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Volume 17, Number 16,
Issue of August 15, 1997
pp. 6338-6351
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Hand/Face Border as a Limiting Boundary in the Body
Representation in Monkey Somatosensory Cortex
Paul R. Manger,
Timothy M. Woods,
Alberto Muñoz, and
Edward
G. Jones
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of California,
Irvine, Irvine, California 92697
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Horizontal intracortical connections may form one substrate for
representational plasticity in somatosensory cortex.
Electrophysiological mapping demonstrated the finer details of the
representations of the hand, lower jaw, neck, and face in area 3b of
normal macaque monkeys. Injections of two fluorescent tracers then
defined the extent to which horizontal connections crossed from the
face into the hand representations and vice versa in area 3b.
Connections are widely distributed within cortical representations of
skin areas innervated by cervical nerves or by the trigeminal nerve but
do not cross a border defined by the anterior limit of the representation of skin innervated by the second cervical nerve. This
border separates the representation of the muzzle, innervated only by
the mandibular nerve, and the representation of the lower jaw and neck
region, innervated by the second and third cervical nerves but
overlapped by the mandibular nerve. Thus, the muzzle representation
lacks connections with the hand and with the lower jaw and neck
representations, but the representations of the hand and of the lower
jaw and neck are strongly interconnected. Overlap of the hand and of
the lower jaw and neck representations and of their horizontal
intracortical connections may form one basis for expansions of the
lower jaw representation into that of the hand when peripheral input
from the hand is lost. Lack of connections with the rest of the face
representation may limit this spread.
Key words:
receptive fields;
fluorescent dextrans;
horizontal
connections;
plasticity;
mandibular nerve;
cervical nerves
INTRODUCTION
The border between the
representations of the hand and the face is a landmark in the
somatotopic map in area 3b of primate somatosensory cortex. The border
is not definable architectonically (Powell and Mountcastle, 1959a ); the
two representations form part of a continuous representation of the
contralateral body surface (Woolsey et al., 1942 ; Dreher et al., 1975 ;
Kaas et al., 1979 ; Pons et al., 1987 ).
The physiologically defined hand/face border has formed a focal
point in studies of representational plasticity in somatosensory cortex
of adult monkeys (Merzenich et al., 1984 ; Wall et al., 1986 ; Florence
et al., 1994 ; Garraghty et al., 1994 ). Garraghty et al. (1994) reported
no change in the position of the hand/face border representation in
animals that had undergone extensive deafferentation of the hand and in
which the representation of the face might have been anticipated to
spread into the silenced representation of the hand. Mutability of the
hand/face border, however, was reported in monkeys that had undergone
unilateral dorsal rhizotomies of all cervical spinal segments 12 years
previously (Pons et al., 1991 ). The representation of the face had
expanded by 10-14 mm into the region of area 3b that would have been
occupied previously by the representation of the hand. This expansion
was too extensive to be accounted for by overlap in thalamocortical projections from the former hand and face representations in the ventral posterior nucleus (VPL) of the thalamus. The spread was attributed to cascading expansions of facial representations determined by divergence of connections in subcortical centers. Expansion of a
part of the head representation normally found medial to the
representation of the hand (Woolsey et al., 1942 ; Dreher et al., 1975 )
was also suggested as sufficient to account for much of the spread
(Lund et al., 1994 ).
In the reorganized cortex described by Pons et al. (1991) , most
multiunit responses were obtained by stimulating receptive fields in
the vicinity of the lower jaw. In this region of skin, the distribution
of the mandibular nerve normally overlaps that of the second cervical
nerve (Sherrington, 1939 ). Therefore, preexisting overlap of the lower
jaw and hand representations at cortical and thalamic levels could help
explain the extensive plasticity of the cortical maps in these
long-term experiments. Overlap in thalamocortical projections of the
ventral posterior thalamic nucleus is limited, however, to ~1.5 mm
(Rausell and Jones, 1995 ). Moreover, in the brainstems and thalami of
the chronically deafferented monkeys used in the study of Pons et al.
(1991) , cells had disappeared from most of the cuneate and from large
parts of the VPL thalamic nucleus as the result of transneuronal
degeneration (Rausell et al., 1992 ). Therefore, at cortical levels,
overlap and potentially the spread of one part of the representation
into another silenced by peripheral denervation may depend on the
extent to which horizontal, intracortical connections spread from one
representation into the other.
