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1.
Activity patterns of the constituent neurons of the posterior cardiac plate-pyloric system in the stomatogastric ganglion of the mantis shrimp Squilla oratoria were studied by recording spontaneous burst discharges intracellularly from neuronal somata. These neurons were identified electrophysiologically, and synaptic connections among them were qualitatively analysed. The posterior cardiac plate constrictor, pyloric constrictor, pyloric dilator and ventricular dilator motoneurons, and the pyloric interneuron were involved in the posterior cardiac plate-pyloric system. All the cell types could produce slow burst-forming potentials which led to repetitive spike discharges. These neurons generated sequentially patterned outputs. Most commonly, the posterior cardiac plate neuron activity was followed by the activity of pyloric constrictor neurons, and then by the activity of pyloric dilator/pyloric interneuron, and ventricular dilator neurons. The motoneurons and interneuron in the posterior cardiac plate-pyloric system were connected to each other either by electrical or by inhibitory chemical synapses, and thus constructed the neural circuit characterized by a wiring diagram which was structurally similar to the pyloric circuit of decapods. The circuitry in the stomatogastric ganglion was strongly conserved during evolution between stomatopods and decapods, despite significant changes in the peripheral structure of the foregut. There were more electrical synapses in stomatopods, and more reciprocal inhibitory synapses in decapods.Abbreviations EJP excitatory junctional potential - IPSP inhibitory postsynaptic potential - CoG commissural ganglion - CPG central pattern generator - ion inferior oesophageal nerve - OG oesophageal ganglion - pcp posterior cardiac plate - son superior oesophageal nerve - STG stomatogastric ganglion - stn stomatogastric nerve - PY pyloric constrictor - PD pyloric dilator - VD ventricular dilator - AB pyloric interneuron - lvn lateral ventricular nerves - tcpm transverse cardiac plate muscle  相似文献   

2.
The locust frontal ganglion (FG) constitutes a major source of innervation to the foregut dilator muscles and thus plays a key role in control of foregut movements. This paper reviews our recent studies on the generation and characteristics of FG motor outputs in two distinct and fundamental locust behaviors: feeding and molting. In an in vitro preparation, isolated from all descending and sensory inputs, the FG was spontaneously active and generated rhythmic multi-unit bursts of action potentials, which could be recorded from all efferent nerves. Thus the FG motor pattern is generated by a central pattern generator within the ganglion. Intracellular recordings suggest that only a small fraction (10-20%) of the FG 100 neurons demonstrate rhythmic activity. The FG motor output in vivo was relatively complex, and strongly dependent on the locust's physiological and behavioral state. Rhythmic activity of the foregut was found to depend on the amount of food present in the crop; animals with full crop demonstrated higher FG burst frequency than those with empty crop. At the molt, the FG generates a distinct motor pattern that could be related to air-swallowing behavior.  相似文献   

3.
Neuromodulators orchestrate complex behavioral routines by their multiple and combined effects on the nervous system. In the desert locust, Schistocerca gregaria, frontal ganglion neurons innervate foregut dilator muscles and play a key role in the control of foregut motor patterns. To further investigate the role of the frontal ganglion in locust behavior, we currently focus on the frontal ganglion central pattern generator as a target for neuromodulation. Application of octopamine, a well-studied insect neuromodulator, generated reversible disruption of frontal ganglion rhythmic activity. The threshold for the modulatory effects of octopamine was 10–6 mol l–1, and 10–4 mol l–1 always abolished the ongoing rhythm. In contrast to this straightforward modulation, allatostatin, previously reported to be a myoinhibitor of insect gut muscles, showed complex, tri-modal, dose-dependent effects on frontal ganglion rhythmic pattern. Using a novel cross-correlation analysis technique, we show that different allatostatin concentrations have very different effects not only on cycle period but also on temporal characteristics of the rhythmic bursts of action potentials. Allatostatin also altered the frontal ganglion rhythm in vivo. The analysis technique we introduce may be instrumental in the study of not fully characterized neural circuits and their modulation. The physiological significance of our results and the role of the modulators in locust behavior are discussed.Abbreviation CPG central pattern generator - FG frontal ganglion - JH juvenile hormone - STNS stomatogastric nervous system  相似文献   

