechanisms, such as the disinhibitio
n of VPL neurons as a result of DCN lesions, allowing the VPL neurons
to be more responsive to alternative inputs or physiological adaptatio
ns in other ascending systems. (C) 1995 Academic Press, Inc.