The present results show the detailed somatotopy of the hand/face
border, suggesting redefinition of the border in terms of trigeminal
and spinal inputs, and show that few horizontal connections that might
serve as a basis for activity-dependent plasticity cross this
border.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Six macaque monkeys (four Macaca mulatta and two
Macaca fuscata), aged 2 years or older, were used. The
somatosensory cortex from one hemisphere of each monkey was used for
physiological recording alone to define the normal representation in
the hand/face border region. The somatosensory cortex of the other
hemisphere was used for anatomical tracing in conjunction with
recording to define the extent to which corticocortical connections
crossed this border.
For the connection-tracing part of the study, animals were
anesthetized with intramuscular ketamine (15 mg/kg) and were maintained on intravenous Nembutal administered at a rate of ~5
mg · kg 1 · hr 1. They
were placed in a stereotaxic frame, and under sterile conditions, small
openings in the skull and dura mater were made to expose a region of
the postcentral gyrus opposite the tip of the intraparietal sulcus.
Varnish-insulated tungsten microelectrodes (5 M impedance) were
advanced at an angle down the posterior bank of the central sulcus in
area 3b; each track was separated from its neighbor by ~500 µm.
Multiunit discharges of neurons at 100-200 µm intervals were
elicited to light tactile stimulation of the hand and face, and the
receptive fields of the neurons were mapped to locate the border
between the representations of the hand, face, and adjacent regions.
During the mapping session, the cortical surface was kept moist with
normal saline. Glass micropipettes having tip diameters of 15-20 µm
and containing 5% Fluorescein-dextran or 5% FluoroRuby (Molecular
Probes, Eugene, OR) in 0.1 M phosphate buffer were then
introduced along selected electrode tracks 1 mm or less on either side
of the hand/face border and were advanced to coordinates at which
receptive fields on the hand or face had been recorded. Positive
iontophoretic currents of 8 µA were applied through a silver wire for
15-20 min, using a 50% duty cycle. The animals were allowed to
survive for 10-14 d.
After the survival time, the animals were reanesthetized as described
above, and the hemisphere opposite that containing the injections was
explored electrophysiologically to define the details of the normal
hand/face border representation. A larger craniotomy was made over the
part of the postcentral gyrus homotopic to the area which was injected,
and the dura mater was removed. An acrylic well was formed around the
opening and filled with mineral oil. Fine grain microelectrode maps of
the region of area 3b in the vicinity of the hand/face border were
made, using the same techniques as described above. The distance
between electrode penetrations in the hemispheres was usually <500
µm, except where blood vessels precluded it. Recordings were made in
100-200 µm steps as the microelectrodes were advanced down the
posterior bank of the central sulcus. At the conclusion of the mapping
session, the animals were given an overdose of Nembutal and perfused
through the ascending aorta with cold, normal saline followed by 4%
paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer. The brain was
removed and blocked, and the blocks were infiltrated with 30% sucrose
at 4°C. These blocks were subsequently frozen in dry ice.
Blocks of cortex from the hemisphere mapped as the terminal experiment
were cut serially at 50 µm in the plane of the electrode penetrations, which was approximately parasagittal. This allowed visualization of the length of each electrode track in two or three
consecutive sections of cortex. The sections were stained with thionin,
and architectonic boundaries were matched to recording sites, using
well established criteria (Powell and Mountcastle, 1959a ; Roberts and
Akert, 1963 ; Jones et al., 1978 ). From this, two-dimensional
reconstructions showing the somatotopic maps and borders of area 3b
were generated.