4.
Knowledge of the neuroanatomy of the sucking pump of Manduca sexta (Sphingidae) is valuable for studies of olfactory learning, pattern generators, and postembryonic modification of motor circuitry. The pump comprises a cibarial valve, a buccal pump, and an esophageal sphincter valve. Cibarial opener and closer muscles control the cibarial valve. Six pairs of dilator muscles and a compressor muscle operate the buccal pump. The cibarial opener and one pair of buccal dilator muscles are innervated by paired neurons in the tritocerebrum, and the cibarial opener has double, bilateral innervation. Their tritocerebral innervation indicates that these muscles evolved from labro-clypeal muscles. The remaining paired buccal dilator muscles each are innervated by an unpaired motor neuron in the frontal ganglion. These motor neurons project bilaterally through the frontal connectives to dendritic arborizations in the tritocerebrum. These projections also have a series of dendritic-like arborizations in the connectives. The cibarial closer and buccal compressor muscles are also innervated by motor neurons in the frontal ganglion, but only the closer muscle neuron projects bilaterally to the tritocerebrum. The innervation of the pump muscles indicates that they are associated with the stomodaeum, and, therefore, the buccal pump evolved from the anterior stomodaeum rather than from the cibarium.  相似文献   

5.
The stomatogastric nervous system (SNS) associated with the foregut was studied in 3rd instar larvae of Drosophila melanogaster and Calliphora vicina (blowfly). In both species, the foregut comprises pharynx, esophagus, and proventriculus. Only in Calliphora does the esophagus form a crop. The position of nerves and neurons was investigated with neuronal tracers in both species and GFP expression in Drosophila. The SNS is nearly identical in both species. Neurons are located in the proventricular and the hypocerebral ganglion (HCG), which are connected to each other by the proventricular nerve. Motor neurons for pharyngeal muscles are located in the brain not, as in other insect groups, in the frontal ganglion. The position of the frontal ganglion is taken by a nerve junction devoid of neurons. The junction is composed of four nerves: the frontal connectives that fuse with the antennal nerves (ANs), the frontal nerve innervating the cibarial dilator muscles and the recurrent nerve that innervates the esophagus and projects to the HCG. Differences in the SNS are restricted to a crop nerve only present in Calliphora and an esophageal ganglion that only exists in Drosophila. The ganglia of the dorsal organs give rise to the ANs, which project to the brain. The extensive conformity of the SNS of both species suggests functional parallels. Future electrophysiological studies of the motor circuits in the SNS of Drosophila will profit from parallel studies of the homologous but more accessible structures in Calliphora.  相似文献   

6.
To evaluate whether sex differences in the proportions of fibers of different phenotypes in the masseter muscle might be the result of differences in the behavior of their motoneurons, we studied the firing patterns of masseter motoneurons in adult male and female rabbits. Activity in individual motoneurons was determined from high spatial resolution EMG recordings made during cortically evoked rhythmic activation of the masticatory muscles. Although some motoneurons could be said to fire according to slow-tonic or fast-phasic patterns, most did not. In both sexes a substantial range of median firing rates and median firing durations was found. In adult males, masseter motoneurons fired more rapidly than those recorded from adult females. No significant sex differences in motoneuron firing duration were found. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that androgen-induced differences in rabbit masseter muscle fiber phenotype are a reflection of differences in motoneuron firing rate. Whether this effect of androgen is directly upon the motoneurons or is the result of a response of muscle fibers to androgen remains to be investigated.  相似文献   

7.
The anatomy and functionality of the stomatogastric nervous system (SNS) of third-instar larvae of Calliphora vicina was characterised. As in other insects, the Calliphora SNS consists of several peripheral ganglia involved in foregut movement regulation. The frontal ganglion gives rise to the frontal nerve and is connected to the brain via the frontal connectives and antennal nerves (ANs). The recurrent nerve connects the frontal- to the hypocerebral ganglion from which the proventricular nerve runs to the proventricular ganglion. Foregut movements include rhythmic contractions of the cibarial dilator muscles (CDM), wavelike movements of crop and oesophagus and contractions of the proventriculus. Transections of SNS nerves indicate mostly myogenic crop and oesophagus movements and suggest modulatory function of the associated nerves. Neural activity in the ANs, correlating with postsynaptic potentials on the CDM, demonstrates a motor pathway from the brain to CDM. Crop volume is monitored by putative stretch receptors. The respective sensory pathway includes the recurrent nerve and the proventricular nerve. The dorsal organs (DOs) are directly connected to the SNS. Mechanical stimulation of the DOs evokes sensory activity in the AN. This suggests the DOs can provide sensory input for temporal coordination of feeding behaviour.  相似文献   

