Properties of conditioned abducens nerve responses in a highly reduced in vitro brain stem preparation from the turtle.
- 1 March 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 81 (3) , 1242-1250
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.1999.81.3.1242
Abstract
Previous work suggested that the cerebellum and red nucleus are not necessary for the acquisition, extinction, and reacquistion of the in vitro classically conditioned abducens nerve response in the turtle. These findings are extended in the present study by obtaining conditioned responses (CRs) in preparations that received a partial ablation of the brain stem circuitry. In addition to removing all tissue rostral to and including the midbrain and cerebellum, a transection was made just caudal to the emergence of the IXth nerve. Such ablations result in a 4-mm-thick section of brain stem tissue that functionally eliminates the sustained component of the unconditioned response (UR) while leaving only a phasic component. We refer to this region of brain stem tissue caudal to the IXth nerve as the "caudal premotor blink region." Neural discharge was recorded from the abducens nerve following a single shock unconditioned stimulus (US) applied to the ipsilateral trigeminal nerve. When the US was paired with a conditioned stimulus (CS) applied to the posterior eighth, or auditory, nerve using a delay conditioning paradigm, a positive slope of CR acquisition was recorded in the abducens nerve, and CR extinction was recorded when the stimuli were alternated. Resumption of paired stimuli resulted in reacquisition. Quantitative analysis of the CRs in preparations in which the caudal premotor blink region had been removed and those with cerebellar/red nucleus lesions showed that both types of preparations had abnormally short latency CR onsets compared with preparations in which these regions were intact. Preparations with brain stem transections had significantly earlier CR offsets as more CRs terminated as short bursts when compared with intact or cerebellar lesioned preparations. These data suggest that a highly reduced in vitro brain stem preparation from the turtle can be classically conditioned. Furthermore, the caudal brain stem is not a site of acquisition in this reduced preparation, but it contributes to the sustained activity of both the UR and CR. Finally, the unusually short CR onset latencies following lesions to the cerebellum are not further exacerbated by removal of the caudal brain stem. These studies suggest that convergence of CS and US synaptic inputs onto the abducens nerve reflex circuitry may underlie acquisition in this reduced preparation, but that mechanisms that control learned CR timing arise from the cerebellorubral system.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Cerebellum and Red Nucleus Are Not Required forIn VitroClassical Conditioning of the Turtle Abducens Nerve ResponseJournal of Neuroscience, 1997
- Pattern of extraocular muscle activation during reflex blinkingExperimental Brain Research, 1993
- Muscle activity during unconditioned and conditioned eye blinks in the rabbitBehavioural Brain Research, 1992
- The motor nuclei and sensory neurons of the IIIRD, IVTH, and VITH cranial nerves in the monitor lizard, Varanus exanthematicusJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1988
- The motor complex and primary projections of the trigeminal nerve in the monitor lizard, varanus exanthematicusJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1986
- Anatomical study of the rabbit's corneal-VIth nerve reflex: Connections between cornea, trigeminal sensory complex, and the abducens and accessory abducens nucleiBrain Research, 1984
- The nictitating membrane response: An electrophysiological study of the abducens nerve and nucleus and the accessory abducens nucleus in rabbitBrain Research, 1983
- Location of abducens afferent neurons in the catExperimental Neurology, 1979
- The organization of central auditory pathways in a reptile,Iguana iguanaJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1978
- The cell masses in the brain stem of the turtle Testudo hermanni; α a topographical and topological analysisJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1974