Blocks of cortex from the hemisphere injected with fluorescent dextrans
were cut serially at 25 µm in the parasagittal plane. Alternating
sections were mounted and stained with thionin or were mounted without
staining for examination under epifluorescence. Sections for
fluorescence microscopy were mounted on clean glass slides, allowed to
dry, and then coverslipped in a 3:1 mixture of glycerol and 0.1 M phosphate buffer. These sections were examined using
fluorescein and Texas Red exciting filters. The stage of the microscope
was attached to optical encoders allowing computer-generated maps of
the sections to be made with the Minnesota Datametrics MD 2 plotting
system. These maps showed landmarks such as blood vessels, the surface
of the cortex, and the border between gray matter and white matter. The
locations of the injections (Fig. 1), of
anterogradely labeled terminal ramifications, and of retrogradely labeled cells (Fig. 2) were then plotted
onto the maps. Camera lucida projections of the alternating
thionin-stained sections were then merged with the plottings, directly
matching architectonic borders and electrode penetrations with the
locations of labeled terminal ramifications and cells in area 3b and
adjoining areas. Selected sections were scanned in 1 µm steps using
an MRC 600 dual-channel, dual-laser confocal scanning system and filter
blocks that allowed simultaneous or interleaved imaging of both dyes. In the flattened maps, the border of area 3b deep in the central sulcus
is referred to as the "anterior border," and that with area 1 as
the "posterior border." "Medial" means toward the midline of
the hemisphere, and "lateral" means toward the lateral sulcus.
Fig. 1.
Scanning laser confocal image of a typical
injection site <500 µm in diameter in area 3b. Labeled pyramidal
cells adjacent to the injection site are seen. Horizontal fibers
projecting through layers 3 and 5 of area
3b are visible, as well as subcortical projection fibers. Scale bar,
250 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (110K GIF file)]
Fig. 2.
Scanning laser confocal image of a typical,
retrogradely labeled pyramidal cell in layer 3 of area 3b. Numerous
anterogradely labeled axons and terminals are also seen throughout the
field.
[View Larger Version of this Image (116K GIF file)]
RESULTS
Somatotopy of the hand/face border
Neurons responding vigorously to light cutaneous stimulation of
the contralateral hand or face under the anesthetic conditions of
the experiments were located in area 3b, in the posterior bank of the
central sulcus. Responses in area 1 under Nembutal anesthesia are much
weaker (Powell and Mountcastle, 1959b ). Only area 3b will be described
here. The representation of the thumb (D1), the representation of the
lower jaw/neck region, and the representations of the lower and upper
lips, muzzle, and dorsolateral aspect of the face were explored
extensively, and common elements and variations in the representations
are visible in Figures 3 and
4. D1 was represented in the most medial
portion of the reconstructed maps. The exact somatotopy of the
representation of D1 has been reported previously (Pons et al., 1987 )
and will be described only briefly.
Fig. 3.
A, Flat map of area 3b,
reconstructed from sagittal sections, showing the region in which the
representations of the hand and face adjoin. A large representation of
the thumb (D1) is found medial to a band of cortex
containing neurons responsive to stimulation of the lower jaw/neck
region. The receptive field examples drawn on the middle figure clearly
delineate this region. The representation extends from the anterior to
the posterior borders (dark lines) of area 3b. The
remainder of the face is represented lateral to the lower jaw/neck
region. Dots represent sites of electrode penetrations. Those penetrations from which receptive fields are illustrated are
identified by letters or numbers and
joined by gray lines. A, Anterior;
M, medial. B, Reconstructed flat map of
the lower jaw/neck representation and adjacent representations in area
3b. The same conventions described in A are used. In
this case, the representation extends to the anterior border of area
3b, but posteriorly the representations of D1 and of the hairy lower
lip intervene. Medial and lateral to the lower jaw/neck representation are the representations of D1 and of the rest of the face,
respectively.
[View Larger Version of this Image (51K GIF file)]
Fig. 4.
A, Reconstructed flat map of the
lower jaw/neck and adjacent representations in area 3b. The same
conventions described in Figure 3 are used. In this case, the
representation of the lower jaw/neck does not form a complete
anteroposterior band across area 3b. The posterior portion of the
representation extends to the posterior border of area 3b, but
anteriorly the representation of the hairy part of the lower lip
intervenes. Medial and lateral to this representation are the
representations of D1 and of the rest of the face, respectively.
B, Reconstructed flat map of the lower jaw/neck
representation and adjacent representations in area 3b. The same
conventions described in A are used. In this case, the
anterior border of the representation extends to the anterior border of
area 3b, but the posterior border is separated by the representation of
the dorsolateral face. The lower jaw/neck representation is again
bordered by the representations of D1 and of other facial structures,
respectively.
