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1.
(1) The musculature of the walking legs is analysed with regard to both morphology and function in the scorpion, Vaejovis spinigerus (Wood, 1863) (Vaejovidae, Scorpiones, Arachnida), and selected other species. Conspicuous features are multipartite muscles, muscles spanning two joints, and partial lack of antagonistic muscles. The muscle arrangement is compared to that in the walking limbs of other Arthropoda and possible phylogenetic implications are discussed. (2). Histochemical characterisation of selected leg muscles indicates that these are composed of layers of slow, intermediate and fast muscle fibres. Anti-GABA immunohistochemistry shows that mainly the intermediate fibres receive innervation from putative inhibitory motoneurons. (3). Intracellular recording from muscle fibres reveals both excitatory and inhibitory muscle innervation. Individual muscle fibres may receive input from more than one inhibitory motoneuron, as indicated by different IPSP amplitudes. (4). The motoneuron supply of the leg muscles is analysed by retrograde fills of motor nerves. The general arrangement of leg motoneurons in the central nervous system and motoneuron anatomy conforms to the situation in pterygote insects and decapod crustaceans. For example, there are an anterior and a posterior group of leg motoneurons in each hemineuromere, and two contralateral somata near the ganglion midline. Between 12 and 20 motoneurons are found to supply each muscle. Most motoneuron cell bodies supplying a given muscle are arranged in a single cluster with a specific location.  相似文献   

2.
In legged animals, the muscle system has a dual function: to produce forces and torques necessary to move the limbs in a systematic way, and to maintain the body in a static position. These two functions are performed by the contribution of specialized motor units, i.e. motoneurons driving sets of specialized muscle fibres. With reference to their overall contraction and metabolic properties they are called fast and slow muscle fibres and can be found ubiquitously in skeletal muscles. Both fibre types are active during stepping, but only the slow ones maintain the posture of the body. From these findings, the general hypothesis on a functional segregation between both fibre types and their neuronal control has arisen. Earlier muscle models did not fully take this aspect into account. They either focused on certain aspects of muscular function or were developed to describe specific behaviours only. By contrast, our neuro-mechanical model is more general as it allows functionally to differentiate between static and dynamic aspects of movement control. It does so by including both muscle fibre types and separate motoneuron drives. Our model helps to gain a deeper insight into how the nervous system might combine neuronal control of locomotion and posture. It predicts that (1) positioning the leg at a specific retraction angle in steady state is most likely due to the extent of recruitment of slow muscle fibres and not to the force developed in the individual fibres of the antagonistic muscles; (2) the fast muscle fibres of antagonistic muscles contract alternately during stepping, while co-contraction of the slow muscle fibres takes place during steady state; (3) there are several possible ways of transition between movement and steady state of the leg achieved by varying the time course of recruitment of the fibres in the participating muscles.  相似文献   

3.
A well-marked hierarchy of centres can be recognized within the suboesophageal lobes and ganglia of the arms. The inputs and outputs of each lobe are described. There are sets of motoneurons and intermediate motor centres, which can be activated either from the periphery or from above. They mostly do not send fibres up to the optic or higher motor centres. However, there is a large set of fibres running from the magnocellular lobe to all the basal supraoesophageal lobes. The centre for control of the four eye-muscle nerves in the anterior lateral pedal lobe receives many fibres direct from the statocyst and from the peduncle and basal lobes, but none direct from the optic lobe. The posterior lateral pedal is a backward continuation of the oculomotor centre, containing large cells that may be concerned in initiating attacks by the tentacles. An intermediate motor centre in the posterior pedal lobe probably controls steering. It sends fibres to the funned and head retractors, and by both direct and interrupted pathways to the fin lobe. It receives fibres from the crista nerve and basal lobes, but none direct from the optic lobe. The jet control centre of the ventral magnocellular lobe receives fibres from the statocyst and skin and also from the optic and basal lobes. Some of these last also give extensive branches throughout the palliovisceral lobes. The branching patterns of the dendritic collaterals differ in the various lobes. Some estimates are given of the numbers of synaptic points. The dendritic collaterals of the motoneurons spread through large volumes of neuropil and they overlap. The incoming fibres spread widely and each presumably activates many motoneurons either together or serially. Many of the lobes contain numerous microneurons with short trunks restricted to the lobe, but there are none of these cells in the chromatophore lobes or fin lobes. The microneurons have only few dendritic collaterals, in contrast to the numerous ones on the nearby motoneurons.  相似文献   

