首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The mechanisms of motor neuron (MN) degeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) are unknown, but glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity may be involved. To examine directly this idea in vivo, we have used microdialysis in the rat lumbar spinal cord and showed that four- to fivefold increases in the concentration of endogenous extracellular glutamate during at least 1 h, by perfusion with the glutamate transport inhibitor L-2,4-trans-pyrrolidine-dicarboxylate, elicited no motor alterations or MN damage. Stimulation of glutamate release with 4-aminopyridine induced transitory ipsilateral hindlimb muscular twitches but no MN damage. In contrast, perfusion of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionate (AMPA) did not modify glutamate levels but produced intense muscular spasms, followed by ipsilateral permanent hindlimb paralysis and a remarkable loss of MNs. These effects of AMPA were prevented by co-perfusion with the AMPA receptor antagonist 2,3-dihydroxy-6-nitro-7-sulfamoyl-benzo(F)quinoxaline. Perfusion with NMDA or kainate produced no motor effects or MN damage. Thus, the elevation of endogenous extracellular glutamate in vivo due to blockade of its transport is innocuous for spinal MNs. Because this resistance is observed under the same experimental conditions in which MNs are highly vulnerable to AMPA, these results indicate that excitotoxicity due to this mechanism might not be an important factor in the pathogenesis of ALS.  相似文献   

2.
We reveal the intrinsic motor capacity of the spinal cord by examining motor behaviours produced by spinal segments caudal to a complete transection of the spinal cord. The turtle spinal cord generates three forms of the scratch reflex in the absence of neural inputs from supraspinal structures. Each form exhibits a characteristic motor neuron discharge pattern. We test the ability of the spinal cord to generate organized motor patterns in the absence of movement-related sensory feedback by examining motor neuron discharge patterns in spinal preparations that are immobilized with a neuromuscular blocking agent. The motor neuron discharge pattern associate with each form is observed in the spinal immobilized preparation. Each of these motor patterns is therefore generated centrally within the spinal cord.  相似文献   

3.
Glutamate is a putative neurotransmitter at Ia-alpha motoneuron synapse in the spinal cord and mediate the action via N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and a-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole-propionate (AMPA) receptors. Since NMDA receptors are not involved in M. tamulus Pocock (MBT) venom-induced depression of spinal monosynaptic reflex (MSR), the present study was undertaken to evaluate the role of AMPA receptors in mediating the depression of MSR by MBT venom. The experiments were performed on isolated hemisected spinal cord from 4-6 day old rats. Stimulation of a dorsal root with supramaximal voltage evoked MSR and polysynaptic reflex (PSR) potentials in the corresponding segmental ventral root. Superfusion of MBT venom (0.3 microg/ml) depressed the spinal reflexes in a time-dependent manner. The maximum depression of MSR(approximately 66%) was seen at 10 min and it was 25 min for PSR (approximately 75%). The time to produce 50% depression of MSR and PSR was 6.7+/- 1.5 and 10.8 +/- 2.6 min, respectively. Pretreatment of the cords with 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2, 3-dione (CNQX, 0.1 microM), an AMPA receptor antagonist, blocked the venom-induced depression of MSR but not PSR. The results indicate that venom-induced depression of MSR is mediated via AMPA receptors.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Glutamate receptor activated neuronal cell death has been implicated in the pathogenesis of motor neuron disease but the molecular mechanism responsible for neuronal dysfunction needs to be elucidated. In the present study, we examined the contribution of NMDA and non-NMDA sub-types of glutamate receptors in selective vulnerability of motor neurons. Glutamate receptor activated Ca2+ signaling, mitochondrial functions and neurotoxicity in motor neurons and other spinal neurons were studied in mixed spinal cord primary cultures. Exposure of cells to glutamate receptor agonists glutamate, NMDA and AMPA elevated the intracellular Ca2+, mitochondrial Ca2+ and caused mitochondrial depolarization and cytotoxicity in both motor neurons and other spinal neurons but a striking difference was observed in the magnitude and temporal patterns of the [Ca2+]i responses between the two neuronal cell types. The motor neurons elicited higher Ca2+ load than the other spinal neurons and the [Ca2+]i levels were elevated for a longer duration in motor neurons. AMPA receptor stimulation was more effective than NMDA. Both the NMDA and non-NMDA receptor antagonists APV and NBQX inhibited the Ca2+ entry and decreased the cell death significantly; however, NBQX was more potent than APV. Our results demonstrate that both NMDA and non-NMDA sub-types of glutamate receptors contribute to glutamate-mediated motor neuron damage but AMPA receptors play the major role. AMPA receptor-mediated excessive Ca2+ load and differential handling/regulation of Ca2+ buffering by mitochondria in motor neurons could be central in their selective vulnerability to excitotoxicity.  相似文献   