[View Larger Version of this Image (50K GIF file)]
Neurons responding to stimulation of the thenar eminence and of
the proximal glabrous surface of D1 were located posteriorly in area
3b. The glabrous skin over the lateral aspect of the distal phalanx of
D1 was represented anterior and lateral to the representation of the
proximal glabrous parts of D1. Anterior to this was a small region of
cortex in which neurons responded to stimulation of hairs on the dorsal
aspect of D1. Anterior to this again and at the anterior border of area
3b, neurons responded to stimulation of the nail bed of D1. The
glabrous skin covering the medial aspect of the distal phalanx of D1
was represented medial to the hairy skin and nail bed representations.
The entire representation of D1 in area 3b had a mediolateral extent of
~2 mm and an anteroposterior extent of ~6.5 mm, the latter
corresponding to the entire width of area 3b at this level of the
postcentral gyrus. The majority of the representation was devoted to
the glabrous skin over the distal phalanx.
Lateral to the representation of D1 was the representation of the lower
jaw and adjacent part of the neck. Although the internal organization
of this representation varied from animal to animal, the overall
representation was consistently located between the representation of
D1 and that of the lips, muzzle, and dorsolateral aspect of the face
(Figs. 3, 4). The lower jaw representation included the skin over the
vertical ramus of the mandible anterior to the ear and extended
anteriorly along the horizontal ramus of the mandible until replaced by
the representation of the hairy part of the lower lip and adjacent
muzzle and chin. Receptive fields in the lower jaw representation
extended continuously onto the skin of the adjacent part of the neck,
mainly its anterior and lateral portions, commonly extending to the
midline of the neck and including the skin beneath the chin. The
anterior border of the region was coincident with the area over which
the texture and color of the hair changes from the soft, light downy
hair of the jaw and neck to the wiry darker hair of the muzzle. We will
refer to the region as a whole as the lower jaw/neck region. As
recording sites moved anteriorly through the lower jaw/neck representation, receptive fields of neurons moved from posterior to
anterior in the region (Figs. 3, 4). All receptive fields were located
on both the jaw and neck, most extending under the jaw to the midline
of the neck. No receptive fields located solely on the neck or solely
on the lower jaw were observed. Receptive fields on lower jaw skin
abutting the muzzle were located most anteriorly and often included the
skin under the chin. The majority of the receptive fields of neurons in
the lower jaw/neck representation were large in comparison with those
of neurons in the representations of the lips and digits.
The representation of the lower jaw/neck lay between the
representations of the first digit and the lips in all of the monkeys studied. The lower jaw/neck representation formed a band ~1-1.5 mm
in mediolateral extent and of variable extent across the
anteroposterior dimension of area 3b. In two of the cases, the
posterior border of the representation was coincident with the
posterior border of area 3b (Fig.
3A,B). In the other two cases, the
posterior border was separated from the posterior border of area 3b by
part of the representation of the dorsolateral face or by parts of the
representations of D1 and of the hairy part of the lower lip (Fig.
4A,B). The anterior border of the
representation was coincident with the anterior border of area 3b in
three of the cases (Figs. 3A,
4A,B). In the remaining case, the
anterior border was separated from the anterior border of area 3b (Fig.
3B) by parts of the representations of D1 and of the hairy
portion of the lower lip.
Lateral to the lower jaw/neck representation, the representations of
the dorsolateral aspect of the face and of the upper and lower lips
were located. The representation of the dorsolateral part of the face
lay along the posterior border of area 3b. Anterior to this was the
representation of the upper lip, and anterior to the upper lip
representation was that of the lower lip. Details of the face
representation in the macaque monkey have been published previously
(Dreher et al., 1975 ; Manger et al., 1996 ).
Anterograde and retrograde labeling in somatosensory cortex:
intrinsic area 3b connections and connections with adjacent fields
Three of the cases received an injection of one tracer in
the representation of D1 and of the other tracer in the representation of the hairy upper lip. The other three cases had one tracer injection in the representation of D1 and the second in that of the lower jaw/neck region, as defined above. For all cases, the microelectrode mapping of area 3b preceding the injection of tracer enabled accurate placement of the tracer into area 3b and into the representations of
D1, of the lower jaw/neck region, or of the upper lip, and permitted
subsequent plotting of labeled cells and fiber terminations in relation
to the electrode tracks. Injections were all ~500 µm in both
mediolateral and anteroposterior extent and confined to area 3b. All
predominantly involved layers III and IV. Correspondingly, the majority
of anterogradely labeled fibers and of retrogradely labeled cells were
located in these layers, especially in layer III, but significant
numbers of labeled cells and fibers were found in layers II, V, and VI
as well.