4.
We studied the reinnervation of internal intercostal muscles of newborn rats. The distal halves were denervated by nerve section at various ages between birth and 6 weeks. Regardless of the age at denervation, neither evoked nor spontaneous nerve-muscle transmission reappeared until the animals were at least 3 weeks old. Older rats recovered a substantial degree of function within 7 days of nerve section. Normally the motor units in this muscle are narrowly distributed, so most axotomized motoneurons lost their entire synaptic periphery. Reinnervation was by axons which had been sectioned, and regenerated motor units were of normal size and number. There was no collateral sprouting from end plates left intact. Motoneurons axotomized at birth did regenerate axons the full length of the muscle within 7 days of operation. Their failure to reinnervate the muscle was due to delay in forming functional end plates. Nerve section in animals aged 1 month or older resulted in an abnormal pattern of reinnervation; reinnervated motor units were diffusely spread through large portions of the muscle, although they still did not overlap with the region left intact. This indicates that thoracic motoneurons respond to axotomy differently in neonatal rats than they do in adults.  相似文献   

5.
Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) occurs only in some motoneurons. In this study, the presence of CGRP in motor endplates in relation to muscle fibre types was examined in slow (soleus muscle) and fast [tibialis anterior (TA) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL)] leg muscles of the rat. CGRP was detected by use of immunohistochemical methods, and staining for the mitochondrial-bound enzyme NADH-TR was used for demonstration of fibre types. The fibres showing low NADH-TR activity were interpreted as representing IIB fibres. All such fibres located in the superficial portion of TA were innervated by endplates displaying CGRP-like immunoreactivity (LI), whereas in the deep portion of TA some of these fibres lacked CGRP-LI at their endplates. Thirty per cent of the IIB fibres in EDL showed CGRP-LI at the endplates. All fibres in TA and EDL displaying high NADH-TR activity and interpreted as type-IIA fibres, lacked CGRP-LI in their motor innervation. One third of the fibres with intermediate NADH-TR activity in TA exhibited CGRP-LI at their endplates, whereas in EDL only few such fibres displayed CGRP-LI in the endplate formation. These fibres are likely to belong to type-IIX or type-I motor units. CGRP-LI was very rarely detected at the endplates in the soleus muscle. These observations show that distinct differences exist between the slow muscle, soleus, and the fast muscles, TA and EDL, but that there are also differences between the different types of fibres in TA and EDL with respect to presence of CGRP-LI at the endplates. As CGRP-LI was frequently detected at endplates of IIB fibres, it is likely that CGRP has a particular role related to the differentiation and maintenance of these fibres.  相似文献   

6.
The study considers structural-functional relations in motor neuropil of the thoracic ganglia in dragonflies-insects capable of performing very complex and fast maneuvering in flight. The motor neuropil in dragonflies was shown to be more differentiated than in less mobile insects, while its motor nuclei are more outlined and approached to each other. There were revealed dendrites of the leg muscle motoneurons (intermediate nucleus), running to the anterior and posterior nuclei that contain dendrites of the wing muscle motoneurons. A possible role of such a dendrite approaching is discussed for close functional cooperation of wing and leg muscles essential for dragonflies to catch a large prey in flight by using their legs. Peculiarities of structural organization of the wing muscle motoneurons in dragonflies and locusts are considered to suggest the greater functional capabilities of motoneurons in the dragonfly motor apparatus.  相似文献   

7.
SYNOPSIS. When peripheral nerves are cut, the axotomized nervesand denervated muscles undergo atrophic changes which are reversedonly when functional connections are remade in the periphery.The restored interaction completely reverses the effects ofaxotomy and denervation and leads to rematching of the sizeof the motoneuron, muscle unit force, speed and histochemicalproperties, according to the size principle. Differences inunit force and fatigue characteristics between motor unit typesare not fully restored in reinnervated muscles but do not obscuresize relationships between the motoneurons and their muscleunits. Although intact motoneurons will supply increased numbers ofmuscle fibers after partial nerve injuries, regenerating axonsappear to be limited in their ability to enlarge their muscleunits. Increased motor unit force in reinnervated slow motorunits is accounted for primarily by an increase in fiber diameter;fast motor units do not increase their mean force output. As a result of the rematching of muscle unit properties withthe size of the motoneurons that reinnervate them, motor unitproperties are appropriate for fine control of movement aftercomplete or partial nerve injuries. However, regenerating axonsdo not reinnervate their original muscle fibers and unless thefibers are injured close to the muscles, they often fail toreinnervate their original muscles. The mismatching of motorpools with inappropriate target muscles is probably the mainfactor responsible for poor recovery of motor function aftercomplete nerve injuries.  相似文献   

