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1.
(1) Electrophysiological experiments were undertaken in order to locate and functionally characterize cells of the raccoon main cuneate nucleus (MCN) that can be activated by electrical stimulation of the cerebellum. A total of 98 such units were studied in pentobarbital sodium-anesthetized, methoxyflurane-anesthetized, or decerebrate preparations. Aside from a greater likelihood of resting discharge in the decerebrate preparations, no appreciable variability in physiological properties of the neurons could be attributed to differences in the type of preparation. (2) Using constant latency of response and ability to be blocked by collision as principal criteria, both antidromically (n = 31) and synaptically (n = 67) activated neurons of the main cuneate nucleus could be identified. A small number of MCN neurons could be activated by both cerebellar and thalamic stimulation, but no unit was antidromically activated from both locations. (3) MCN neurons projecting to the cerebellum are located primarily in the ventral polymorphic cell region of the nucleus at and rostral to the obex, corresponding to the “medial tongue” region of Johnson et al (1968). In contrast, neurons synaptically activated from the cerebellum are found throughout the dorsoventral extent of the rostral MCN, including the “clusters” region. (4) The majority of antidromically activated units responded to mechanical stimulation of deeper tissues, and most of these were activated by muscle stretch. Only a small portion (13-15%) of either antidromically or synaptically activated units were classed as light touch units with peripheral receptive fields (RFs) restricted to glabrous surfaces of the forepaw. (5) Glabrous skin RFs located on the digital surfaces are smaller than those located on the palm pads. In both cases, RFs are larger than those associated with primary afferent fibers, but toward the low end of the distribution for MCN neurons not activated by cerebellar stimulation. (6) All MCN units activated by cerebellar stimulation, regardless of modality, respond to mechanical stimulation with trains of irregularly spaced single spikes. Glabrous skin cutaneous mechanoreceptive MCN neurons, whether rapidly or slowly adapting, respond to ramp indentations with an instantaneous frequency which may be described as a power function of ramp velocity, with exponents less than one. These values are in the same range as those previously reported for primary afferents of the cuneate fasciculus (Pubols and Pubols, 1973).  相似文献   

2.
Extracellular recordings were used to characterize responses to cutaneous mechanical stimulation of 78 neurons in the rat nucleus submedius (SM). Thirty-nine of these units were activated by some type of cutaneous mechanical stimulation. Eighteen cells were activated exclusively by noxious stimuli. In 13 of these cells, responses were of swift onset and relatively rapid termination following stimulus application. In contrast, in three neurons responses were delayed both in onset and termination, and in two the response was immediate, but the markedly increased evoked activity outlasted stimulus application by 13 min. Receptive fields (RFs) of these nociceptive neurons were generally large, although none were bilateral. Four SM neurons were activated by innocuous stimuli, but their maximal response was obtained only after noxious stimulation. Responses of all of these neurons were of immediate onset and recovery, and their RFs were large (two were bilateral). Twelve SM neurons were activated maximally by innocuous stimuli. Responses of seven of these cells were immediate in onset and termination, while that of three were delayed in both onset and termination. Two of the 12 innocuous-only neurons quickly became unresponsive to repeated stimulus applications, and could be reactivated only after a rest period during which no stimuli were applied. RFs of these units were also generally large, and in three cases were bilateral. Five SM neurons responded by decreasing, or completely ceasing, their firing subsequent to noxious-only (n = 2), or innocuous-only (n = 3) stimulation. Four of these units had large RFs (two were bilateral). The remaining 39 SM neurons could not be activated by any type of mechanical cutaneous stimulation we tried.

Electrical stimulation of the ventrolateral orbital cortex (VLO) was employed to examine frontal cortical projections of 21 SM neurons. Ten of these units were activated, although all of them synaptically rather than antidromically, and two were inhibited. There was no clear-cut relationship between neuronal location, physiological type, RF site, or VLO stimulation effects among the 39 SM neurons.