In the three cases in which the injections of tracer were made into the
representations of D1 and of the upper lip, the results were highly
consistent (Figs.
5, 6, 7).
Emanating from each injection was an asymmetric pattern of cell and
fiber labeling in area 3b. Injections of tracer in the representation
of the hairy upper lip led to a majority of labeled cells and terminal
ramifications lateral to the injection site (i.e., in the face
representation) and extending for at least 3 mm mediolaterally (shown
in full in Fig. 5). By contrast, medial to the upper lip injections,
labeled cells and terminal ramifications extended for a distance of no more than 1 mm, at which point the labeled cell bodies and terminations ended abruptly. The sharp medial boundary of labeled cells and fiber
terminations corresponded to the lateral boundary of the lower jaw/neck
representation, as determined from the mapping before injection.
Fig. 5.
Reconstructed flat map combining the
patterns of anterograde and retrograde labeling resulting from two
injections in area 3b. Fluorescein-dextran
(green) was injected in the representation of the
thenar eminence, and FluoroRuby (red) was injected in
the representation of the upper lip. For retrograde labeling, each dot represents one cell. For anterograde labeling, each
dot represents a cluster of large boutons (usually
3-5). Recording sites (dots) and electrode penetrations
(lines) are indicated. Broken lines indicate borders of the lower jaw/neck representation. Intrinsic connections spread widely within the hand and the lower jaw/neck representations and within the rest of the face representation, but
there is little overlap between the two. In this figure, the full
mediolateral extent of labeling in area 3b is shown. In subsequent figures, only labeling in the immediate vicinity of the hand/face border is shown. A, Anterior; M,
medial.
[View Larger Version of this Image (34K GIF file)]
Fig. 6.
Reconstructed flat maps showing individually the
patterns of anterograde and retrograde labeling resulting from two
injections in area 3b. FluoroRuby was injected in the representation of
the thenar eminence, and Fluorescein-dextran was injected in the
representation of the upper lip. Although extensively distributed,
anterograde and retrograde labeling from each injection site shows
little or no overlap and forms a distinct boundary at the region that corresponds to the lateral border of the representation of the lower
jaw and neck. The injection in the representation of the hand results
in denser labeling in area 3a than does the injection made in the
representation of the upper lip. Both injections demonstrate equally
strong connections with area 1. A, Anterior;
M, medial.
[View Larger Version of this Image (34K GIF file)]
Fig. 7.
Reconstructed flat maps of the patterns of
anterograde and retrograde labeling resulting from two injections in
area 3b. FluoroRuby was injected in the representation of the thenar
eminence, and Fluorescein-dextran was injected in the representation of
the upper lip. Selected recording tracks are shown. The partial map of
the representation was derived from other penetrations. The injection
made in the representation of the upper lip shows strong anterograde
labeling extending throughout the representation of the dorsolateral
face, whereas that made in the representation of the thenar eminence
shows similarly strong labeling extending through the hand and lower
jaw/neck representations. There is a clear boundary, however, at the
junction of the representation of the lower jaw and neck and the
representation of the lip, across which the connections do not overlap.
A, Anterior; M, medial.
[View Larger Version of this Image (39K GIF file)]
For injections made in the representation of D1 in these cases, the
asymmetry in the labeling pattern was reversed, with the majority of
labeled cell bodies and fiber ramifications being found medial to the
injection site (i.e., in the representation of the digits), the labeled
fibers in particular extending in layer III for distances up to 4 mm.
This was 1-2 mm beyond the medial limit of retrogradely labeled cell
bodies. Lateral to the injection site, the labeled cells and terminals
ended abruptly in a manner comparable with that seen medial to
injections in the lip representation. This sharp boundary did not occur
at the lateral border of the D1 representation but at the lateral
border of the lower jaw/neck representation, ending abruptly at its
border with the representation of the lips.
In all three cases there was only very slight overlap (~200 µm
mediolaterally) of cells and fiber terminations labeled with one or
other of the two dyes (Figs. 5, 6, 7), and no double-labeled cells or
fibers were observed. The short region of overlap invariably occurred
at the lateral boundary of the representation of the lower jaw/neck
region in area 3b.