6.
Electroacupuncture (EA) applied to the abdomen and hindlimb modulates the ovarian blood flow (OBF) response. The present study aimed to further elucidate the role of the site and the frequency of short-term EA stimulation and the influence of the estrous cycle on the OBF response using anesthetized rats. EA stimulation was applied to the abdominal or the hindlimb muscles at three different frequencies (2, 10, and 80 Hz) during the estrus or diestrus phase. Involvement of spinal and supraspinal reflexes in OBF responses to EA stimulation was investigated by spinal cord transection. Abdominal EA stimulation at 10 Hz increased the OBF response, whereas hindlimb EA stimulation at 10 Hz and abdominal and hindlimb stimulation at 80 Hz decreased the OBF response; 2-Hz EA caused no OBF response. The OBF response to abdominal EA was more pronounced in the estrus than the diestrus phase. The OBF response to abdominal and hindlimb EA stimulation at both 10 and 80 Hz was almost abolished, both after severance of the sympathetic nerves and after spinal cord transection. In conclusion, the OBF response to both abdominal and hindlimb EA stimulation was mediated as a reflex response via the ovarian sympathetic nerves, and the response was controlled via supraspinal pathways. Furthermore, the OBF response to segmental abdominal EA stimulation was frequency dependent and amplified in the estrous phase.  相似文献   

7.
Peripheral nerve demyelination was induced in cats by oral administration of ether extracts of Tullidora (Karwinskia humboldtiana). Proteins from several hindlimb nerves, spinal roots, and dorsal columns of the spinal cord were subjected to slab gel electrophoresis and quantified by densitometry. In Tullidora-treated cats with severe motor disturbances, specific myelin proteins were reduced by at least 50% in motor nerves and less than 25% in cutaneous axons. There was a greater decrease of these proteins in the distal than in the cephalad segments of the sciatic nerve; no changes were detected either in the spinal roots or in the white matter of the spinal cord. Electron microscopy revealed intense demyelination in the motor nerves only. Both the density of the 100 A-thick neurofilaments and the relative proportion of a polypeptide with a molecular weight of 68,000 were considerably increased in the affected nerves. It is tentatively concluded that the active principles of Tullidora may enter the axons through the motor nerve terminals. The distal segments of the motor nerves would then be preferentially affected and demyelination could result from axonal damage.  相似文献   

8.
Antri M  Mellen N  Cazalets JR 《PloS one》2011,6(6):e20529
Although the mammalian locomotor CPG has been localized to the lumbar spinal cord, the functional-anatomical organization of flexor and extensor interneurons has not been characterized. Here, we tested the hypothesis that flexor and extensor interneuronal networks for walking are physically segregated in the lumbar spinal cord. For this purpose, we performed optical recordings and lesion experiments from a horizontally sectioned lumbar spinal cord isolated from neonate rats. This ventral hemi spinal cord preparation produces well-organized fictive locomotion when superfused with 5-HT/NMDA. The dorsal surface of the preparation was visualized using the Ca(2+) indicator fluo-4 AM, while simultaneously monitoring motor output at ventral roots L2 and L5. Using calcium imaging, we provided a general mapping view of the interneurons that maintained a stable phase relationship with motor output. We showed that the dorsal surface of L1 segment contains a higher density of locomotor rhythmic cells than the other segments. Moreover, L1 segment lesioning induced the most important changes in the locomotor activity in comparison with lesions at the T13 or L2 segments. However, no lesions led to selective disruption of either flexor or extensor output. In addition, this study found no evidence of functional parcellation of locomotor interneurons into flexor and extensor pools at the dorsal-ventral midline of the lumbar spinal cord of the rat.  相似文献   

9.
The spinal cord can generate motor patterns underlying several kinds of limb movements. Many spinal interneurons are multifunctional, contributing to multiple limb movements, but others are specialized. It is unclear whether anatomical distributions of activated neurons differ for different limb movements. We examined distributions of activated neurons for locomotion and scratching using an activity-dependent dye. Adult turtles were stimulated to generate repeatedly forward swimming, rostral scratching, pocket scratching, or caudal scratching motor patterns, while sulforhodamine 101 was applied to the spinal cord. Sulforhodamine-labeled neurons were widely distributed rostrocaudally, dorsoventrally, and mediolaterally after each motor pattern, concentrated bilaterally in the deep dorsal horn, the lateral intermediate zone, and the dorsal to middle ventral horn. Labeled neurons were common in all hindlimb enlargement segments and the pre-enlargement segment following swimming and scratching, but a significantly higher percentage were in the rostral segments following swimming than rostral scratching. These findings suggest that largely the same spinal regions are activated during swimming and scratching, but there are some differences that may indicate locations of behaviorally specialized neurons. Finally, the substantial inter-animal variability following a single kind of motor pattern may indicate that essentially the same motor output is generated by anatomically variable networks.  相似文献   

