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1.
The inferior olivary nucleus provides one of the two main inputs to the cerebellum: the so-called climbing fibers. Activation of climbing fibers is generally believed to be related to timing of motor commands and/or motor learning. Climbing fiber spikes lead to large all-or-none action potentials in cerebellar Purkinje cells, overriding any other ongoing activity and silencing these cells for a brief period of time afterwards. Empirical evidence shows that the climbing fiber can transmit a short burst of spikes as a result of an olivary cell somatic spike, potentially increasing the information being transferred to the cerebellum per climbing fiber activation. Previously reported results from in vitro studies suggested that the information encoded in the climbing fiber burst is related to the occurrence of the spike relative to the ongoing sub-threshold membrane potential oscillation of the olivary cell, i.e. that the phase of the oscillation is reflected in the size of the climbing fiber burst. We used a detailed three-compartmental model of an inferior olivary cell to further investigate the possible factors determining the size of the climbing fiber burst. Our findings suggest that the phase-dependency of the burst size is present but limited and that charge flow between soma and dendrite is a major determinant of the climbing fiber burst. From our findings it follows that phenomena such as cell ensemble synchrony can have a big effect on the climbing fiber burst size through dendrodendritic gap-junctional coupling between olivary cells.  相似文献   

2.
Low-amplitude potentials (10-130 microV) related to the action of a distant branch of the climbing fiber, which elicits complex spikes of the reference Purkinje cell were revealed by means of potential averaging synchronously with complex spikes of Purkinje cells in 10 out of 255 paired records of cerebellar Purkinje cells activity and extracellular field potentials at interelectrode distances of 200-1500 microns. These potential waves had a stable form in independent sets of data. In 3 out of 10 cases, the low-amplitude potentials included a slow (about 100 ms in duration) component. In one case, both test and reference electrodes recorded both simple and complex spikes of different Purkinje cells so that complex spikes of both cells were practically synchronous (conditional probability of complex spikes p = 0.97, onset time difference 0.54 ms). Thus for the first time in cerebellar physiology both simple and complex spikes activity of two Purkinje cells controlled by the same climbing fiber was recorded.  相似文献   

3.
Signal processing in cerebellar Purkinje cells   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Mechanisms and functional implications of signal processing in cerebellar Purkinje cells have been the subject of recent extensive investigations. Complex patterns of their planar dendritic arbor are analysed with computer-aided reconstructions and also topological analyses. Local computation may occur in Purkinje cell dendrites, but its extent is not clear at present. Synaptic transmission and electrical and ionic activity of Purkinje cell membrane have been revealed in detail, and related biochemical processes are being uncovered. A special type of synaptic plasticity is present in Purkinje cell dendrites; long-term depression (LTD) occurs in parallel fiber-Purkinje cell transmission when the parallel fibers are activated with a climbing fiber innervating that Purkinje cell. Evidence indicates that synaptic plasticity in Purkinje cells is due to sustained desensitization of Purkinje dendritic receptors to glutamate, which is a putative neurotransmitter of parallel fibers, and that conjunctive activation of a climbing fiber and parallel fibers leads to desensitization through enhanced intradendritic calcium concentration. A microzone of the cerebellar cortex is connected to an extracerebellar neural system through the inhibitory projection of Purkinje cells to a cerebellar or vestibular nuclear cell group. Climbing fiber afferents convey signals representing control errors in the performance of a neural system, and evoke complex spikes in Purkinje cells of the microzone connected to the neural system. Complex spikes would modify the performance of the microzone by producing LTD in parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses, and consequently would improve the overall performance of the neural system. The primary function of the cerebellum thus appears to be endowing adaptability to numerous neural control systems in the brain and spinal cord through error-triggered reorganization of the cerebellar cortical circuitry.  相似文献   

