Reduction of GABAA receptor binding of [3H]muscimol in the barrel field of mice after peripheral denervation: transient and long-lasting effects
1994
The effect of peripheral sensory deprivation upon GABAA receptor binding of [3H]muscimol was investigated in the barrel cortex — cortical representation of mystacial vibrissae of mice — by means of in vitro quantitative autoradiography. Unilateral lesions of all vibrissae or selected rows of whiskers were performed neonatally or in adulthood. [3H]muscimol binding was examined after various survival times up to 60 days. Both types of lesions performed in adult mice resulted in a transient decrease (10–25%) of binding values in the deafferented areas of the barrel field as compared with the unoperated control side. Sixty days after denervation [3H]muscimol binding returned to control values. Similar results were found after neonatal removal of all vibrissae. Neonatal lesion of selected rows of vibrissae, however, resulted in a decrease of [3H]muscimol binding (by about 26%) lasting up to 60 days in corresponding rows of barrels. This last result was accompanied by severe cytoarchitectonic malformation of the barrel field. The results support the hypothesis that a decrease of inhibition plays a facilitatory role in the plastic reorganization of cortical circuitry.
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