Of the somatosensory cortical areas adjacent to area 3b, only
areas 3a and 1 were examined in detail. In both areas, foci of cells
and fiber ramifications labeled by each dye were clearly separated from
one another, and there was only very slight overlap, if any, in their
distributions. In accord with previous reports of the connections of
the different somatosensory areas, more dense cell and fiber labeling
was found in area 1 with sparser labeling in area 3a. Also as reported
previously, the pattern of cell and fiber labeling in all three areas
was patchy (Jones et al., 1978 ; Shanks et al., 1985 ; Krubitzer and
Kaas, 1990 ; Burton and Fabri, 1995 ).
In three cases, the paired injections were made in the physiologically
determined representations of D1 and of the lower jaw/neck region of
area 3b. Two are illustrated in Figures 8
and 9. As seen with the previous cases,
the pattern of anterogradely and retrogradely transported label in the
granular and supragranular layers of area 3b was asymmetrically
distributed around each injection site. For both injections, the
labeling extended further medially than laterally in the D1 and lower
jaw/neck representations and formed a sharp border at the upper lip
representation. There was an extensive amount of overlap in the
distributions of cells and fiber ramifications labeled with each dye.
The extent of overlap was not as great for the retrogradely labeled
cells. There was, nevertheless, a lack of double-labeled cells, only
two being found in area 3b and none in areas 1 or 3a.
Fig. 8.
Reconstructed flat maps of the patterns of
anterograde and retrograde labeling resulting from two injections in
area 3b. FluoroRuby was injected in the representation of glabrous D1,
and Fluorescein-dextran was injected in the representation of the lower
jaw and neck. This and the following case (Fig. 9) differ from the
previous three (Figs. 5, 6, 7) in that the labeling patterns overlap
extensively in area 3b as well as in area 1. Despite the extensive
overlap in connectional patterns, very few cells were retrogradely
labeled with both tracers. A, Anterior;
M, medial.
[View Larger Version of this Image (36K GIF file)]
Fig. 9.
Reconstructed flat maps of the patterns of
anterograde and retrograde labeling resulting from two injections in
area 3b. Fluorescein-dextran (green) was injected
in the representation of the thenar eminence, and FluoroRuby
(red) was injected in the representation of the lower
jaw/neck. Selected recording tracks are shown. The partial map of the
representation was derived from other penetrations. As shown in Figure
8, there is extensive overlap of the labeled cells and fibers emanating
from the two injection sites. A, Anterior; M, medial.
[View Larger Version of this Image (38K GIF file)]
For the injection in the D1 representation in these cases, the
transported label extended for ~4 mm medial to the injection site in
area 3b (full medial extent not shown). As seen with the cases
described above, the cell and fiber labeling ensuing from the D1
injection overlapped the representation of the lower jaw/neck region
and formed a sharp boundary with the lip representation at the lateral
border of the lower jaw/neck representation, 2.5 mm lateral to the
injection site. The lateral extent of the cell and fiber labeling
ensuing from the injection in the lower jaw/neck representation also
terminated at the lateral border of this representation, 1 mm lateral
to the injection site, and did not extend into the representations of
the lips, muzzle, or dorsolateral part of the face. Medially, however,
the labeling emanating from this injection extended for 2 mm into the
D1 representation, overlapping extensively with the cells and fibers
labeled by the other dye. In area 1 there was a similar amount of
overlap of the transported label, especially the anterograde label. The
transported label in area 1 did not extend mediolaterally over a
distance greater than that in area 3b. The distribution of the
transported label in areas 3a, 3b, and 1 was patchy.
DISCUSSION
Somatotopy at the hand/face border representation
In previous studies of macaque monkeys, Woolsey et al. (1942) and
Nelson et al. (1980) demonstrated that lateral to the D1 representation, a band of cortex responds to stimulation of the region
defined in the present study as lower jaw/neck and confirmed as
separating the representations of D1 and those of the lips or
muzzle.
Woolsey et al. (1942) , Dreher et al. (1975) , Bioulac and Lamarre
(1979) , and Nelson et al. (1980) also obtained responses to stimulation
of receptive fields on the occiput, neck, and side of the head in
cortex medial to the representation of the hand. Woolsey (1958, his
Fig. 22), in an effort to preserve the idea of continuous somatotopy,
made a hypothetical union of the lateral representation of the lower
jaw and neck and of the medial representation of the occiput, neck, and
scalp via a thin cortical zone located posterior to the hand
representation. The present study found no indications of extensions of
the lower jaw/neck representation or of the occiput, posterior part of
the neck and scalp representation into the region posterior to the hand
representation in area 3b. Thus, areas of skin innervated by anterior
(lower jaw and neck) and posterior (scalp and occiput) primary rami of
the upper cervical nerves have discontinuous representations in area
3b.