4.
Elimination of most granule, basket, and stellate interneurons in the rat cerebellum was achieved by repeated doses of low level x-irradiation applied during the first two weeks of postnatal life. Electrical stimulation of the brain stem and peripheral limbs was employed to investigate the properties of afferent cerebellar pathways and the nature of the reorganized neuronal synaptic circuitry in the degranulated cerebellum of the adult. Direct contacts of mossy fibers on Purkinje cells were indicated by short latency, single spike responses: 1.9 msec from the lateral reticular nucleus of brain stem and 5.4 msec from ipsilateral forlimb. These were shorter than in normal rats by 0.9 and 2.1 msec, respectively. The topography of projections from peripheral stimulation was approximately normal. Mossy fiber responses followed stimulation at up to 20/sec, whereas climbing fiber pathways fatigued at 10/sec. The latency of climbing fiber input to peripheral limb stimulation in x-irradiated cerebellum was 23 ± 8 (SD) msec. In x-irradiated rats, the climbing fiber pathways evoked highly variable extracellular burst responses and intracellular EPSPs of different, discrete sizes. These variable responses suggest that multiple climbing fibers contact single Purkinje cells. We conclude that each type of afferent retains identifying characteristics of transmission. However, rules for synaptic specification appear to break down so that: (1) abnormal classes of neurons develop synaptic connections, i.e., mossy fibers to Purkinje cells; (2) incorrect numbers of neurons share postsynaptic targets, i.e., more than one climbing fiber to a Purkinje cell; and (3) inhibitory synaptic actions may be carried out in the absence of the major inhibitory interneurons, i.e., Purkinje cell collaterals may be effective in lieu of basket and stellate cells.  相似文献   

5.
Elimination of most granule, basket, and stellate interneurons in the rat cerebellum was achieved by repeated doses of low level x-irradiation applied during the first two weeks of postnatal life. Electrical stimulation of the brain stem and peripheral limbs was employed to investigate the properties of afferent cerebellar pathways and the nature of the reorganized neuronal synaptic circuitry in the degranulated cerebellum of the adult. Direct contacts of mossy fibers on Purkinje cells were indicated by short latency, single spike responses: 1.9 msec from the lateral reticular nucleus of brain stem and 5.4 msec from ipsilpateral forelimb. These were shorter than in normal rats by 0.9 and 2.1 msec, respectively. The topography of projections from peripheral stimulation was approximately normal. Mossy fiber responses followed stimulation at up to 20/sec, whereas climbing fiber pathways fatigued at 10/sec. The latency of climbing fiber input to peripheral limb stimulation in x-irradiated cerebellum was 23 +/- 8 (SD) msec. In x-irradiated rats, the climbing fiber pathways evoked highly variable extracellular burst responses and intracellular EPSPs of different, discrete sizes. These variable responses suggest that multiple climbing fibers contact single Purkinje cells. We conclude that each type of afferent retains identifying characteristics of transmission. However, rules for synaptic specification appear to break down so that: (1) abnormal classes of neurons develop synaptic connections, i.e., mossy fibers to Purkinje cells; (2) incorrect numbers of neurons share postsynaptic targets, i.e., more than one climbing fiber to a Purkinje cell; and (3) inhibitory synaptic actions may be carried out in the absence of the major inhibitory interneurons, i.e., Purkinje cell collaterals may be effective in lieu of basket and stellate cells.  相似文献   

6.
The survival of inferior olive neurons is dependent on contact with cerebellar Purkinje cells. There is evidence that this dependence changes with time. Because inferior olivary axons, called climbing fibers, already show significant topographical ordering in cerebellar target zones during late embryogenesis in mice, the question arises as to whether olive neurons are dependent on target Purkinje cells for their survival at this early age. To better characterize this issue, inferior olive development was studied in two transgenic mouse mutants, wnt-1 and L7ADT, with embryonic and early postnatal loss of cerebellar target cells, respectively, and compared to that in the well-studied mutant, Lurcher. Morphological criteria as well as quantitative measures of apoptosis were considered in this developmental analysis. Survival of inferior olive neurons is observed to be independent of Purkinje cells throughout embryogenesis, but dependence begins immediately at birth in both wild types and mutants. Thereafter, wild types and mutants show a rapid increase in olive cell apoptosis, with a peak at postnatal day 4, followed by a period of low-level, but significant, apoptosis that continues to at least postnatal day 11; the main difference is that apoptosis is quantitatively enhanced in the mutants compared to wild types. The multiphasic course of these effects roughly parallels the known phases of climbing fiber synaptogenesis. In addition, despite significant temporal differences among the mutants with respect to absolute numbers of dying cells, there are common spatial features suggestive of distinct intrinsic programs linking different olivary subnuclei to their targets.  相似文献   