These results provide further support for the involvement of SM neurons in nociceptive information signaling, and suggest additionally that the role of the nucleus is not limited to nociception but encompasses a wider range of cutaneous sensations.  相似文献   

3.
Extracellular recordings were used to characterize responses to cutaneous mechanical stimulation of 78 neurons in the rat nucleus submedius (SM). Thirty-nine of these units were activated by some type of cutaneous mechanical stimulation. Eighteen cells were activated exclusively by noxious stimuli. In 13 of these cells, responses were of swift onset and relatively rapid termination following stimulus application. In contrast, in three neurons responses were delayed both in onset and termination, and in two the response was immediate, but the markedly increased evoked activity outlasted stimulus application by 13 min. Receptive fields (RFs) of these nociceptive neurons were generally large, although none were bilateral. Four SM neurons were activated by innocuous stimuli, but their maximal response was obtained only after noxious stimulation. Responses of all of these neurons were of immediate onset and recovery, and their RFs were large (two were bilateral). Twelve SM neurons were activated maximally by innocuous stimuli. Responses of seven of these cells were immediate in onset and termination, while that of three were delayed in both onset and termination. Two of the 12 innocuous-only neurons quickly became unresponsive to repeated stimulus applications, and could be reactivated only after a rest period during which no stimuli were applied. RFs of these units were also generally large, and in three cases were bilateral. Five SM neurons responded by decreasing, or completely ceasing, their firing subsequent to noxious-only (n = 2), or innocuous-only (n = 3) stimulation. Four of these units had large RFs (two were bilateral). The remaining 39 SM neurons could not be activated by any type of mechanical cutaneous stimulation we tried. Electrical stimulation of the ventrolateral orbital cortex (VLO) was employed to examine frontal cortical projections of 21 SM neurons. Ten of these units were activated, although all of them synaptically rather than antidromically, and two were inhibited. There was no clear-cut relationship between neuronal location, physiological type, RF site, or VLO stimulation effects among the 39 SM neurons. These results provide further support for the involvement of SM neurons in nociceptive information signaling, and suggest additionally that the role of the nucleus is not limited to nociception but encompasses a wider range of cutaneous sensations.  相似文献   

4.
Electrophysiological recordings were made from the median, ulnar, radial, and dorsal ulnar nerves to determine the types of mechanosensory receptors serving glabrous and hairy skin surfaces of the raccoon forepaw. In addition to the cutaneous mechanoreceptors, fibers innervating deep tissues were also recorded from each of these nerves. These included sensory fibers innervating muscles, joints, claws, and the subcutaneous pulp.

The array of receptors serving raccoon glabrous skin was the same as found in monkeys and humans: Rapidly adapting (RA), slowly adapting (SA), and Pacinian (Pc) fibers were characterized. Pacinian fibers have been rarely described in previous physiological studies of the raccoon peripheral nerves, but in the present study they composed between 14% and 18% of the glabrous skin mechanoreceptors recorded. A distal-proximal gradient in the density of skin innervation was evident for all three types of receptors.