8.
Two buccal mass retractor muscles of Philine are innervatedby at least 4 excitatory motoneurons, whose cell bodies liein the buccal and the cerebral ganglia. The muscle fibres respondto action potentials generated in the motoneurons or their axonswith excitatory junction potentials (ejps), each of which isfollowed by a small twitch-like contraction. Both the electricaland mechanical responses facilitate and summate with repetitivestimulation. A large ventrally located cerebral neuron (VGC) inhibits tensiondevelopment in the muscle by reducing the amplitude of the excitatoryjunction potentials from and identified buccal motoneuron. Acetylcholinereversibly depolarises and causes tonic contraction of the muscles.This action is partially antagonised by hexamethonium, whichalso blocks the ejps from two axons in the buccal and one inthe pedal nerve 9. 5-Hydroxytryptamine potentiates the ejp fromthe identified buccal motoneuron and enhances the rate of relaxation.Histamine reduces the amplitude of the presumed cholinergicbuccal nerve ejps, but does not affect the hexamethonium sensitiveejp in the pedal nerve 9. In this respect its action resemblesthat of the ventral giant cell.  相似文献   

9.
Although locust feeding has been well studied, our understanding of the neural basis of feeding-related motor patterns is still far from complete. This paper focuses on interactions between the pattern of rhythmic movements of the mouth appendages, governed by the suboesophageal ganglion (SOG), and the foregut movements, controlled by the frontal ganglion (FG), in the desert locust. In vitro simultaneous extracellular nerve recordings were made from totally isolated ganglia as well as from fully interconnected SOG-FG and brain-SOG-FG preparations. SOG-confined bath application of the nitric oxide donor, SNP, or the phosphodiesterase antagonist, IBMX, each followed by the muscarinic agonist pilocarpine, consistently induced robust fictive motor patterns in the SOG. This was observed in both isolated and interconnected preparations. In the brain-SOG-FG configuration the SOG-confined modulator application had an indirect excitatory effect on spontaneous FG rhythmic activity. Correlation between fictive motor patterns of the two ganglia was demonstrated by simultaneous changes in burst frequency. These interactions were found to be brain-mediated. Our results indicate the presence of intricate neuromodulation-mediated circuit interactions, even in the absence of sensory inputs. These interactions may be instrumental in generating the complex rhythmic motor patterns of the mandibles and gut muscles during locust feeding or ecdysis-related air swallowing.  相似文献   

10.
1. Transmitters of motoneurons in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) of Squilla were identified by analyzing the excitatory neuromuscular properties of muscles in the posterior cardiac plate (pcp) and pyloric regions. 2. Bath and iontophoretic applications of glutamate produce depolarizations in these muscles. The pharmacological experiments and desensitization of the junctional receptors elucidate the glutamatergic nature of the excitatory junctional potentials (EJPs) evoked in the constrictor and dilator muscles. The reversal potentials for the excitatory junctional current (EJC) and for the glutamate-induced current are almost the same. 3. Some types of dilator muscle show sensitivity to both glutamate and acetylcholine (ACh) exogenously applied. The pharmacological evidence and desensitization of the junctional receptors indicate the glutamatergic nature of neuromuscular junctions in these dually sensitive muscles. The reversal potentials for the EJC and for the ACh-induced current are not identical. 4. Glutamate is a candidate as an excitatory neuro-transmitter at the neuromuscular junctions which the STG motoneurons named PCP, PY, PD, LA and VC make with the identified muscles. Kainic and quisqualic acids which act on glutamate receptors are potent excitants of these muscles. Extrajunctional receptors to ACh are present in two types of the muscle innervated by LA and VC. 5. Neurotransmitters used by the STG motoneurons of stomatopods are compared to those of decapods.  相似文献   

