Literature DB >> 14999063

Corticospinal system development depends on motor experience.

John H Martin1, Michelle Choy, Seth Pullman, Zhuo Meng.   

Abstract

Early motor experiences have been shown to be important for the development of motor skills in humans and animals. However, little is known about the role of motor experience in motor system development. In this study, we address the question of whether early motor experience is important in shaping the development of the corticospinal (CS) tract. We prevented limb use by the intramuscular injection of botulinum toxin A into selected forelimb muscles to produce muscle paralysis during the period of development of CS connection specificity, which is between postnatal weeks 3 and 7. CS terminations were examined using an anterograde tracer. Preventing normal forelimb use during CS axon development produced defective development of CS terminations at week 8 and in maturity. There were reductions in the topographic distribution of axon terminals, in terminal and preterminal branching, and in varicosity density. This suggests that limb use is needed to refine CS terminals into topographically specific clusters of dense terminal branches and varicosities. To determine correlated effects on motor behavior, cats were tested in a prehension task, to reach and grasp a piece of food from a narrow food well, when the neuromuscular blockade dissipated (by week 10) and in maturity (week 16). Preventing normal limb use also produced a prehension deficit later in development and in maturity, in which there was a loss of the supination component of grasping. This component of prehension in the cat depends on CS projections from the paw representation of rostral motor cortex to the cervical enlargement. Our findings show that motor experiences are necessary for normal development of CS terminations and function.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 14999063      PMCID: PMC6730424          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4616-03.2004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  34 in total

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Review 5.  Activity- and use-dependent plasticity of the developing corticospinal system.

Authors:  John H Martin; Kathleen M Friel; Iran Salimi; Samit Chakrabarty
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Authors:  Jason B Carmel; Sangsoo Kim; Marcel Brus-Ramer; John H Martin
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7.  Activity-dependent codevelopment of the corticospinal system and target interneurons in the cervical spinal cord.

Authors:  Samit Chakrabarty; Brandon Shulman; John H Martin
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2009-07-08       Impact factor: 6.167

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9.  Rapid and persistent impairments of the forelimb motor representations following cervical deafferentation in rats.

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Review 10.  Spinal cord modularity: evolution, development, and optimization and the possible relevance to low back pain in man.

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