Receptors characterized in the hairy skin of the dorsal paw were similar to those described in other mammals, and included both down and guard hair afferents, non-hair-associated RA fibers, and SA I and SA II fibers. The relative proportions of these fibers differed from those generally reported for the hairy skin of other mammals. SA hair-associated afferent fibers, which have been reported previously only in primate hairy skin, were also found in large numbers in the raccoon. Similarities and differences in the frequency and types of receptors innervating the raccoon forepaw, the forepaws of other mammals, and the hands of primates (including humans) are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
A single-unit population study of the feline cuneate nucleus was carried out to identify principal neuron types, their distribution within the nucleus, pattern of peripheral activation, and receptive field characteristics. Units were also tested for response to isolated dorsal column or dorsolateral funicular electrical stimulation. The nucleus was explored in a uniform pattern, and sample size was optimized by applying the search stimulus shocks to the dorsal spinal cord. Single units were defined as spinal afferents, cuneothalamic-relay (CTR) neurons, and non-cuneothalamic-relay (non-CTR) neurons. The following features were observed: (1) The distribution within the nucleus of specific cell types agreed with cytoarchitectural studies: Spinal afferent fibers were superficial and caudal; 22% of neurons were CTR neurons; CTR neurons were most dense in the middle of the nucleus and were largely separate from non-CTR neurons. (2) Of the 58 neurons tested for response to isolated dorsal column and dorsolateral funicular stimulation, 24% were activated from both tracts. (3) Convergent input from the off-focus periphery (defined as other than the ipsilateral forelimb) was detected in both CTR and non-CTR neurons, most commonly from the contralateral forepaw. Several neurons were activated from three limbs. (4) Thirty-seven percent of units were unresponsive to hair movement, touch, muscle palpation, or movement of joints. Compared to spinal fibers and non-CTR neurons, CTR neurons were most likely to have an identifiable input.  相似文献   

6.
We examined stimulus-response relationships of vibrissa-activated mechanosensory neurons of the rat's fifth (trigeminal) ganglion. Single-unit activity was recorded with tungsten microelectrodes. The vibrissae were deflected with a variety of parametrically controlled stimulus waveforms.

We found that the receptive field of each vibrissa-activated neuron consisted of a single vibrissa. Few, if any, unambiguous examples of spontaneous activity were observed in these neurons. Even if true spontaneous activity was present, its observed incidence was low, as were the measured discharge rates.

Thresholds of individual neurons were usually quite discrete; often a 1-2% increase in pulse magnitude (angular displacement) above a level to which the neuron did not respond caused it to discharge on every trial. The distribution of thresholds for the sample was continuous with a median of about 1° and a range of over three orders of magnitude. The most sensitive neurons responded to deflections of less than 0.1°. Many neurons responded to a single suprathreshold pulse with more than one spike. We found no consistent relationships among the thresholds of the additional evoked discharges of an individual neuron other than that the total number of evoked spikes either increased or stayed the same, but never decreased, as stimulus magnitude increased.

About one-third of the neurons examined had velocity thresholds below 3°/sec. Above that value, thresholds were distributed continuously throughout a range of over three orders of magnitude. The median velocity threshold was about 100°/sec. The broad and continuous distributions of both magnitude and velocity thresholds suggest that a population of vibrissa-activated neurons can code stimulus strength smoothly and continuously over a wide range, even though individual neurons may be poorly suited to do so.  相似文献   

