Depression of group Ia monosynaptic EPSPs in cat hindlimb motoneurones during fictive locomotion
- 1 August 2000
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 526 (3) , 639-652
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7793.2000.00639.x
Abstract
The effects of fictive locomotion on monosynaptic EPSPs recorded in motoneurones and extracellular field potentials recorded in the ventral horn were examined during brainstem-evoked fictive locomotion in decerebrate cats. Composite homonymous and heteronymous EPSPs and field potentials were evoked by group I intensity (<= 2T) stimulation of ipsilateral hindlimb muscle nerves. Ninety-one of the 98 monosynaptic EPSPs were reduced in amplitude during locomotion (mean depression of the 91 was to 66 % of control values); seven increased in amplitude (to a mean of 121 % of control). Twenty-one of the 22 field potentials were depressed during locomotion (mean depression to 72 % of control). All but 14 Ia EPSPs were smaller during both the flexion and extension phases of locomotion than during control. In 35 % of the cases there was < 5 % difference between the amplitudes of the EPSPs evoked during the flexion and extension phases. In 27 % of the cases EPSPs evoked during flexion were larger than those evoked during extension. The remaining 38 % of EPSPs were larger during extension. There was no relation between either the magnitude of EPSP depression or the locomotor phase in which maximum EPSP depression occurred and whether an EPSP was recorded in a flexor or extensor motoneurone. The mean recovery time of both EPSP and field potential amplitudes following the end of a bout of locomotion was approximately 2 min (range, < 10 to > 300 s). Motoneurone membrane resistance decreased during fictive locomotion (to a mean of 61 % of control, n = 22). Because these decreases were only weakly correlated to EPSP depression (r 2 = 0.31) they are unlikely to fully account for this depression. The depression of monosynaptic EPSPs and group I field potentials during locomotion is consistent with the hypothesis that during fictive locomotion there is a tonic presynaptic regulation of synaptic transmission from group Ia afferents to motoneurones and interneurones. Such a reduction in neurotransmitter release would decrease group Ia monosynaptic reflex excitation during locomotion. This reduction may contribute to the tonic depression of stretch reflexes occurring in the decerebrate cat during locomotion.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Group I disynaptic excitation of cat hindlimb flexor and bifunctional motoneurones during fictive locomotionThe Journal of Physiology, 2000
- Depression of muscle and cutaneous afferent‐evoked monosynaptic field potentials during fictive locomotion in the catThe Journal of Physiology, 1999
- Tonic Presynaptic Reduction of Monosynaptic Ia EPSPs during Fictive LocomotionaAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1998
- SENSORI-SENSORY AFFERENT CONDITIONING WITH LEG MOVEMENT: GAIN CONTROL IN SPINAL REFLEX AND ASCENDING PATHSProgress in Neurobiology, 1997
- Modulation, probably presynaptic in origin, of monosynaptic Ia excitation during human gaitExperimental Brain Research, 1996
- Transmission from group II muscle afferents is depressed by stimulation of locus coeruleus/subcoeruleus, K lliker-Fuse and raphe nuclei in the catExperimental Brain Research, 1992
- Large reductions in composite monosynaptic EPSP amplitude following conditioning stimulation are not accounted for by increased postsynaptic conductances in motoneuronsNeuroscience Letters, 1990
- The possibility of phase-dependent monosynaptic and polysynaptic la excitation to homonymous motoneurones during fictive locomotionBrain Research, 1978
- Extracellular Accumulation of K+ Evoked by Activity of Primary Afferent Fibers in the Cuneate Nucleus and Dorsal Horn of CatsCanadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1974