8.
The innervation of each of the muscles involved in mediating head movement in the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria is described in detail. The number of motor neurones to each muscle and the neutral pathway and ganglion of origin of each are deduced from both histological and electrophysiological evidence. Only two of the muscles are, on histological evidence, innervated by as few as four different neurones, while several receive more than ten, and one at least 13. Individual muscles are shown physiologically to receive, in a few cases, as many as six different motor neurones. At least six muscles are innervated by motor neurones originating in more than one ganglion. One group of four muscles consisting in total of less than 100 muscle fibres receives more than 20 different motor neurones from three different ganglia through three or four different nerve roots. In these muscles, many single muscle fibres receive innervation from at least two different ganglia. It is concluded that the segmental nature of an insect muscle can not be deduced solely from a knowledge of the ganglion of origin of the motor innervation to that muscle. The innervation patterns that exist today must reflect past evolutionary development, but changes in the peripheral distribution of motor neurones, or migration of motor neurone cell bodies from one ganglion to another, or the development of additional motor neurones, or several of these factors together, must have formed a part of that development.  相似文献   

9.
Inhibitory motoneurons which supply the leg musculature are identified and characterized in the scorpion, Vaejovis spinigerus (Wood, 1863) (Vaejovidae, Scorpiones, Arachnida). (1) Successive intracellular muscle fiber recordings from antagonists, and correlation of the monitored inhibitory postsynaptic potentials with spikes in motor nerves, suggest supply of the scorpion leg musculature by common inhibitory motoneurons. (2) Anti-GABA immunohistochemistry is combined with transmission electron microscopy to estimate the number of inhibitory motor axons present in the main leg nerve. The number of immunoreactive axons decreases toward more distal leg segments, from 14 to 18 in the basis to 6-8 in the tibia. No immunoreactive axons are detected beyond the tibia. (3) The distribution of putative inhibitory neurons in the subesophageal ganglion mass is determined by anti-GABA immunohistochemistry, revealing notable similarities to the situation in pterygote insects. This provides a framework for the characterization of the inhibitory motoneurons. (4) Backfills from leg nerves are combined with anti-GABA immunocytochemistry to identify inhibitory motoneurons in the central nervous system. Putative inhibitory motoneurons occur in three clusters per hemi-segment. Two clusters are located near the posterior edge of the neuromere, one lateral, the other more medial, and both contain ca. 8-10 cell bodies. The third cluster consists of two somata located contralaterally, just off the ganglion midline.  相似文献   

10.
Stop and start of stepping are two basic actions of the musculo-skeletal system of a leg. Although they are basic phenomena, they require the coordinated activities of the leg muscles. However, little is known of the details of how these activities are generated by the interactions between the local neuronal networks controlling the fast and slow muscle fibres at the individual leg joints. In the present work, we aim at uncovering some of those details using a suitable neuro-mechanical model. It is an extension of the model in the accompanying paper and now includes all three antagonistic muscle pairs of the main joints of an insect leg, together with their dedicated neuronal control, as well as common inhibitory motoneurons and the residual stiffness of the slow muscles. This model enabled us to study putative processes of intra-leg coordination during stop and start of stepping. We also made use of the effects of sensory signals encoding the position and velocity of the leg joints. Where experimental observations are available, the corresponding simulation results are in good agreement with them. Our model makes detailed predictions as to the coordination processes of the individual muscle systems both at stop and start of stepping. In particular, it reveals a possible role of the slow muscle fibres at stop in accelerating the convergence of the leg to its steady-state position. These findings lend our model physiological relevance and can therefore be used to elucidate details of the stop and start of stepping in insects, and perhaps in other animals, too.  相似文献   