7.
The response properties of 322 single units in the electroreceptive midbrain (lateral mesencephalic nucleus, LMN) of the thornback ray, Platyrhinoidis triseriata, were studied using uniform and local electric fields. Tactile, visual, or auditory stimuli were also presented to test for multimodality. Most LMN electrosensory units (81%) are silent in the absence of stimulation. Those with spontaneous activity fired irregularly at 0.5 to 5 impulses/s, the lower values being more common. Two units had firing rates greater than 10/s. Midbrain electrosensory units are largely phasic, responding with one or a few spikes per stimulus onset or offset or both, but the adaptation characteristics of some neurons are complex. The same neuron can exhibit phasic or phasic-tonic responses, depending upon orientation of the electric field. Tonic units without any initial phasic over-shoot were not recorded. Even the phasic-tonic units adapt to a step stimulus within several seconds. Unit thresholds are generally lower than 0.3 microV/cm, the weakest stimulus delivered, although thresholds as high as 5 microV/cm were recorded, Neuronal responses reach a maximum, with few exceptions, at 100 microV/cm and decrease rapidly at higher intensities. LMN neurons are highly sensitive to stimulus repetition rates: most responded to frequencies of 5 pulses/s or less; none responded to rates greater than 10/s. Three distinct response patterns are recognized. Best frequencies in response to sinusoidal stimuli range from 0.2 Hz (the lowest frequency delivered) to 4 Hz. Responses decrease rapidly at 8 Hz or greater, and no units responded to frequencies greater than 32 Hz. Most LMN neurons have small, well defined excitatory electroreceptive fields (RFs) exhibiting no surround inhibition, at least as detectable by methods employed here. Seventy-eight percent of units recorded had RFs restricted to the ventral surface: of these, 98% were contralateral. The remaining 22% of units had disjunct dorsal and ventral receptive fields. Electrosensory RFs on the ventral surface are somatotopically organized. Anterior, middle, and posterior body surfaces are mapped at the rostral, middle, and caudal levels, respectively, of the contralateral LMN. The lateral, middle, and medial body are mapped at medial, middle, and lateral levels of the nucleus. Moreover, the RFs of all units isolated in a given dorsoventral electrode track are nearly superimposable. About 40% of LMN, measured from the dorsal surface, is devoted to input from ventral electroreceptors located in a small region rostral and lateral to the mouth.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Electrical activity of single vibrissa-activated neurons was recorded in pars interpolaris and pars oralis of the nucleus of the trigeminal spinal tract of rats. Stimuli consisted of quantitatively controlled deflections of individual mystacial vibrissae. The evoked spike trains were analyzed as point-process time series with a variety of quantitative procedures. Most second-order trigeminal neurons were directionally sensitive. About one-third of interpolaris neurons and over half of oralis neurons responded to axial push of the hair shaft. About half of the neurons of both oralis and interpolaris had receptive fields that included more than one vibrissa. The upper-quartile receptive field size of neurons of interpolaris was about half that of oralis, although the distributions overlapped. In interpolaris, almost one-fifth of the sample discharged in the absence of an intentionally applied stimulus; in oralis, over one-third of the sample displayed background activity. The ranges of angular displacement thresholds of both samples exceeded three orders of magnitude. The distributions differed quantitatively. They were, nevertheless, similar in shape, and exhibited considerable overlap. The median threshold of oralis neurons was about half that of interpolaris neurons, and about one-fifth that of first-order neurons. About one-fourth of the second-order neurons exhibited a nonmonotonic relationship between pulse displacement and the number of evoked spikes. Neurons of interpolaris tended to be more severely nonmonotonic than those of oralis, and some “turned off” at stimulus magnitudes well above threshold. Nevertheless, the number of spikes evoked in either entire sample was a monotonically increasing function of pulse displacement. The range of angular velocity thresholds observed in both second-order samples exceeded three orders of magnitude. As with the angular displacement thresholds, the distributions of angular velocity thresholds were quantitatively different, although their shapes and extremes were similar, and they overlapped extensively. The observed differences of stimulus-response relationships of the neurons in interpolaris and oralis reflect differences in the ways different trigeminal nuclei receive, process, and distribute information to the circuits in which they participate.  相似文献   

9.
Cortical foci in which stimulation produced movement in either the forelimb or hindlimb were isolated in rats. In each experiment, two foci were selected: one for movement in the forelimb, and the other in the hindlimb. Stimulation was subsequently reduced in order to avoid eliciting a movement, and the effects of this stimulation on activity of gracile and cuneate neurons were examined. Both excitation and inhibition were observed and were found to be arranged in a somatotopic manner. Excitation was almost exclusively obtained when the receptive field (RF) of a given neuron corresponded to the body surfaces overlying the joints involved in the cortically evoked movement. A high percentage of neurons with RFs on body surfaces corresponding to, or adjacent to, the region of cortically induced movement were inhibited, while the activity of neurons with RFs distant to the site of movement was seldom modified. These results suggest that cortical influences exerted on the dorsal column nuclei (DCN) in rats are organized in a somatotopic manner.  相似文献   

10.
Macaca nemestrina monkeys were trained to indicate the location of suprathreshold tactile stimuli delivered to the glabrous skin of either foot. The testing paradigm involved self-initiated trials (a bar press), followed by 10-Hz stimulation at one of six locations (e.g., on the distal phalanx of the second toe on the left foot), providing the opportunity for the animal to press one of six buttons located on a facing panel. The buttons were positioned on a picture of a monkey's feet at locations corresponding to the skin loci that were stimulated on different trials. If the animal first presed the button corresponding to the position stimulated, liquid reward was delivered; responses to any other button terminated stimulation without reward, requiring initiation of another trial for the opportunity to receive reinforcement.

