Intrinsic Activation of Human Motoneurons: Possible Contribution to Motor Unit Excitation
- 1 April 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 87 (4) , 1850-1858
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00024.2001
Abstract
The main purpose of this study was to estimate the contribution of intrinsic activation of human motoneurons (e.g., by plateau potentials) during voluntary and reflexive muscle contractions. Pairs of motor units were recorded from either the tibialis anterior or soleus muscle during three different conditions: 1 ) during a brief muscle vibration followed by a slow relaxation of a steady isometric contraction; 2 ) during a triangular isometric torque contraction; and 3 ) during passive sinusoidal muscle stretch superimposed on a steady isometric contraction. In each case, the firing rate of a tonically firing control motor unit was used as a measure of the effective synaptic excitation (i.e., synaptic drive) to a slightly higher-threshold test motor unit that was recruited and de-recruited during a contraction trial. The firing rate of the control unit was compared at recruitment and de-recruitment of the test unit. This was done to determine whether the estimated synaptic drive needed to recruit a motor unit was less than the amount needed to sustain firing as a result of an added depolarization produced from intrinsic sources. After test unit recruitment, the firing rate of the control unit could be decreased significantly (on average by 3.6 Hz from an initial recruitment rate of 9.8 Hz) before the test unit was de-recruited during a descending synaptic drive. Similar decreases in control unit rate occurred in all three experimental conditions. This represents a possible 40% reduction in the estimated synaptic drive needed to maintain firing of a motor unit compared with the estimated amount needed to recruit the unit initially. The firing rates of both the control and test units were modulated together in a highly parallel fashion, suggesting that the unit pairs were driven by common synaptic inputs. This tight correlation further validated the use of the control unit firing rate as a monitor of synaptic drive to the test motor unit. The estimates of intrinsically mediated depolarization of human motoneurons (≈40% during moderate contractions) are consistent with values obtained for plateau potentials obtained from intracellular recordings of motoneurons in reduced animal preparations, although various alternative mechanisms are discussed. This suggests that similar intrinsic conductances provide a substantial activation of human motoneurons during moderate physiological activity.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- Analysis of firing behaviour of human motoneurones within ‘subprimary range’Journal of Physiology-Paris, 1999
- Common drive of motor units in regulation of muscle forceTrends in Neurosciences, 1994
- 5-HT and motor control: a hypothesisTrends in Neurosciences, 1993
- Neuromodulation of vertebrate motor neuron membrane propertiesCurrent Opinion in Neurobiology, 1992
- Post-contraction changes in human muscle spindle resting discharge and stretch sensitivityExperimental Brain Research, 1991
- Fluctuations in motor unit recruitment threshold during slow isometric contractions of wrist extensor muscles in manNeuroscience Letters, 1989
- Voltage- and time-dependent chloride currents in chick skeletal muscle cells grown in tissue culturePflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 1989
- Bistable firing properties of soleus motor units in unrestrained ratsActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1989
- Time course and properties of late adaptation in spinal motoneurones of the catExperimental Brain Research, 1982
- Discharge frequency and discharge pattern of human motor units during voluntary contraction of muscleElectroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology, 1972