Abstract
The distribution of S1 (first somatosensory area) and S2 (second somatosensory area) neurons projecting to the contralateral S2 was studied with horseradish peroxidase in normal adult cats and in cats aged between 129 and 248 days in which the injected S2 area had been deprived of some of its input by an earlier lesion (on postnatal days 3 to 30; day of birth = day 1) of ipsilateral S1, alone or combined with a lesion of contralateral S2. In animals with S1 lesions, as in the normal controls, labeled neurons were selectively distributed to the regions of the trunk representation and to parts of the forelimb and hindlimb representations; however, the normally acallosal region in the forepaw representation contained scattered labeled neurons in three of the four animals whose S1 had been lesioned during the first postnatal week. In these animals, the distribution of labeled neurons in the contralateral S2 was apparently normal. Furthermore, the additional lesion of this area during the first postnatal week (one animal) did not increase the degree of filling-in of the normally acallosal parts of S1. The partial filling-in of the acallosal parts of S1 is probably due to the preservation to adulthood of some of the callosal neurons which are present in these regions during the early postnatal life. Possibly, these neurons did not disappear (or lose their callosal axons) because the neonatal lesion (i) allowed their successful competition for terminal space in contralateral S2 or (ii) induced a reorganization of the peripheral input to this area.