The localization errors for normal monkeys were reliably greater along the mediolateral dimension of the foot than they were proximodistally. For example, stimulation of the tip of toe 4 elicited responses to the button at the tip of toe 2 on 25% of the trials, as compared with only 10% errors betweeen the tip of toe 4 and the pad at the base of toe 4. Following unilateral interruption of the dorsal spinal columns at an upper thoracic level, the capacity for absolute tactile localization was unchanged over months of testing. The greater localization accuracy along the proximodistal axis of the foot remained after dorsal column transection.

In order to evaluate neural substrates of localization by monkeys, single-neuron receptive field (RF) sizes and distributions within the first somatosensory (SI) cortex were examined to determine the overlap or separation of the representations of different points on glabrous skin. The sample of neurons that provided the RF data was obtained in previous investigations of unanesthetized, neuromuscularly blocked Macaca fascicularis monkeys. Analysis of RF overlap revealed that greater than 50% of cytoarchitectural area 1 units that responded to stimulation of one digit tip also responded to another digit or to the pad at the base of a digit. These large RFs seem poorly suited to subserve a high degree of spatial localization and are compatible with the frequent localization errors by the monkeys in the behavioral experiments. However, the area 1 RF data do not explain the tendency of these animals to exhibit better localization accuracy along the proximodistal axis than along the mediolateral axis of the volar foot. We suggest that the observed asymmetry of localization accuracy may be the result of dynamic neural mechanisms that involve lateral interactions between cortical columns. Evidence from metabolic mapping experiments suggests that these lateral interactions determine the spatial distribution of cortical columns that respond to repetitive somatic stimuli (Whitsel et al, 1988).  相似文献   

11.
Blitz DM  Regehr WG 《Neuron》2005,45(6):917-928
Local interneurons provide feed-forward inhibition from retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) to thalamocortical (TC) neurons, but questions remain regarding the timing, magnitude, and functions of this inhibition. Here, we identify two types of inhibition that are suited to play distinctive roles. We recorded excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs/IPSCs) in TC neurons in mouse brain slices and activated individual RGC inputs. In 34% of TC neurons, we identified EPSCs and IPSCs with identical thresholds that were tightly correlated, indicating activation by the same RGC. Such "locked" IPSCs occurred 1 ms after EPSC onset. The remaining neurons had only "nonlocked" inhibition, in which EPSCs and IPSCs had different thresholds, indicating activation by different RGCs. Nonlocked inhibition may refine receptive fields within the LGN by providing surround inhibition. In contrast, dynamic-clamp recordings suggest that locked inhibition improves the precision of synaptically evoked responses in individual TC neurons by eliminating secondary spikes.  相似文献   