7.
Climbing fiber afferents to the cerebellum, from the inferior olivary complex, have a powerful excitatory effect on Purkinje cells. Changes in the responsiveness of olivary neurons to their afferent inputs, leading to changes in the firing rate or pattern of activation in climbing fibers, have a significant effect on the activation of cerebellar neurons and ultimately on cerebellar function. Several neuropeptides have been localized in both varicosities and cell bodies of the mouse inferior olivary complex, one of which, calcitonin gene related peptide (CGRP), has been shown to modulate the activity of olivary neurons. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the synaptic relationships of CGRP-containing components of the caudal medial accessory olive and the principal olive of adult mice, using immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy. The vast majority of immunoreactive profiles were dendrites and dendritic spines within and outside the glial boundaries of synaptic glomeruli (clusters). Both received synaptic inputs from non-CGRP labeled axon terminals. CGRP was also present within the somata of olivary neurons as well as in profiles that had cytological characteristics of axons, some of which were filled with synaptic vesicles. These swellings infrequently formed synaptic contacts. At the LM level, few, if any, CGRP-immunoreactive climbing fibers, were seen, suggesting that CGRP is compartmentalized within the somata and dendrites of olivary neurons and is not transported to their axon terminals. Thus, in addition to previously identified extrinsic sources of CGRP, the widespread distribution of CGRP within olivary somata and dendrites identifies an intrinsic source of the peptide suggesting the possibility of dendritic release and a subsequent autocrine or paracrine function for this peptide within olivary circuits.  相似文献   

8.
Okubo Y  Kakizawa S  Hirose K  Iino M 《Neuron》2001,32(1):113-122
IP(3) signaling in Purkinje cells is involved in the regulation of cell functions including LTD. We have used a GFP-tagged pleckstrin homology domain to visualize IP(3) dynamics in Purkinje cells. Surprisingly, IP(3) production was observed in response not only to mGluR activation, but also to AMPA receptor activation in Purkinje cells in culture. AMPA-induced IP(3) production was mediated by depolarization-induced Ca(2+) influx because it was mimicked by depolarization and was blocked by inhibition of the P-type Ca(2+) channel. Furthermore, trains of complex spikes, elicited by climbing fiber stimulation (1 Hz), induced IP(3) production in Purkinje cells in cerebellar slices. These results revealed a novel IP(3) signaling pathway in Purkinje cells that can be elicited by synaptic inputs from climbing fibers.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The survival of inferior olive neurons is dependent on contact with cerebellar Purkinje cells. There is evidence that this dependence changes with time. Because inferior olivary axons, called climbing fibers, already show significant topographical ordering in cerebellar target zones during late embryogenesis in mice, the question arises as to whether olive neurons are dependent on target Purkinje cells for their survival at this early age. To better characterize this issue, inferior olive development was studied in two transgenic mouse mutants, wnt‐1 and L7ADT, with embryonic and early postnatal loss of cerebellar target cells, respectively, and compared to that in the well‐studied mutant, Lurcher. Morphological criteria as well as quantitative measures of apoptosis were considered in this developmental analysis. Survival of inferior olive neurons is observed to be independent of Purkinje cells throughout embryogenesis, but dependence begins immediately at birth in both wild types and mutants. Thereafter, wild types and mutants show a rapid increase in olive cell apoptosis, with a peak at postnatal day 4, followed by a period of low‐level, but significant, apoptosis that continues to at least postnatal day 11; the main difference is that apoptosis is quantitatively enhanced in the mutants compared to wild types. The multiphasic course of these effects roughly parallels the known phases of climbing fiber synaptogenesis. In addition, despite significant temporal differences among the mutants with respect to absolute numbers of dying cells, there are common spatial features suggestive of distinct intrinsic programs linking different olivary subnuclei to their targets. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 43: 18–30, 2000  相似文献   

11.
Excitatory drive enters the cerebellum via mossy fibers, which activate granule cells, and climbing fibers, which activate Purkinje cell dendrites. Until now, the coordinated regulation of these pathways has gone unmonitored in spatially resolved neuronal ensembles, especially in awake animals. We imaged cerebellar activity using functional two-photon microscopy and extracellular recording in awake mice locomoting on an air-cushioned spherical treadmill. We recorded from putative granule cells, molecular layer interneurons, and Purkinje cell dendrites in zone A of lobule IV/V, representing sensation and movement from trunk and limbs. Locomotion was associated with widespread increased activity in granule cells and interneurons, consistent with an increase in mossy fiber drive. At the same time, dendrites of different Purkinje cells showed increased co-activation, reflecting increased synchrony of climbing fiber activity. In resting animals, aversive stimuli triggered increased activity in granule cells and interneurons, as well as increased Purkinje cell co-activation that was strongest for neighboring dendrites and decreased smoothly as a function of mediolateral distance. In contrast with anesthetized recordings, no 1-10 Hz oscillations in climbing fiber activity were evident. Once locomotion began, responses to external stimuli in all three cell types were strongly suppressed. Thus climbing and mossy fiber representations can shift together within a fraction of a second, reflecting in turn either movement-associated activity or external stimuli.  相似文献   