10.
Distributions of corticospinal and corticobulbar neurons were revealed by tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) processing after injections of wheatgerm agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA:HRP) into the cervical or lumbar enlargements of the spinal cord, or medullary or pontine levels of the brain stem. Sections reacted for cytochrome oxidase (CO) allowed patterns of labeled neurons to be related to the details of the body surface map in the first somatosensory cortical area (SI). The results indicate that a number of cortical areas project to these subcortical levels: (1) Projection neurons in granular SI formed a clear somatotopic pattern. The hindpaw region projected to the lumbar enlargement, the forepaw region to the cervical enlargement, the whisker pad field to the lower medulla, and the more rostral face region to more rostral brain stem levels. (2) Each zone of labeled neurons in SI extended into adjacent dysgranular somatosensory cortex, forming a second somatotopic pattern of projection neurons. (3) A somatotopic pattern of projection neurons in primary motor cortex (MI) paralleled SI in mediolateral sequence corresponding to the hindlimb, forelimb, and face. (4) A weak somatotopic pattern of projection neurons was suggested in medial agranular cortex (Agm), indicating a premotor field with a rostromedial-to-caudolateral representation of hindlimb, forelimb, and face. (5) A somatotopic pattern of projection neurons representing the foot to face in a mediolateral sequence was observed in medial parietal cortex (PM) located between SI and area 17. (6) In the second somatosensory cortical area (SII), neurons projecting to the brain stem were immediately adjacent caudolaterally to the barrel field of SI, whereas neurons projecting to the upper spinal cord were more lateral. No projection neurons in this region were labeled by the injections in the lower spinal cord. (7) Other foci of projection neurons for the face and forelimb were located rostral to SII, providing evidence for a parietal ventral area (PV) in perirhinal cortex (PR) lateral to SI, and in cortex between SII and PM. None of these regions, which may be higher-order somatosensory areas, contained labeled neurons after injections in the lower spinal cord. Thus, more cortical fields directly influence brain stem and spinal cord levels related to sensory and motor functions of the face and forepaw than the hindlimb. The termination patterns of corticospinal and corticobulbar projections were studied in other rats with injections of WGA:HRP in SI.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The aromatic hydrocarbon 1,2-diacetylbenzene (1,2-DAB) is a protein-reactive γ-diketone metabolite of the neurotoxic solvent 1,2-diethylbenzene (1,2-DEB). The effect of neurotoxic 1,2-DAB and its non-neurotoxic isomer 1,3-DAB has been studied on motor proteins and cytoskeletal proteins of rat spinal cord (SC). For in vitro studies, SC slices were incubated with 1, 2, 5, 10 mM of DAB isomers for 30 min at 37°C. For in vivo studies, rats received (i.p.) 20 mg/kg/day of 1,2-DAB or 1,3-DAB, or vehicle (2% acetone in saline), 5 days a week for 2 weeks. Spinal cord and sciatic nerve proteins were subjected to Western blotting using monoclonal mouse antibodies to NF-M, kinesin, dynein, and tau. Proteins were quantified and paired mean comparisons performed to assess concentration-dependent changes in native protein bands. In vitro, 1,2-DAB produced a concentration-dependent decrease of motor and cytoskeletal proteins. While dynein and tau appeared similarly affected by 1,2-DAB, kinesin was most affected by the toxicant. In vivo, 1,2-DAB affected motor and cytoskeletal proteins of sciatic nerves and spinal cord differentially. In general, sciatic nerve proteins were much more affected than spinal cord proteins. The results show that motor proteins that drive axonal transport anterogradely (kinesin) and retrogradely (dynein), cytoskeletal protein NF-M, which is slowly transported in the anterograde direction, and microtubule-associated protein, tau, which is involved in axonal transport, are differentially impacted by 1,2-DAB. By contrast, non-neurotoxic isomer 1,3-diacetylbenzene (1,3-DAB), had no adverse effect on neural proteins either in vitro or in vivo. 2D-Differential in gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) of sciatic nerves from neurotoxic 1,2-DAB and non-neurotoxic 1,3-DAB treated rats revealed 197 and 304 protein spots, respectively. This paper is dedicated to my long-time friend Naren L. Banik, Ph.D.  相似文献   