12.
In the bullfrog, two types of slowly adapting (SA) cutaneous mechanoreceptor afferent units have been identified physiologically: irregularly discharging frog type I (Ft I) units in both warty and nonwarty skin, and regularly discharging frog type II (Ft II) units in the nonwarty skin. In the present study, mechanosensitive spots of Ft I units were located around the skin warts in the warty skin. The quinacrine technique (Crowe and Whitear, 1978) revealed that quinacrine-accumulating Merkel cells were present around the skin warts and near the orifice of skin glands that also surrounded the skin warts. Thus, a significant correlation was found between the location of Merkel cells and the receptive fields (RFs) of Ft I units in the warty skin. Direct current (DC) stimulation was applied for 1 sec to the skin inside and outside the mechanical RFs of the two types of SA units. RFs for DC stimulation were located on those for mechanical stimulation in both types of SA units. The current threshold required to produce a single spike was lower in cathodal than in anodal pulses in both types of SA units. Greater current intensity elicited an increased number of spikes, but the effective polarity of currents was anodal for Ft I units and cathodal for Ft II units. The optimal current intensity for producing prolonged discharges ranged from +60 to +100 microA in Ft I units and - from -50 to -80 microA in Ft II units. The sequence of impulses evoked was irregular in Ft I units and regular in Ft II units, as seen in mechanical responses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The role of spread of skin deformation in activating cutaneous mechanoreceptors at a distance from their threshold receptive fields (RFs) was examined in glabrous skin of the North American raccoon and the squirrel monkey. One feedback-controlled mechanical stimulus probe was used to indent the skin to a controlled depth at a constant velocity, at varying distances from a second probe, which was used to monitor vertical displacement depth and velocity at this distant site. In many instances, the monitor probe was positioned over the RF of a cutaneous mechanoreceptor, and single-unit action potentials were simultaneously recorded from individual fibers of the median or ulnar nerve.

With distance from the site of stimulation, there was a systematic, monotonic decline in indentation depth and velocity; velocity fell off with distance more rapidly than depth. The degree of diminution with distance varied with the size, shape, and curvature of the digital or palm pad stimulated. Spread of indentation was more restricted on digital than on palm pads, and was more restricted across monkey skin than across raccoon skin. Spread was less with higher-velocity than with lower-velocity indentations, but was seemingly unaffected by indentation depth.

As expected from the findings noted above, the number of spikes discharged by slowly adapting mechanoreceptive afferent fibers declined more rapidly with distance between stimulus site and RF for digital than for palmar RFs, in squirrel monkey than in raccoon skin, and with higher-velocity than with lower-velocity stimuli. Furthermore, the number of spikes occurring during either ramp or early static indentation phases of stimulation dropped to zero more rapidly with distance than did either vertical indentation depth or velocity. Decreases with distance in both indentation depth and velocity acted to restrict the size of suprathreshold RFs. For most units, horizontal components of mechanical stimulation subtracted from the effects of vertical components.

It is suggested, on the basis of this and other studies, that many neural and perceptual phenomena usually attributed to central mechanisms of afferent inhibition may be attributable, at least in part, to mechanical properties of the skin. In addition, the present data suggest that regional variations in the two-point limen may be associated with variations in spread of mechanical deformation. The conclusion that glabrous skin and subjacent soft tissues act as a low-pass filter system provides a mechanical basis for the relative efficacy of high-frequency vibratory stimuli in tactile pattern perception. Finally, the view is presented that the skin and subjacent tissues should be considered, along with cutaneous mechanoreceptors, as forming a tactile receptor organ system.  相似文献   

14.
Intracellular recordings from the lumbosacral dorsal horn were made to identify the axonal projection and the afferent innervation of the lateral cervical nucleus (LCN) and solitary tract nucleus (STN) on the spinal neurons of chloralose-anesthetized cats. A total of 49 neurons from laminae III-V in the spinal dorsal horn responded to stimulation of both the LCN and STN. Of these, 28 and 21 neurons responded antidromically and orthodromically to stimulation of the LCN and STN, respectively. Seven of the 28 antidromically activated neurons were followed by one or more responses synaptically driven from the LCN and/or STN. The diameter of these ascending or descending fibers was in the range of A delta fibers. The results indicate that (1) some spinal neurons, namely spinocervical tract-spinosolitary tract (SCT-SST) neurons, issue branched axons of A delta-fibers and dually project to both LCN and STN; (2) some SCT-SST neurons receive innervation from both the LCN and STN; (3) some spinal neurons and interneurons are dually innervated by descending fibers originating from both the LCN and STN, and (4) the convergence and integration between somatic and visceral sensory inputs might occur in the SCT-SST neurons.  相似文献   