11.
Calcitonin gene-related peptide-like immunoreactivity (CGRP-ir) is displayed by motoneurons that innervate striated muscle but is absent from preganglionic parasympathetic motoneurons. One hypothesis to explain this is that CGRP gene expression in motoneurons is, in part, dependent on influences from the innervated organ. To test this hypothesis, we cross-anastomosed the right hypoglossal and cervical vagal nerves of rats so that the vagal motoneurons grew to innervate the musculature of the tongue. Following a recovery period of 17 to 52 weeks, the distribution of CGRP-ir in the dorsal motor vagal nucleus was determined in both cross-anastomosed animals and self-anastomosed control animals. Successful reinnervation of the tongue musculature by vagal motoneurons was demonstrated by showing that electrical stimulation of the central vagus/peripheral hypoglossal nerve produced a twitch of the tongue muscles. Motoneurones of the dorsal motor vagal nucleus, which now innervated the tongue were found to express CGRP-ir, which was evident from the double labeling of neurons with both horseradish peroxidase and CGRP-ir. Motoneurones of the dorsal motor vagal nucleus contralateral to the cross-anastomosis remained CGRP negative. Similarly, motoneurons of the dorsal motor vagal nucleus in control animals where the vagus nerve was self-anastomosed remained CGRP negative, showing that an induction of CGRP expression is not a result of nerve section itself. We suggest that a signal from the striated muscle transported retrogradely via the motor axon regulates expression of CGRP-ir in motoneurons. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
Isografts of sciatic nerve, skeletal muscle, submaxillary gland and, as control experiments, of optice nerve, were transplanted into the non transected spinal cord of young albino mice, through a punctiform pial aperture. Under these conditions, local cellular reactions were reduced and the sensori motor behavior of the operated animals remained apparently undisturbed throughout the experimental period. Within a few days, axonal sprouts issuing mainly from the terminal clubs of intraspinal nerve fibres severed by the grafting procedure were seen elongating and growing into--and presumably throughout--the nervous as well as the muscular and glandular transplants. The Schwann cells of these grafts, either sedentary or migrating towards the cord and intermingling with host reactive glial cells, appeared to guide the growth of the axonal sprouts they ensheathed (from day 3 to day 10) and generally myelinated (as early as day 6). Optic nerve transplants, lacking Schwann cells, were never reinnervated. Furthermore, in control microinjuries without grafting, limited growth of axonal sprouts was observed only when a few host Schwann cells were present. Mouse spinal neurons, therefore, demonstrate a marked capacity for regrowth when minimal damage to the spinal cord is associated with an adequate supply of Schwann cells. In contrast, host as well as transplanted glial cells, were unable, at least when they were not associated with Schwannian elements, to promote regenerative expression of these central neurons.  相似文献   

13.
During infancy, children develop an expanding repertoire of movement skills in parallel with the maturation in their brains of direct nerve-fibre connections between the cerebral cortex and motoneurons in the spinal cord. These corticomotoneuronal connections are characteristic of primates and can be studied in monkeys; in these animals, refinement in the control of movements of the hand is also associated with increasing development of corticomotoneuronal connections. In monkeys, motoneurons innervating distally acting muscles are preferentially excited by convergent activities in corticomotoneuronal fibres. This excitation has been demonstrated to be effective in natural functional states when a conscious monkey is performing learned movement tasks. Extensive intraspinal arborizations of individual corticomotoneuronal fibres could permit the engagement of large numbers of local motoneurons and related interneurons by each of these fibres. Abolition of corticomotoneuronal influences, after section of the pyramidal tracts, causes a permanent deficit in fractionation of use of muscles of the forelimb and an inability to carry out independent movements of the fingers.  相似文献   

14.
In the adult rat, there is a general correspondence between the sizes of motoneurons, motor units, and muscle fibers that has particular functional importance in motor control. During early postnatal development, after the establishment of singular innervation, there is rapid growth of diaphragm muscle (Dia(m)) fibers. In the present study, the association between Dia(m) fiber growth and changes in phrenic motoneuron size (both somal and dendritic) was evaluated from postnatal day 21 (D21) to adulthood. Phrenic motoneurons were retrogradely labeled with fluorescent tetramethylrhodamine dextran (3,000 MW), and motoneuron somal volumes and surface areas were measured using three-dimensional confocal microscopy. In separate animals, phrenic motoneurons retrogradely labeled with choleratoxin B-fragment were visualized using immunocytochemistry, and dendritic arborization was analyzed by camera lucida. Between D21 and adulthood, Dia(m) fiber cross-sectional area increased by approximately 164% overall, with the growth of type II fibers being disproportionate to that of type I fibers. There was also substantial growth of phrenic motoneurons ( approximately 360% increase in total surface area), during this same period, that was primarily attributable to an expansion of dendritic surface area. Comparison of the distribution of phrenic motoneuron surface areas between D21 and adults suggests the establishment of a bimodal distribution that may have functional significance for motor unit recruitment in the adult rat.  相似文献   