11.
We investigated the modulatory role of a radular mechanoreceptor (RM) in the feeding system of Incilaria. RM spiking induced by current injection evoked several cycles of rhythmic buccal motor activity in quiescent preparations, and this effect was also observed in preparations lacking the cerebral ganglia. The evoked rhythmic activity included sequential activation of the inframedian radular tensor, the supramedian radular tensor, and the buccal sphincter muscles in that order.In addition to the generation of rhythmic motor activity, RM spiking enhanced tonic activities in buccal nerve 1 as well as in the cerebrobuccal connective, showing a wide excitatory effect on buccal neurons. The excitatory effect was further examined in the supramedian radular tensor motoneuron. RM spiking evoked biphasic depolarization in the tensor motoneuron consisting of fast excitatory postsynaptic potentials and prolonged depolarization lasting after termination of RM spiking. These depolarizations also occurred in high divalent cation saline, suggesting that they were both monosynaptic.When RM spiking was evoked in the fictive rasp phase during food-induced buccal motor rhythm, the activity of the supramedian radular tensor muscle showed the greatest enhancement of the three muscles tested, while the rate of ongoing rhythmic motor activity showed no increase.Abbreviations CPG central pattern generator - EPSP excitatory postsynaptic potential - RBMA rhythmic buccal motor activity - RM radular mechanosensory neuron - SMT supramedian radular tensor neuron  相似文献   

12.
Breathing is a complex act requiring the coordinated activity of multiple groups of muscles. Thoracic and abdominal respiratory muscles expand and contract the lungs, whereas pharyngeal and laryngeal respiratory muscles maintain upper airway patency and regulate upper airway resistance. An appreciation of the importance of the latter muscle group in maintaining ventilatory homeostasis and in the pathophysiology of sleep apnea has led to extensive studies examining the neural regulation of pharyngeal dilator muscles. The present review examines the role of heterogeneity in motoneuron and muscle properties in determining the diversity in the electrical and mechanical behaviors of thoracic compared with pharyngeal muscle groups. Specifically, phrenic and hypoglossal motoneuron electrophysiological properties influence whether and the extent to which these neurons will fire in response to a given synaptic input arising from chemo- and mechanoreceptors and from respiratory and nonrespiratory pattern generators. Furthermore, thoracic and pharyngeal muscle properties determine the mechanical response to motoneuronal activity, including the speed of contraction, relationships between motoneuron firing frequency and force production, and whether force is maintained during repetitive activation. Heterogeneity in the functional capabilities of these motoneurons and muscles is in turn determined by diversity of their structural and biochemical properties. Thus, intrinsic properties of respiratory motoneurons and muscles act in concert with neuronal drives in defining the complex electrical and mechanical behavior of pharyngeal and thoracic respiratory motor systems.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Motoneurons in the spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB) innervate the perineal muscles, bulbocavernosus (BC), and levator ani (LA). Testosterone regulates the survival of SNB motoneurons and BC/LA muscles during perinatal life. Previous findings suggest that effects of testosterone on this system may be mediated by trophic factors-in particular, by a factor acting through the ciliary neurotrophic factor alpha-receptor (CNTFRalpha). To test the role of CNTFRalpha in the response of the developing SNB system to testosterone, CNTFRalpha +/+ and -/- mice were treated with testosterone propionate (TP) or oil during late embryonic development. BC/LA muscle size and SNB motoneuron number were evaluated on the day of birth. Large sex differences in BC and LA muscle size were present in newborn mice of both genotypes, but muscle volumes were reduced in CNTFRalpha -/- animals relative to same-sex, wild-type controls. Prenatal testosterone treatment completely eliminated the sex difference in BC/LA muscle size in wild-type animals, and eliminated the effect of the CNTFRalpha gene deletion on muscle size in males. However, the effect of TP treatment on BC and LA muscle sizes was blunted in CNTFRalpha -/- females. SNB motoneuron number was sexually dimorphic in oil-treated, wild-type mice. In contrast, there was no sex difference in SNB motoneuron number in oil-treated, CNTFRalpha knockout mice. Prenatal treatment with testosterone did not increase SNB motoneuron number in CNTFRalpha -/- mice, but also did not significantly increase SNB motoneuron number in newborn wild-type animals. These findings confirm the absence of a sex difference in SNB motoneuron number in CNTFRalpha -/- mice. Moreover, the CNTFRalpha gene deletion influences perineal muscle development and the response of the perineal muscles to testosterone. Prenatal TP treatment of CNTFRalpha -/- males overcomes the effects of the gene deletion on the BC and LA muscles without a concomitant effect on SNB motoneuron number.  相似文献   

