2 results match your criteria: "N.K. Kolzov Institute of Developmental Biology[Affiliation]"
Neuroscience
June 1994
N.K. Kolzov Institute of Developmental Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow.
Electrophysiological and anatomical studies were carried out in parallel to investigate the ability of lateral geniculate body neurons to regenerate axons damaged by the removal of the primary visual cortex and to innervate graft neurons functionally after transplantation of fetal neocortical tissue to a lesion cavity in the brain of adult rats. In electrophysiological experiments neurons of a large portion of the transplants (14/35) displayed visual responses with characteristics resembling closely those of normal primary visual cortex; these transplants also displayed a different degree of restoration of topographically organized visual field representations on them. To demonstrate anatomical regeneration of inputs from the host lateral geniculate body to the graft, injections of FluoroGold were made before grafting into the intact visual cortex for retrograde labeling of the lateral geniculate body neurons.
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April 1993
N.K. Kolzov Institute of Developmental Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow.
Solid pieces of tectum or occipital neocortex derived from 17-day rat fetuses were placed over the lesioned right superior colliculus (SC) in adult rats as sheets retaining the internal structure of the embryonal tissue. The upper laminae of the recipient's SC (approximately up to stratum opticum) were removed by aspiration after the neocortex overlying the SC was aspirated out. Two to 5 months after the operation a microelectrode study of the neuronal electrical activity in the grafts was performed.
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