Intrinsic connections of hand, lower jaw/neck, and
face representations
The experiments demonstrated that the muzzle representation
in area 3b lacks intracortical connections with the representations of
the hand or of the lower jaw and neck; however, the representations of
the lower jaw and neck and of the digits are strongly interconnected. The implication is that cortex representing cutaneous areas innervated by anterior primary rami of cervical spinal nerves is continuously connected, but the continuity ends abruptly at the border with the
representation of areas innervated solely by the mandibular nerve. In
primary motor cortex, the hand and face representations, as defined by
intracortical microstimulation (Huntley and Jones, 1991 ), show a
similar delimiting border; horizontal connections emanating from a
representation of thumb movements, although spreading extensively
throughout the upper limb representation, do not cross into the face
representation. The border between trigeminal and cervical
representations thus appears to be a "protected" one. This
contrasts with the extensive spread of connections within the
representations of the digits in area 3b (Jones and Powell, 1969 ;
Burton and Fabri, 1995 ; present study). These extensive connections may
help account for reorganization of the hand representation under
use-dependent conditions or after intracortical microstimulation (Recanzone et al., 1992a ,b ). In accounting for activity-dependent expansions of the upper limb representation into that of the face, however, it now becomes necessary to consider whether these cross the
protected border or are confined within the representation of the
cervically innervated, lower jaw/neck region. Preexisting corticocortical connections clearly cannot account for expansion of the
representation of the rest of the face into that of the hand.
The anterior primary ramus of the second cervical nerve innervates the
lower jaw/neck region as defined in the present study; the jaw
component of this skin field is overlapped extensively by the
distribution of the mandibular nerve (Sherrington, 1939 ). The
mandibular distribution extends from the lips and muzzle to the rami of
the mandible and angle of the jaw but not onto the neck. In the present
study, receptive fields of neurons in the lower jaw/neck representation
usually extended over both lower jaw and neck, i.e., into the territory
of overlap, whereas those of neurons in the muzzle and lip
representations never extended onto the lower jaw/neck region.
Therefore, central neurons receiving inputs from the lower jaw region
via the mandibular nerve apparently do not have detectable inputs from
mandibular fibers innervating the lips and muzzle. The pattern of
intracortical connections tends to reflect the peripheral innervation
pattern; there is extensive overlap of the connections in the lower
jaw/neck and in the D1 representations but little across the border
between the lower jaw/neck and the lip and muzzle representations.
Whether overlap of cervical and mandibular nerve inputs occurs at lower
levels of the somatosensory pathway, particularly the thalamus, is
unclear. The lower jaw/neck region is represented in VPL (Jones and
Friedman, 1982 ; Jones et al., 1982 ) which receives only dorsal
column-lemniscal and spinal inputs; these do not overlap into the
ventral posterior medial nucleus (VPM) (Tracey et al., 1980; Jones et
al., 1982 ; Asanuma et al., 1983 ). Neurons responding to stimulation of
the lower jaw and neck region have never been reported in VPM (Jones et
al., 1986a ; Rausell and Jones, 1991a ); VPM receives only trigeminal
inputs which do not overlap into VPL (Jones et al., 1986b ; Rausell and
Jones, 1991b ). Studies of somatotopy in the dorsal column and principal
trigeminal nuclei of monkeys (Kerr et al., 1968 ; Ferrington et al.,
1988 ; Culbertson and Brushart, 1989 ; Florence et al., 1989 ) have not
reported whether lower jaw and neck representations are found in both
nuclei. There is, however, extensive overlap of upper cervical and
trigeminal inputs in the caudal spinal trigeminal nucleus (Kerr, 1972 ).
The outputs of the caudal nucleus are relayed to area 3b by
small-celled populations in and around VPM (Rausell and Jones,
1991b ).
Implications for cortical plasticity
After long-term C2-T4 dorsal rhizotomies in monkeys, Pons et al.
