A. Canedo et J. Aguilar, Spatial and cortical influences exerted on cuneothalamic and thalamocortical neurons of the cat, EUR J NEURO, 12(7), 2000, pp. 2515-2533
This work aimed to study the responses of cuneothalamic and thalamocortical
cells to electrical stimulation of the body surface in alpha-chloralose-an
aesthetized cats. It was found that both classes of cells had a central exc
itatory receptive field, an edge overlapping the field centre whose stimula
tion elicited inhibitory-excitatory (cuneothalamic cells) and excitatory-in
hibitory (thalamocortical cells) sequences, and a surrounding or peripheral
area usually being inhibitory. Manipulating the descending corticofugal ac
tivity by removing the fronto-parietal cortex, electrical stimulation, or b
y placing picrotoxin or muscimol over the sensorimotor cortex demonstrated
that the cortical feedback potentiated effects driven from the field centre
and the surround. In particular this potentiated centre-driven excitation
and surround-driven inhibition, but some of the data points to more complex
patterns. The inhibition elicited in cuneothalamic cells from the edge and
the surround of the field was faster than the excitation induced from the
field centre. Effects at the edge of the field centre included late excitat
ory responses relayed via the cerebral cortex. There were also direct corti
cofugal excitatory inputs to the field centre. Excitatory surrounds were oc
casionally observed, the assumption being that in most cases these were sup
pressed by the enhanced inhibition driven from the cortex. The data indicat
e that the cortico-subcortical feedback contributes not only to enhance the
surround antagonism of a centre response but also to increase the time res
olution of thalamic and cuneate relay somesthetic neurons.