12.
The responses of dorsal horn neurones to the excitatory amino acids quisqualate, kainate, N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), and quinolinate have been examined in an in vitro preparation of the rat spinal cord. The antagonism of these responses by iontophoretically applied D-(-)-2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate (DAPV), kynurenate, and acridinate was tested, and the results were compared with data obtained from the spinal cord in vivo. The pattern of antagonism was similar in both preparations, although the potencies of agonists and antagonists were found to be significantly greater in vitro. The antagonism of amino acid induced firing of neurones was also recorded during the application of DAPV and kynurenate in the bathing medium. Dose-response curves and IC50 values were determined for these antagonists against all four agonists. The responses to quinolinate were antagonized differently from those to NMDA, quisqualate, or kainate, suggesting that quinolinate does not act specifically through the NMDA receptor as it does in other regions, nor does it appear to act via two or more of the three archetypal amino acid receptors. These findings suggest that a fourth amino acid receptor responsible for quinolinate's action in the spinal cord may exist.  相似文献   

13.
Although the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) subtype of L-glutamate receptor is well characterized, the significance of non-NMDA glutamate-sensitive binding sites is not well documented. In this study, a new tricyclic quinoxalinedione (NBQX) and an arthropod toxin (philanthotoxin) were shown to block responses of spinal neurones in vivo to kainate, quisqualate, and AMPA in parallel but had little effect on responses to NMDA. Philanthotoxin appeared to be a use-dependent antagonist consistent with a channel-blocking mode of action. On cortical wedges in vitro, however, NBQX proved to be a more potent antagonist of AMPA and quisqualate than of kainate (pA2 values of 7.1, 7.0, and 5.6, respectively) with no effect at 10 microM on responses to NMDA. These studies provide evidence that on cortical neurones, but not on spinal neurones. AMPA and kainate depolarize by pharmacologically different mechanisms.  相似文献   

14.
Animals produce a variety of behaviors using a limited number of muscles and motor neurons. Rhythmic behaviors are often generated in basic form by networks of neurons within the central nervous system, or central pattern generators (CPGs). It is known from several invertebrates that different rhythmic behaviors involving the same muscles and motor neurons can be generated by a single CPG, multiple separate CPGs, or partly overlapping CPGs. Much less is known about how vertebrates generate multiple, rhythmic behaviors involving the same muscles. The spinal cord of limbed vertebrates contains CPGs for locomotion and multiple forms of scratching. We investigated the extent of sharing of CPGs for hind limb locomotion and for scratching. We used the spinal cord of adult red-eared turtles. Animals were immobilized to remove movement-related sensory feedback and were spinally transected to remove input from the brain. We took two approaches. First, we monitored individual spinal cord interneurons (i.e., neurons that are in between sensory neurons and motor neurons) during generation of each kind of rhythmic output of motor neurons (i.e., each motor pattern). Many spinal cord interneurons were rhythmically activated during the motor patterns for forward swimming and all three forms of scratching. Some of these scratch/swim interneurons had physiological and morphological properties consistent with their playing a role in the generation of motor patterns for all of these rhythmic behaviors. Other spinal cord interneurons, however, were rhythmically activated during scratching motor patterns but inhibited during swimming motor patterns. Thus, locomotion and scratching may be generated by partly shared spinal cord CPGs. Second, we delivered swim-evoking and scratch-evoking stimuli simultaneously and monitored the resulting motor patterns. Simultaneous stimulation could cause interactions of scratch inputs with subthreshold swim inputs to produce normal swimming, acceleration of the swimming rhythm, scratch-swim hybrid cycles, or complete cessation of the rhythm. The type of effect obtained depended on the level of swim-evoking stimulation. These effects suggest that swim-evoking and scratch-evoking inputs can interact strongly in the spinal cord to modify the rhythm and pattern of motor output. Collectively, the single-neuron recordings and the results of simultaneous stimulation suggest that important elements of the generation of rhythms and patterns are shared between locomotion and scratching in limbed vertebrates.  相似文献   

15.
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) stimulated release of [3H]noradrenaline (NA) from prelabelled rat spinal cord slices. The release was partially insensitive to tetrodotoxin (TTX) and was inhibited by the NMDA antagonist MK-801. Alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionate (AMPA) also evoked release of [3H]NA, which was enhanced by blocking AMPA receptor desensitization with cyclothiazide. AMPA-evoked release was inhibited by the non-NMDA antagonist 2,3-dihydroxy-6-nitro-7-sulfamoyl-benzo(f)-quinoxaline (NBQX) but was not affected by TTX. NMDA and AMPA showed synergistic effects, indicating co-existence of NMDA and AMPA receptors on noradrenergic terminals. Kainate evoked [3H]NA release only at high concentrations and the release was not potentiated by blocking kainate receptor desensitization with concanavalin A. Thus, the results indicate that there are stimulatory presynaptic NMDA and AMPA receptors on noradrenergic axon terminals in the spinal cord and that they interact synergistically to evoke release of [3H]NA.  相似文献   

