AN INTRACELLULAR STUDY OF MUSCLE PRIMARY AFFERENTS DURING FICTIVE LOCOMOTION IN THE CAT

被引:109
作者
GOSSARD, JP [1 ]
CABELGUEN, JM [1 ]
ROSSIGNOL, S [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV MONTREAL,FAC MED,CTR RECH SCI NEUROL,MONTREAL H3C 3J7,QUEBEC,CANADA
关键词
D O I
10.1152/jn.1991.65.4.914
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
1. Presynaptic activity of identified primary afferents from flexor, extensor, and bifunctional hindlimb muscles was studied with intra-axonal recordings during fictive locomotion. Fictive locomotion appeared spontaneously in decorticate cats (n = 9), with stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region (n = 4), and in spinal cats injected with clonidine or nialamide and L-DOPA (n = 4). Representative flexor and extensor muscle nerves, recorded to monitor the locomotor pattern and dorsal rootlets of the sixth and seventh lumbar segments, were recorded simultaneously to monitor dorsal root potentials (DRPs). 2. From responses to muscle stretches and, in some instances, twitch contractions of the parent muscle, 75% of the single units examined were putatively identified as spindle afferents (40/53). On the basis of conduction velocity and stimulation threshold, 73% of these were further classified as group I fibers (29/40), the rest as group II fibers. 3. All units (n = 53 with resting potential more negative than -45 mV) showed fluctuations of their membrane potential (up to 1.5 mV) at the rhythm of the fictive locomotion. Subsequent averaging of these fluctuations over several cycles revealed that 89% of all units displayed a predominant wave of depolarization during the flexor phase, followed by a trough of repolarization. In 79% of the units, there was also a second, usually smaller, depolarization during the extensor phase. The relative size of each wave of depolarization could vary with different episodes of fictive locomotion in the same unit and among various afferents from the same muscle in the same experiment. 4. The firing frequency of some afferents from the ankle flexor tibialis anterior (5/16) and the bifunctional muscle posterior biceps-semitendinosus (4/15) was phasically modulated along the fictive step cycle. The maximum frequency always occurred during the flexor phase, i.e., during the largest depolarization of the unit. Because of the absence of phasic sensory input in the curarized animal, we assume that the phasic discharges were generated within the spinal cord and antidromically propagated. Phasic firing was never encountered in afferents from extensor muscles such as triceps surae (0/15) and vastus lateralis (0/4). 5. The results demonstrate that the pattern of rhythmic depolarization accompanying fictive locomotion is similar for the majority of flexor, extensor, and bifunctional group I (and possibly group II) muscle spindle primary afferents. They further indicate that there is a specific phasic modulation of antidromic firing for some flexor and bifunctional muscle spindle afferents. Taken together, these results suggest that the efficacy of transmission of muscle afferent pathways may be altered more during the flexor phase than the extensor phase. Possible functional roles are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:914 / 926
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] PERIODIC FLUCTUATION IN BURST AMPLITUDE DURING FICTIVE LOCOMOTION IN THE CAT
    VIDAL, C
    EXPERIENTIA, 1980, 36 (01): : 77 - 78
  • [22] Depression of muscle and cutaneous afferent-evoked monosynaptic field potentials during fictive locomotion in the cat
    Perreault, MC
    Shefchyk, SJ
    Jimenez, I
    McCrea, DA
    JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON, 1999, 521 (03): : 691 - 703
  • [23] CYTOCHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF CAT SPINAL NEURONS ACTIVATED DURING FICTIVE LOCOMOTION
    CARR, PA
    HUANG, A
    NOGA, BR
    JORDAN, LM
    BRAIN RESEARCH BULLETIN, 1995, 37 (02) : 213 - 218
  • [24] Modulation of monosynaptic transmission by presynaptic inhibition during fictive locomotion in the cat
    Ménard, A
    Leblond, H
    Gossard, JP
    BRAIN RESEARCH, 2003, 964 (01) : 67 - 82
  • [25] ON THE REGULATION OF REPETITIVE FIRING IN LUMBAR MOTONEURONS DURING FICTIVE LOCOMOTION IN THE CAT
    BROWNSTONE, RM
    JORDAN, LM
    KRIELLAARS, DJ
    NOGA, BR
    SHEFCHYK, SJ
    EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 1992, 90 (03) : 441 - 455
  • [26] Sensory integration in presynaptic inhibitory pathways during fictive locomotion in the cat
    Ménard, A
    Leblond, H
    Gossard, JP
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2002, 88 (01) : 163 - 171
  • [27] RHYTHMIC MODULATION IN MEMBRANE-POTENTIAL OF CUTANEOUS AFFERENTS DURING FICTIVE LOCOMOTION IN CATS
    GOSSARD, JP
    CABELGUEN, JM
    SALTIEL, P
    DREW, T
    ROSSIGNOL, S
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1988, 15 (03) : 341 - 341
  • [28] MECHANICAL ENTRAINMENT OF FICTIVE LOCOMOTION IN THE DECEREBRATE CAT
    KRIELLAARS, DJ
    BROWNSTONE, RM
    NOGA, BR
    JORDAN, LM
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1994, 71 (06) : 2074 - 2086
  • [29] Organization of common synaptic drive to motoneurones during fictive locomotion in the spinal cat
    Nielsen, JB
    Conway, BA
    Halliday, DM
    Perreault, MC
    Hultborn, H
    JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON, 2005, 569 (01): : 291 - 304
  • [30] GAMMA-MOTONEURON DISCHARGE PATTERNS DURING FICTIVE LOCOMOTION IN THE DECEREBRATE CAT
    MURPHY, PR
    HAMMOND, GR
    EXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, 1990, 75 (01) : 107 - 110