Response to stretch of proprioceptors in adult rat muscles de-efferented at brith
- 1 January 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Pflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 368 (1-2) , 129-133
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01063465
Abstract
Hind-limb muscles of new-born rats were de-efferented by removing the lumbosacral spinal cord. Spinal ganglia remained intact, together with their peripheral axon. The presence of sensory terminals in limb spindles, induces the full ultrastructural differentiation of muscle spindles, as has been shown previously. In the present paper we have shown by integrating the sensory discharges in the whole nerve from chronically de-efferented muscles that even several months after birth, muscle proprioceptors (probably mostly spindles) still maintain their basic mechanoreceptor properties. Although the limbs were completely immobilized throughout the whole experimental period, spindles from these chronically de-efferented muscles still responded as slowly adapting receptors. The dynamic component was also present in the integrated neurogram response during stretching. It thus appears that basic functional properties of rat muscle proprioceptors persist even when these receptors differentiate and survive without motor innervation and any adequate functional stimuli, i.e. under conditions of permanent disuse.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- The differentiation of intrafusal fibre types in rat muscle spindles after motor denervationCell and tissue research, 1974
- Alterations in spindle activity during long-term tenotomy in the rat gastrocnemius muscleExperimental Neurology, 1973
- Development of muscle spindles deprived of fusimotor innervationCell and tissue research, 1973
- The increased response of chronically de-efferented rat muscle spindles to stretchBrain Research, 1970
- [The effect of acetylcholine on normal and denervated muscle receptors].1969
- SENSORY OUTFLOW FROM CHRONICALLY TENOTOMIZED MUSCLES1963
- The response of de‐efferented muscle spindle endings in the cat's soleus to slow extension of the muscleThe Journal of Physiology, 1961
- Supraspinal control of the muscle spindles and its significanceThe Journal of Physiology, 1953
- ATROPHY AND DEGENERATION IN THE MUSCLE SPINDLE.Brain, 1932