15.
A new species of the family Magnoliaceae, Magnolia cattienensis Q. N. Vu from Cát Tiên National Park, in the Lâm ??ng Province, south of Vietnam is described and illustrated. Magnolia cattienensis is most closely related to M. henryi Dunn, but differs by narrowly cuneate and gradually attenuate bases of the leaves (vs broadly cuneate, not attenuated), pilose pedicles (vs glabrous), and villose peduncles (vs glabrescent), pubescent gynoecium (vs glabrous), and fewer mature carpels (26–30 vs 85–90) with dense trichomes (vs glabrous).  相似文献   

16.
The contribution of joint afferents to the response of cortical neurons in area 3a to mechanical stimulation of the contralateral hindlimb was evaluated in cats anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital and paralyzed with pancuronium bromide. The hindlimb projection to the pericruciate cortex was established by recording the evoked potentials to electrical stimulation of the sciatic nerve and some of its branches, the biceps-semitendinosus and the quadratus femoris

Out of 169 neurons, 63 responded exclusively to cutaneous stimuli (superficial), whereas the others could be activated by local pressure of hindlimb muscles and/or by joint rotation (deep). Deep neurons were classified as slowly adapting (SA) or rapidly adapting (RA) units. In the neurons responding exclusively to joint rotation, the site of the receptive field could not be identified with certainty. In 13 deep neurons, their firing was affected by rotation of multiple joints of the contralateral hindlimb

In an attempt to identify the source of activation of cortical neurons, partial denervations and muscle disconnections were performed in five animals to isolate and stimulate the hip capsule. In these preparations, in 14 of 15 cortical neurons the source of activation was localized in the periarticular muscles, with no response to mechanical stimulation of the joint capsule. Only one neuron (S A) could be selectively excited by punctate pressure on the hip capsule

Our results suggest that in neurons of area 3a of the cat, the information about the position of the femur relies mainly on muscle afferents  相似文献   

17.
Previous histological and neurophysiological studies have shown that the innervation density of rapidly adapting (RA) mechanoreceptive fibers increases towards the fingertip. Since the psychophysical detection threshold depends on the contribution of several RA fibers, a high innervation density would imply lower thresholds. However, our previous human study showed that psychophysical detection thresholds for the Non-Pacinian I channel mediated by RA fibers do not improve towards the fingertip. By recording single-unit spike activity from rat RA fibers, here we tested the hypothesis that the responsiveness of RA fibers is asymmetric in the proximo-distal axis which may counterbalance the effects of innervation density. RA fibers (n?=?32) innervating the digital glabrous skin of rat hind paw were stimulated with 40-Hz sinusoidal mechanical bursts at five different stimulus locations relative to the receptive field (RF) center (two distal, one RF center, two proximal). Different contactor sizes (area: 0.39, 1.63, 2.96?mm2) were used. Rate-intensity functions were constructed based on average firing rates, and the absolute spike threshold and the entrainment threshold were obtained for each RA fiber. Thresholds for proximal stimulus locations were found to be significantly higher than those for distal stimulus locations, which suggests that the mechanical stimulus is transmitted better towards the proximal direction. The effect of contactor size was not significant. Mechanical impedance of the rat digital glabrous skin was further measured and a lumped-parameter model was proposed to interpret the relationship between the asymmetric response properties of RA fibers and the mechanical properties of the skin.  相似文献   