15.
Electrical or magnetic stimulation of the human motor cortex causes a strong, short latency facilitation of tibialis anterior (TA) motoneurons but only weak, longer latency changes in the excitability of soleus (SOL) motoneurons. The facilitation of TA motoneurons has been attributed to the monosynaptic action of the "fast" corticospinal pathway. The present study further investigates the cortical control of soleus motoneurons in man. In tests of reaction time to auditory stimuli, normal subjects took significantly longer to activate soleus motoneurons than tibialis anterior motoneurons. Thus we could not demonstrate the existence of a "fast" pathway from the brain to SOL motoneurons that, for some reason, is not activated by magnetic stimulation. The hypothesis that the cortex might control soleus motoneurons indirectly by modulation of the Ia input from muscle spindles was tested. Magnetic stimulation of the cortex was used to condition the facilitation of soleus motoneurons resulting from the stimulation of group I fibres in the tibial nerve. There were no consistent changes in Ia facilitation. We conclude (i) that there is no evidence so far that SOL motoneurons are excited by a direct pathway from the cortex (similar to that projecting to TA motoneurons) and (ii) that the observed changes in firing probability of soleus motoneurons produced by magnetic stimulation over the motor cortex do not result from modulation of presynaptic inhibition of Ia afferents.  相似文献   

16.
Critical point dried and fractured appendicularia of the species Oikopleura dioica have been examined in the scanning electron microscope. The dorsal nerve cord with ganglion cells and peripheral nerve fibres could easily be observed. Thick peripheral nerve fibres leave the nerve cord as bilateral pairs at constant intervals along the tail. Most of these fibres branch from the naked nerve cord, but some evidently originate in ganglion perikarya bulging out from the nerve cord itself. These paired peripheral nerves always have elaborate end-arborizations on the medial surface of the lateral muscle cells. They are accordingly interpreted as motor axons. Some thinner peripheral nerve fibres originate at irregular intervals from both the nerve cord and the ganglion cells. Due to the numerous extracellular fibrils that connect the bilateral layers of the epidermal fins and the muscle cells to each other, these thin nerve fibres can seldom be traced to their termination. A few ones can, however, be traced ventrally between the notochord and the muscle cells and seem to end in singular bulb-like expansions. Clusters of synaptic vesicles are present in transmission electron micrographs of such nerves, and they are accordingly believed to carry efferent impulses. The extracellular fibrils are arranged in a highly ordered pattern with thick bundles crossing the gap between the structures to be interconnected and with numerous radiating insertions on the surface of the tissues.  相似文献   

17.
The spinal motoneuron has long been a good model system for studying neural function because it is a neuron of the central nervous system with the unique properties of (1) having readily identifiable targets (the muscle fibers) and therefore having a very well-known function (to control muscle contraction); (2) being the convergent target of many spinal and descending networks, hence the name of "final common pathway"; and (3) having a large soma which makes it possible to penetrate them with sharp intracellular electrodes. Furthermore, when studied in vivo, it is possible to record simultaneously the electrical activity of the motoneurons and the force developed by their muscle targets. Performing intracellular recordings of motoneurons in vivo therefore put the experimentalist in the unique position of being able to study, at the same time, all the compartments of the "motor unit" (the name given to the motoneuron, its axon, and the muscle fibers it innervates1): the inputs impinging on the motoneuron, the electrophysiological properties of the motoneuron, and the impact of these properties on the physiological function of the motoneurons, i.e. the force produced by its motor unit. However, this approach is very challenging because the preparation cannot be paralyzed and thus the mechanical stability for the intracellular recording is reduced. Thus, this kind of experiments has only been achieved in cats and in rats. However, the study of spinal motor systems could make a formidable leap if it was possible to perform similar experiments in normal and genetically modified mice.For technical reasons, the study of the spinal networks in mice has mostly been limited to neonatal in vitro preparations, where the motoneurons and the spinal networks are immature, the motoneurons are separated from their targets, and when studied in slices, the motoneurons are separated from most of their inputs. Until recently, only a few groups had managed to perform intracellular recordings of motoneurons in vivo2-4 , including our team who published a new preparation which allowed us to obtain very stable recordings of motoneurons in vivo in adult mice5,6. However, these recordings were obtained in paralyzed animals, i.e. without the possibility to record the force output of these motoneurons. Here we present an extension of this original preparation in which we were able to obtain simultaneous recordings of the electrophysiological properties of the motoneurons and of the force developed by their motor unit. This is an important achievement, as it allows us to identify the different types of motoneurons based on their force profile, and thereby revealing their function. Coupled with genetic models disturbing spinal segmental circuitry7-9, or reproducting human disease10,11, we expect this technique to be an essential tool for the study of spinal motor system.  相似文献   