12.
The responses of the cerebellar Purkinje cell to removal of its climbing fiber input has been studied electrophysiologically in slices of rat cerebella. Using single electrode current clamp methods, membrane potentials were recorded in various conditions from normal and 3-AP deafferented Purkinje cells (PC). The membrane of the deafferented PC showed a rectification for hyperpolarizing currents which varied in degree with length of time after removal of the climbing fiber input. While this rectification was the most pronounced change in membrane properties provoked by the deafferentation, other more subtle effects were observed in experiments with changes in extracellular ionic compositions. Since the rectification began at membrane potentials near -60 mV, it could prevent membrane hyperpolarization by inhibitory synaptic inputs and thus produce an apparent hypersensitivity to excitatory inputs.  相似文献   

13.
A lumped circuit model was constructed which consisted of two input channels, climbing fiber and mossy fiber afferents, which described the magnitudes of synaptic transmission and which accounted for synaptic and transmission delays. The parameters and coefficients of the transfer function were chosen such that they corresponded to physiological observable quantities. The corresponding time function approximated the data points. The results indicated that the dynamic behavior of the cerebellar circuit was satisfactorily accounted for by a parallel excitatory and inhibitory system with a combined climbing fiber and mossy-parallel fiber input exciting the Purkinje cells. The initial negative was predominantly a climbing fiber response of the Purkinje cell supporting the inference which was derived from purely electrophysiological data.  相似文献   

14.
Jörntell H  Ekerot CF 《Neuron》2002,34(5):797-806
The highly specific relationships between parallel fiber (PF) and climbing fiber (CF) receptive fields in Purkinje cells and interneurons suggest that normal PF receptive fields are established by CF-specific plasticity. To test this idea, we used PF stimulation that was either paired or unpaired with CF activity. Conspicuously, unpaired PF stimulation that induced long-lasting, very large increases in the receptive field sizes of Purkinje cells induced long-lasting decreases in receptive field sizes of their afferent interneurons. In contrast, PF stimulation paired with CF activity that induced long-lasting decreases in the receptive fields of Purkinje cells induced long-lasting, large increases in the receptive fields of interneurons. These properties, and the fact the mossy fiber receptive fields were unchanged, suggest that the receptive field changes were due to bidirectional PF synaptic plasticity in Purkinje cells and interneurons.  相似文献   

15.
Dendrite arborization patterns are critical determinants of neuronal connectivity and integration. Planar and highly branched dendrites of the cerebellar Purkinje cell receive specific topographical projections from two major afferent pathways; a single climbing fiber axon from the inferior olive that extend along Purkinje dendrites, and parallel fiber axons of granule cells that contact vertically to the plane of dendrites. It has been believed that murine Purkinje cell dendrites extend in a single parasagittal plane in the molecular layer after the cell polarity is determined during the early postnatal development. By three-dimensional confocal analysis of growing Purkinje cells, we observed that mouse Purkinje cells underwent dynamic dendritic remodeling during circuit maturation in the third postnatal week. After dendrites were polarized and flattened in the early second postnatal week, dendritic arbors gradually expanded in multiple sagittal planes in the molecular layer by intensive growth and branching by the third postnatal week. Dendrites then became confined to a single plane in the fourth postnatal week. Multiplanar Purkinje cells in the third week were often associated by ectopic climbing fibers innervating nearby Purkinje cells in distinct sagittal planes. The mature monoplanar arborization was disrupted in mutant mice with abnormal Purkinje cell connectivity and motor discoordination. The dendrite remodeling was also impaired by pharmacological disruption of normal afferent activity during the second or third postnatal week. Our results suggest that the monoplanar arborization of Purkinje cells is coupled with functional development of the cerebellar circuitry.  相似文献   

16.
Extra- or intracellular unit responses of Purkinje cells to the activation of climbing fibres were recorded in the cerebellum of adult rats. Out of 1.719 cels studied, only 4 were found to be innervated by more than one climbing fibre. This very small rate of residual multiple innervation in the normal adult illustrates the accuracy of the synaptic elimination process which leads to the innervation of each Purkinje cell through only one climbing fibre during normal development in the rat.  相似文献   