15.
Summary In the crickets, Gryllus campestris and Gryllus bimaculatus, the innervation of the dorso-ventral neck muscles M62, M57, and M59 was examined using cobalt staining via peripheral nerves and electrophysiological methods. M62 and M57 are each innervated by two motoneurons in the suboesophageal ganglion. The four motoneurons project into the median nerve to bifurcate into the transverse nerves of both sides. M62 and M57 are the only neck muscles innervated via this route. These bifurcating axon-projections are identical to those of the spiracular motoneurons in the prothoracic ganglion innervating the opener and closer muscle of the first thoracic spiracle in the cricket. The morphology of their branching pattern is described. The neck muscle M57 and the opener muscle of the first thoracic spiracle are additionally innervated by one mesothoracic motoneuron each, with similar morphology. These results suggest, that in crickets, the neck muscles M57 and M62 are homologous to spiracular muscles in the thoracic segments. The two neck muscles M62 and M59 (the posterior neighbour of M57) receive projections from a prothoracic dorsal unpaired median (DUM) neuron that also innervates dorsal-longitudinal neck muscles but not M57. In addition, one or two mesothoracic DUM neurons send axon collaterals intersegmentally to M59. This is the first demonstration of the innervation of neck muscles by DUM neurons.  相似文献   

16.
1.  Muscles of the posterior cardiac plate (pcp) and pyloric regions in the stomach of Squilla are innervated by motoneurons located in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG). The pattern of innervation of various muscles in these regions was determined using electrophysiological methods.
2.  The dilator muscles are singly or doubly innervated by the pyloric dilator neurons (PDs). The constrictor muscles are singly or doubly innervated by the pcp neuron (PCP) or the pyloric neurons (PYs). These muscles are sequentially activated by pcp-pyloric motor outputs produced by the PCP, PY, and PD. All muscles can generate an all-or-nothing spike.
3.  The constrictor muscles generate spikes followed by depolarizing afterpotentials which lead to a sustained depolarization with repetitive spikes. The PYs can entrain rhythmic spike discharges of these muscles.
4.  The spike of muscles remains unchanged by bath application of tetrodotoxin (10-7 M) to suppress neuronal impulse activities, but it is blocked by Mn2+ (10 mM).
5.  The constrictor muscle isolated from the STG displays an endogenous property of spontaneous membrane oscillation that produces a train of spikes. Brief depolarizing or hyperpolarizing stimuli can trigger or terminate an oscillatory potential, respectively, and reset the subsequent rhythm.
6.  The possible functions of myogenicity under the control of discharges of motoneurons in the pyloric constrictor neuromuscular system are discussed.
  相似文献   

17.
Summary The muscles of the pyloric region of the stomach of the crab,Cancer borealis, are innervated by motorneurons found in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG). Electrophysiological recording and stimulating techniques were used to study the detailed pattern of innervation of the pyloric region muscles. Although there are two Pyloric Dilator (PD) motorneurons in lobsters, previous work reported four PD motorneurons in the crab STG (Dando et al. 1974; Hermann 1979a, b). We now find that only two of the crab PD neurons innervate muscles homologous to those innervated by the PD neurons in the lobster,Panulirus interrruptus. The remaining two PD neurons innervate muscles that are innervated by pyloric (PY) neurons inP. interruptus. The innervation patterns of the Lateral Pyloric (LP), Ventricular Dilator (VD), Inferior Cardiac (IC), and PY neurons were also determined and compared with those previously reported in lobsters. Responses of the muscles of the pyloric region to the neurotransmitters, acetylcholine (ACh) and glutamate, were determined by application of exogenous cholinergic agonists and glutamate. The effect of the cholinergic antagonist, curare, on the amplitude of the excitatory junctional potentials (EJPs) evoked by stimulation of the pyloric motor nerves was measured. These experiments suggest that the differences in innervation pattern of the pyloric muscles seen in crab and lobsters are also associated with a change in the neurotransmitter active on these muscles. Possible implications of these findings for phylogenetic relations of decapod crustaceans and for the evolution of neural circuits are discussed.Abbreviations ACh acetylcholine - Carb carbamylcholine - cpv muscles of the cardio-pyloric valve - cpv7n nerve innervating muscle cpv7 - cv muscles of the ventral cardiac ossicles - cv1n nerve innervating muscle cvl - cv2n nerve innervating muscle cv2 - EJP excitatory junctional potential - IC inferior cardiac neuron - IV inferior ventricular neuron - IVN inferior ventricular nerve - LP lateral pyloric neuron - LPG lateral posterior gastric neuron - lvn lateral ventricular nerve - mvn medial ventricular nerve - p muscles of the pylorus - PD pyloric dilator neuron - PD in intrinsic PD neuron - PD ex extrinsic PD neuron - pdn pyloric dilator nerve - PY pyloric neuron - pyn pyloric nerve - STG stomatogastric ganglion - VD ventricular dilator neuron  相似文献   