18.
We have examined the cellular and synaptic mechanisms underlying the genesis of alternating motor activity in the developing spinal cord of the chick embryo. Experiments were performed on the isolated lumbosacral cord maintained in vitro. Intracellular and whole cell patch clamp recordings obtained from sartorius (primarily a hip flexor) and femorotibialis (a knee extensor) motoneurons showed that both classes of cell are depolarized simultaneously during each cycle of motor activity. Sartorius motoneurons generally fire two bursts/cycle, whereas femorotibialis motoneurons discharge throughout their depolarization, with peak activity between the sartorius bursts. Voltage clamp recordings revealed that inhibitory and excitatory synaptic currents are responsible for the depolarization of sartorius motoneurons, whereas femorotibialis motoneurons are activated principally by excitatory currents. Early in development, the dominant synaptic currents in rhythmically active sartorius motoneurons appear to be inhibitory so that firing is restricted to a single, brief burst at the beginning of each cycle. In E7-E13 embryos, lumbosacral motor activity could be evoked following stimulation in the brainstem, even when the brachial and cervical cord was bathed in a reduced calcium solution to block chemical synaptic transmission. These findings suggest that functional descending connections from the brainstem to the lumbar cord are present by E7, although activation of ascending axons or electrical synapses cannot be eliminated. Ablation, optical, and immunocytochemical experiments were performed to characterize the interneuronal network responsible for the synaptic activation of motoneurons. Ablation experiments were used to show that the essential interneuronal elements required for the rhythmic alternation are in the ventral part of the cord. This observation was supported by real-time Fura-2 imaging of the neuronal calcium transients accompanying motor activity, which revealed that a high proportion of rhythmically active cells are located in the ventrolateral part of the cord and that activity could begin in this region. The fluorescence transients in the majority of neurons, including motoneurons, occurred in phase with ventral root or muscle nerve activity, implying synchronized neuronal action in the rhythm generating network. Immunocytochemical experiments were performed in E14-E16 embryos to localize putative inhibitory interneurons that might be involved in the genesis or patterning of motor activity. The results revealed a pattern similar to that seen in other vertebrates with the dorsal horn containing neurons with gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-like immunoreactivity and the ventral and intermediate regions containing neurons with glycine-like immunoreactivity.  相似文献   

19.
Intracellular recordings were made of synaptic responses of 93 motoneurons in the cervical region of the cat spinal cord to stimulation of the medial longitudinal bundle, the brain-stem reticular formation, the lateral vestibular nucleus of Deiters, and the red nucleus. In response to stimulation of the medial longitudinal bundle and the vestibular nucleus responses in the motoneurons of the distal groups of muscles of the forelimb were predominantly excitatory, whereas in motoneurons of the proximal extensor muscles they were predominantly inhibitory. During stimulation of the red nucleus, excitatory and inhibitory responses were recorded in almost equal numbers of cells regardless of their functional class. Monosynaptic EPSPs appeared in one-fifth of motoneurons in response to stimulation of the medial longitudinal bundle and, in a few cases, to stimulation of the vestibular and red nuclei. Otherwise, during stimulation of these structures polysynaptic responses were recorded in the motoneurons. In 62% of cases postsynaptic potentials arising in response to stimulation of the various suprasegmental structures tested were identical in direction in the same motoneurons. A mutually facilitatory effect was observed during stimulation of different suprasegmental inputs. The results are evidence that interaction between influences of the structures tested takes place largely at the level of spinal interneurons.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 10, No. 4, pp. 391–399, July–August, 1978.  相似文献   

20.
Wu CW  Kaas JH 《Neuron》2000,28(3):967-978
Primates with long-standing therapeutic amputations of a limb at a young age were used to investigate the possibility that deefferented motor nerves sprout to new muscle targets. Injections of anatomical tracers into the muscles proximal to the amputated stump labeled a larger extent of motoneurons than matched injections on the intact side or in normal animals, including motoneurons that would normally supply only the missing limb muscles. Although the total numbers of distal limb motoneurons remained normal, some distal limb motoneurons on the amputated side were smaller in size and simpler in form. These results suggest that deprived motoneurons survive and retain function by reinnervating new muscle targets. The sprouted motor efferents may account for some of the reorganization of primary motor cortex that follows long-standing amputation.  相似文献   

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