Development of spinal reflexes in the rat fetus studied in vitro.
- 1 September 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 294 (1) , 581-594
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1979.sp012947
Abstract
1. The onset and development of spinal reflex activity was investigated using the isolated spinal cord of the rat fetus. The potential changes generated in motoneurones were recorded extracellularly from L3 ventral roots. 2. A spike potential was recorded from the ventral root at embryonic day 13.5 in response to stimulation of the cord surface close to the ventral root. The discharge persisted in Ca2+‐free solution but was blocked by tetrodotoxin. 3. At embryonic day 14.5, trans‐synaptically evoked discharges were detected in motoneurones. 4. Stimulation of the dorsal root was first effective in eliciting reflex discharges at embryonic day 15.5. The reflex response then consisted of a prolonged depolarization upon which were superimposed small spikes, and was probably polysynaptic. 5. A spike potential, presumably a monosynaptic reflex, was generated at the end of fetal life. This discharge appeared first at embryonic day 17.5 in a primitive form. 6. Between embryonic day 16.5 and 17.5, stimulation of the dorsal root of diffferent segments (L1‐L6) elicited responses similar to those induced by the corresponding (i.e. L3) dorsal root stimulation. These inter‐segmentally induced responses were then reduced in size toward the birth. However, in the presence of strychnine, a train of spike discharges of similar shape to the segmentally induced response was also evoked by stimulation of the dorsal root at L4 or L5. These spikes disappeared during further post‐natal development. 7. It is concluded that synapses in the segmental polysynaptic pathway become functional in a retrograde sequence with respect to the direction of normal reflex impulse flow. The reflex responses, elicited by stimulation of the dorsal roots of different segments, are suggested to be suppressed first by the development of inhibitory mechanisms and then by neuronal cell death or by elimination of the synapses responsible for generating the inter‐segmental reflexes.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effect of repetitive stimulation upon monosynaptic transmission in kittensThe Journal of Physiology, 1965
- Complex bioelectric activity in organized tissue cultures of spinal cord (human, rat and chick)Journal of Cellular and Comparative Physiology, 1964
- Electrophysiology of the Fetal Spinal CordThe Journal of general physiology, 1964
- Electrophysiology of the Fetal Spinal CordThe Journal of general physiology, 1964
- Bioelectric Activity in Long-Term Cultures of Spinal Cord TissuesScience, 1963
- Presynaptic inhibition of the monosynaptic reflex pathway in kittensThe Journal of Physiology, 1963
- Patterns of innervation of kitten motoneuronesThe Journal of Physiology, 1963
- REFLEX TRANSMISSION IN THE KITTENJournal of Neurophysiology, 1962
- The distribution of dorsal root fibres on motor cells in the lumbosacral spinal cord of the cat, and the site of excitatory and inhibitory terminals in monosynaptic pathwaysProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1958
- Development of reflex mechanisms in the spinal cord of albino rat embryos. Correlations between structure and function, and comparisons with the cat and the chickJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1936