18.
Spike discharge activity of RA-type SI cortical neurons was recorded extracellularly in anesthetized monkeys and cats. Multiple applications (trials) of 10-50 Hz sinusoidal vertical skin displacement stimulation ("flutter") were delivered to the receptive field (RF). Analysis revealed large and systematic temporal trends not only in SI RA neuron responsivity (measured as spikes/s and as spikes/stimulus cycle), but also in entrainment, and in phase angle of the entrained responses. In contrast to SI RA neurons, the response of RA skin afferents to comparable conditions of skin flutter stimulation exhibited little or no dynamics. The occurrence and form of the SI RA neuron response dynamics that accompany skin flutter stimulation are shown to depend on factors such as stimulus frequency and the locus of the recording site in the global cortical response pattern. Comparison of recordings obtained in near-radial vs tangential microelectrode penetrations further reveals that the SI RA neuron response dynamics that occur during skin flutter stimulation are relatively consistent within, but heterogeneous across column-sized regions. The observed SI RA neuron response dynamics are suggested to account, in part, for the improved capacity to discriminate stimulus frequency after an exposure ("adaptation") to skin flutter stimulation (Goble and Hollins, J Acoust Soc Am 96: 771-780, 1994). Parallels with recent proposals about the contributions to visual perception of short-term primary sensory cortical neuron dynamics and synchrony in multineuron spike activity patterns are identified and discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Spike discharge activity of RA-type SI cortical neurons was recorded extracellularly in anesthetized monkeys and cats. Multiple applications (trials) of 10-50 Hz sinusoidal vertical skin displacement stimulation ("flutter") were delivered to the receptive field (RF). Analysis revealed large and systematic temporal trends not only in SI RA neuron responsivity (measured as spikes/s and as spikes/stimulus cycle), but also in entrainment, and in phase angle of the entrained responses. In contrast to SI RA neurons, the response of RA skin afferents to comparable conditions of skin flutter stimulation exhibited little or no dynamics. The occurrence and form of the SI RA neuron response dynamics that accompany skin flutter stimulation are shown to depend on factors such as stimulus frequency and the locus of the recording site in the global cortical response pattern. Comparison of recordings obtained in near-radial vs tangential microelectrode penetrations further reveals that the SI RA neuron response dynamics that occur during skin flutter stimulation are relatively consistent within, but heterogeneous across column-sized regions. The observed SI RA neuron response dynamics are suggested to account, in part, for the improved capacity to discriminate stimulus frequency after an exposure ("adaptation") to skin flutter stimulation (Goble and Hollins, J Acoust Soc Am 96: 771-780, 1994). Parallels with recent proposals about the contributions to visual perception of short-term primary sensory cortical neuron dynamics and synchrony in multineuron spike activity patterns are identified and discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The Merkel cell–neurite (MCN) complex generates slowly adapting type 1 (SA1) response when mechanically stimulated. Both serotonin (5-HT) and glutamate have been implicated in the generation of normal SA1 responses, but previous studies have been inconclusive as to what their roles are or how synaptic transmission occurs. In this study, excised dorsal skin patches from common water frogs (Rana ridibunda) were stimulated by von Frey hairs during perfusion in a tissue bath, and single-unit spike activity was recorded from SA1 fibres. Serotonin had no significant effect on the SA1 response at low (10?µM) concentration, significantly increased activity in a force-independent manner at 100?µM, but decreased activity with reduced responsiveness to force at 1?mM. Glutamate showed no effect on the responsiveness to force at 100?µM. MDL 72222 (100?µM), an ionotropic 5-HT3 receptor antagonist, completely abolished the responsiveness to force, suggesting that serotonin is released from Merkel cells as a result of mechanical stimulation, and activated 5-HT3 receptors on the neurite. The metabotropic 5-HT2 receptor antagonist, ketanserin, greatly reduced the SA1 fibre's responsiveness to force, as did the non-specific glutamate receptor antagonist, kynurenic acid. This supports a role for serotonin and glutamate as neuromodulators in the MCN complex, possibly by activation and/or inhibition of signalling cascades in the Merkel cell associated with vesicle release. Additionally, it was observed that SA1 responses contained a force-independent component, similar to a dynamic response observed during mechanical vibrations.  相似文献   

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