17.
Neuron-target interactions during development are critical for determining the final numbers of neurons in the nervous system. To investigate the role of Purkinje cells and programmed cell death in the regulation of afferent neuron numbers, we have counted olivary neurons and granule cells in two lines of transgenic mice (NSE73a and NSE71) that overexpress a human gene for bcl-2 (Hu-bcl-2) in Purkinje cells and olivary neurons, but not in granule cells. Bcl-2 overexpression in vivo reduces naturally occurring neuronal cell death and cell death following axotomy, target removal, or ischemia. Olivary neuron numbers in NSE73a and NSE71 transgenic mice are significantly increased compared to controls by 28% and 27%, respectively, while granule cell numbers are only increased in NSE73a mice (29% above controls). We have previously shown that Purkinje cell number is increased by 43% in NSE73a transgenics and by 23% in NSE71 transgenics. The ratio of Purkinje cells to olivary neurons is not significantly different between the control and transgenic mice, while the ratio of granule cells to Purkinje cells is significantly decreased in the NSE71 transgenic mice compared to controls and NSE73a transgenics. The increased numbers of olivary neurons suggest that bcl-2 overexpression rescues these neurons from programmed cell death. The increase in granule cell number in only one transgenic line is discussed with respect to hypotheses that Purkinje cells regulate both granule cell progenitor proliferation and the survival of differentiated granule cells. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 32: 502–516, 1997  相似文献   

18.
Summary The teleostean cerebellar cortex has been studied with respect to its cytoarchitectonic arrangement and intracortical neuronal circuits. Samples of fish cerebellum were fixed either by immersion or vascular perfusion in 5% glutaraldehyde solution and processed for light and scanning electron microscopy. The cerebellar cortex shows four distinct layers: granular; fibrous stratum; Purkinje cell; and molecular layers. In the granular layer, mossy and climbing fiber glomeruli were characterized. The mossy glomerular region appeared as polygonal, round or ovoid clews formed by the convergence of up to 17 dendritic profiles upon a thick mossy fiber branch. The en passant nature of mossy fiber-granule cell dendrite synaptic relationship was clearly appreciated. The climbing fibers showed tendril and glomerular collaterals. The latter form thin, elongated glomeruli. Remnants of a neuroglial envelope were observed in the mossy fiber glomeruli but are apparently absent from the climbing fiber glomeruli. The beaded-shape Golgi cell axonal ramifications were observed participating in the formation of both glomerular types. Velate protoplasmic astrocytes and oligodendrocytes were also identified. The fibrous stratum appeared to be formed by compact bundles of thick and thin myelinated axons, running horizontally beneath the Purkinje cell layer and apparently belonging to ascending climbing fibers and descending Purkinje cell axons. At the Purkinje cell layer a selective removal of Bergmann glial cells was observed allowing the visualization of the pericellular basket and the pinceaux. Climbing fiber stems and their tendril collaterals were seen on their way to the molecular layer ascending parallel to the Purkinje dendritic ramifications. Stellate neuron processes were found passing through the fan-like arborescence of Purkinje cell dendrites.  相似文献   

19.
The rat olivocerebellar climbing fiber system has been investigated at the light and electron microscopic level with anterograde Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) tracing. From PHA-L Injections in different parts of the inferior olive labelled axons could be traced to the contralateral cerebellum. Arriving in the deep cerebellar white matter, the olivocerebellar axons ran around and through the cerebellar nuclei. Plexuses of labelled terminal fibers appeared in the cerebellar nuclei, and the density of this innervation was estimated to 1-4 million varicosities per mm3. Ultrastructurally, these boutons engaged in asymmetric synapses with small dendrites. Bundles of labelled fibers continued into the folial white matter, and terminated as climbing fibers in sagittal zones of the cerebellar cortex. Both the cortical and nuclear terminations of the olivocerebellar system are strictly topographically organized. The plasticity of climbing fibers was studied after partial lesions of the inferior olive induced by 3-acetylpyridine. One to 6 months after the lesion, surviving climbing fibers demonstrated extensive sprouting. The newly formed axons originated from parent climbing fiber plexuses, grew in the direction of parallel fibers, and formed terminal plexuses around several neighbouring Purkinje cells. As normal climbing fiber terminals, these terminals formed asymmetric synapses with spines of proximal Purkinje cell dendrites, and evidence by Benedetti et al. (1983) shows that the regenerated innervation is electrophysiologically functional. It is suggested that denervated Purkinje cells release a trophic substance, which stimulate surviving climbing fibers to sprouting, axonal growth and synapse formation.  相似文献   

20.
A critical review of the role of the cerebellum in motor learning is presented. Specifically, the hypothesis that the climbing fibers that issue from the inferior olive serve to modify the responsiveness of cerebellar Purkinje cells is evaluated. It is concluded that there is no convincing evidence, at this time, to support the view that a long-term modification of Purkinje cell activity is either the basis of motor learning or an authentic mechanism of cerebellar function. An alternative view, based on the biophysical, anatomical and ensemble properties of olivary neurons, suggests an important role for the olivocerebellar system in the coordination of movements. Future work in this interesting area of neuroscience will distinguish these two hypotheses.  相似文献   

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