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Functional consequences of embryonic neocortex transplanted to rats with prefrontal cortex lesions.
109
Citations
26
References
1987
Year
Embryonic NeocortexNeuropsychologyBrain FunctionDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceBrain DevelopmentDelayed Alternation PerformanceDevelopmental NeuroscienceSocial SciencesNeuroregenerationT-maze AlternationFunctional ConsequencesNeurogenesisCognitive NeurosciencePrefrontal Cortex LesionsBrain StructureBehavioral NeuroscienceMedicineCortical RemodelingRehabilitationDevelopmental BiologyNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemT-maze Alternation PerformanceNeural Stem Cell
In four experiments we reexamined the recent report by Labbe, Firl, Mufson, and Stein (1983) that fetal cortical tissue transplanted to an aspirative prefrontal cortical cavity in rats can ameliorate the learning impairments induced by the aspirative lesions. Healthy surviving grafts from young (E16) embryonic donors had no immediate effects on the rats' impairments in T-maze alternation, spatial navigation in the Morris swimming pool task, or locomotor activity, and they produced even greater impairments than the lesions alone when all three tests were conducted after longer (3-5 month) survival periods. Grafts taken from older (E21) donors did produce a short-lasting improvement in the T-maze alternation performance, replicating the previous report. However, this effect was not seen in the other two behavioral tests; the grafts survived poorly, and the beneficial effect was no longer apparent in the long-term tests. It is concluded that (a) functional benefits of embryonic cortical grafts are dependent on a precise combination of conditions rather than being a general phenomenon, and (b) the short-lasting recovery in delayed alternation performance is attributable to diffuse influences of the embryonic tissue on the lesioned host brain rather than to a reconnection of damaged circuitries.
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