18.
The neural network underlying rhythmic wing movements in the molluscClione limacina is well-studied. Two different groups of motoneurons innervate two distinct groups of wing muscles. The locomotor rhythm generated in the left and right pedal ganglia is synchronized by interneurons. When the axons of the locomotor motoneurons are crushed, numerous fine neurites sprout towards the denervated muscles and reach them in 8–15 days. At this stage motoneurons project to and synapse on not only correct but equally incorrect muscle targets. After 2 weeks of regeneration the number of incorrect neurites and synaptic connections begins to decrease and following 1.5–2 months all incorrect connections are eliminated, incorrect axons are withdrawn and the behavioral deficit is compensated. In this study the regeneration of interneurons and the growth profiles of inter- and motoneurons were also studiedin vitro. Two individually isolated pedal ganglia were co-cultured in three different configurations: a) the wing nerve stump from one ganglion was fixed against the commissural stump from another ganglion; b) the wing nerve stumps were fixed against each other; c) the commissural stumps were fixed against each other. Under the above experimental conditions we found that the interneurons were able to cross only the contact between two commissural stumps, and in this case found their original targets, restored correct connections and synchronized the rhythm in two pedal ganglia. In contrast, motoneurons were able to cross all types of contacts.  相似文献   

19.
Summary We used physiological recordings, intracellular dye injections and immunocytochemistry to further identify and characterize neurons in the buccal ganglia of Aplysia calif ornica expressing Small Cardioactive Peptide-like immunoreactivity (SCP-LI). Neurons were identified based upon soma size and position, input from premotor cells B4 and B5, axonal projections, muscle innervation patterns, and neuromuscular synaptic properties. SCP-LI was observed in several large ventral neurons including B6, B7, B9, B10, and B11, groups of s1 and s2 cluster cells, at least one cell located at a branch point of buccal nerve n2, and the previously characterized neurons B1, B2 and B15.B6, B7, B9, B10 and B11 are motoneurons to intrinsic muscles of the buccal mass, each displaying a unique innervation pattern and neuromuscular plasticity. Combined, these motoneurons innervate all major intrinsic buccal muscles (I1/I3, I2, I4, I5, I6). Correspondingly, SCP-LI processes were observed on all of these muscles. Innervation of multiple nonhomologous buccal muscles by individual motoneurons having extremely plastic neuromuscular synapses, represents a unique form of neuromuscular organization which is prevalent in this system. Our results show numerous SCPergic buccal motoneurons with widespread ganglionic processes and buccal muscle innervation, and support extensive use of SCPs in the control of feeding musculature.Abbreviations SCP-LI small cardioactive peptide-like immunoreactivity - PSC postsynaptic current - EPSP excitatory postsynaptic potential - IPSP inhibitory postsynaptic potential - FI facilitation index - TMR time to maximal response  相似文献   

20.
The effect of excitation of group Ia afferents, evoked by stimulation of a mixed nerve, on the firing pattern of voluntarily activated single motor units of an antagonist muscle (biceps femoris, triceps surae, and tibialis anterior muscles) was studied. Poststimulus histograms were constructed for rhythmic sequences of motor unit potentials recorded by needle electrodes and the duration of interspike intervals was analyzed. Reciprocal inhibition and other effects accompanying nerve stimulation were discovered in the motoneurons of all three muscles. Distinguishing features of the manifestation of reciprocal inhibition in a discharging motoneuron were investigated; the effect was shown to depend on the time of occurrence of the inhibitory action in the interspike interval.Institute for Problems in Information Transmission, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 10, No. 6, pp. 626–636, November–December, 1978.  相似文献   

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