(1991) described expansion of the face representation over a region of
cortex that presumably had been once occupied by the upper
limb representation. The extent of this expansion (10-14 mm) exceeds
the cortical distance limit determined by divergence of thalamocortical
afferents (Garraghty and Sur, 1990 ; Rausell and Jones, 1995 ).
Significantly, the expanded part of the representation was restricted
to that of the lower jaw region, minus the neck. Pons et al. (1991)
proposed that a cascade of expansion ascending through subcortical
somatic sensory nuclei and determined by preexisting divergence at all
levels may be sufficient to account for the large change in the cortex
(Garraghty and Kaas, 1991 ; Kaas, 1991 ; Petit and Schwark, 1993 ;
Florence and Kaas, 1995 ). In these animals, however, most of the relay
cells of the cuneate nucleus and of the medial half of the VPL nucleus
were obliterated by transneuronal degeneration (Rausell et al., 1992 ).
Hence, expansion of the lower jaw and face representation on the basis
of divergence would have had to occur at trigeminal relay centers
within the brainstem and/or thalamus and/or within the cortex
itself.
The extent of normal thalamocortical divergence from VPM in relation to
the hand and face representations has not been determined, but on the
basis of the results of Rausell and Jones (1995) , it is unlikely to be
sufficiently extensive to support on its own a 10-14 mm expansion of
the lower jaw representation. When coupled with the extensive spread of
intracortical connections from the lower jaw/neck representation into
that of the hand, however, expansions beyond the range of
thalamocortical divergence become feasible. Expansion of
representations of parts of the head located medial to the hand
representation, as advocated by Lund et al. (1994) , seems less likely
in view of the lack of evidence for representations of the lower jaw
skin in these parts of area 3b (Nelson et al., 1980 ; Manger et al.,
1996 ; present study). It should be noted, however, that in the areas of
skin represented medially, the distributions of posterior primary rami
of upper cervical nerves and of the ophthalmic nerve overlap in a
manner akin to that of anterior rami and the mandibular nerve in the lower jaw region (Sherrington, 1939 ). The horizontal connections of
this part of the representation should be explored. Potentially, a
lower jaw representation located posteriorly in area 1 could expand
into the hand representation on the basis of preexisting trigeminal
thalamocortical connections, but this has not been demonstrated.
Contributing to the divergence of mandibular nerve-mediated thalamocortical input in the chronically deafferented monkeys may have
been the diffusely projecting, calbindin immunoreactive cells of the
VPM matrix (Rausell and Jones, 1991a ) which are selectively innervated
by afferents ascending from the spinal trigeminal nucleus (Rausell and
Jones, 1991b ) and which showed immunoreactive changes indicative of
heightened activity in these monkeys (Rausell et al., 1992 ).
The present results suggest that preexisting horizontal, intracortical
connections could account for expansion of the lower jaw representation
into that of the hand, provided that input (presumably carried via the
mandibular nerve) reaches the lower jaw representation. The extent of
the horizontal connections, at least 3 mm, is insufficient, however, to
account for a 10-14 mm expansion. Such an extensive expansion may
depend on a number of additional mechanisms. Divergence at subcortical
levels is obviously one, and sprouting of the horizontal connections
(Darian-Smith and Gilbert, 1994 ) is potentially another;
topographically mismatched inputs to area 3b from mandibular
nerve-mediated representations in other somatosensory cortical fields
(Robinson and Burton, 1980 ; Krubitzer and Kaas, 1990 ; Krubitzer et al.,
1993 ) may also contribute.
The present results show that preexisting horizontal connections cannot
support expansion of any part of the lower face representation other
than that of the lower jaw into the hand representation, because they
do not transgress a border set by the anterior limit of the C2
innervation territory. This may be a key factor in restricting expansion of the representation to that of the lower jaw in monkeys subjected to chronic deafferentation of the upper limb.
FOOTNOTES
Received March 21, 1997; revised May 13, 1997; accepted May 27, 1997.
This work was supported by Grant NS 21377 from National Institutes of
Health, United States Public Health Service.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. E. G. Jones, Department
of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of California, Irvine, Irvine,
CA 92697.
Dr. Manger's present address: Neurobiology Research, 151A Sepulveda
Veterans Administration Medical Center, 16111 Plummer Street, North
Hills, CA 91343.
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