16.
Hoxa10 and Hoxd10 coordinately regulate lumbar motor neuron patterning   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The paralogous Hox genes Hoxa10 and Hoxd10 are expressed in overlapping domains in the developing lumbar spinal cord and surrounding mesoderm. Independent inactivation of these two genes alters the trajectory of spinal nerves and decreases the complement of motor neurons present in the lumbar spinal cord, whereas dual inactivation of these two genes has been shown to alter peripheral nerve growth and development in the mouse hindlimb. We have examined the organization and distribution of lumbar motor neurons in the spinal cords of Hoxa10/Hoxd10 double mutant animals. Double mutant animals have decreased numbers of lumbar motor neurons in both the medial and lateral motor columns. The anteroposterior position of the lumbar motor column is shifted caudally in double mutant animals, and the distribution of motor neurons is altered across individual spinal segments. Distinctions between classes of motor neurons based on positional specificity appear disrupted in double mutants. Double mutants also demonstrate abnormal spinal cord vasculature and altered kidney placement and size. Our observations suggest that Hoxa10 and Hoxd10 activity is required to specify the position of the lumbar motor column and to provide segmental specification and identity for the lumbar motor neurons.  相似文献   

17.
Distributions of corticospinal and corticobulbar neurons were revealed by tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) processing after injections of wheatgerm agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA:HRP) into the cervical or lumbar enlargements of the spinal cord, or medullary or pontine levels of the brain stem. Sections reacted for cytochrome oxidase (CO) allowed patterns of labeled neurons to be related to the details of the body surface map in the first somatosensory cortical area (SI). The results indicate that a number of cortical areas project to these subcortical levels: (1) Projection neurons in granular SI formed a clear somatotopic pattern. The hindpaw region projected to the lumbar enlargement, the forepaw region to the cervical enlargement, the whisker pad field to the lower medulla, and the more rostral face region to more rostral brain stem levels. (2) Each zone of labeled neurons in SI extended into adjacent dysgranular somatosensory cortex, forming a second somatotopic pattern of projection neurons. (3) A somatotopic pattern of projection neurons in primary motor cortex (MI) paralleled SI in mediolateral sequence corresponding to the hindlimb, forelimb, and face. (4) A weak somatotopic pattern of projection neurons was suggested in medial agranular cortex (Agm), indicating a premotor field with a rostromedial-to-caudolateral representation of hindlimb, forelimb, and face. (5) A somatotopic pattern of projection neurons representing the foot to face in a mediolateral sequence was observed in medial parietal cortex (PM) located between SI and area 17. (6) In the second somatosensory cortical area (SII), neurons projecting to the brain stem were immediately adjacent caudolaterally to the barrel field of SI, whereas neurons projecting to the upper spinal cord were more lateral. No projection neurons in this region were labeled by the injections in the lower spinal cord. (7) Other foci of projection neurons for the face and forelimb were located rostral to SII, providing evidence for a parietal ventral area (PV) in perirhinal cortex (PR) lateral to SI, and in cortex between SII and PM. None of these regions, which may be higher-order somatosensory areas, contained labeled neurons after injections in the lower spinal cord. Thus, more cortical fields directly influence brain stem and spinal cord levels related to sensory and motor functions of the face and forepaw than the hindlimb.

The termination patterns of corticospinal and corticobulbar projections were studied in other rats with injections of WGA:HRP in SI. Injections in lateral SI representing the face produced dense terminal label in the contralateral trigeminal complex. Injections in cortex devoted to the forelimb and forepaw labeled the contralateral cuneate nucleus and parts of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. The cortical injections also demonstrated interconnections of parts of SI with some of the other regions of cortex with projections to the spinal cord, and provided further evidence for the existence of PV in rats.  相似文献   

18.
The neural control system for generation of locomotion is an important system for analysis of neural mechanisms underlying complex motor acts. In these studies, a novel experimental model using neonatal rat brain stem and spinal cord in vitro was developed for investigation of the locomotor system in mammals. The in vitro brain stem and spinal cord system was shown to retain functional circuitry for locomotor command generation, motor pattern generation, and sensorimotor integration. This system was exploited to investigate neurochemical mechanisms involved in neurogenesis of locomotion. Evidence was obtained for peptidergic and gamma-amino-butyric acid-mediated mechanisms in brain-stem circuits generating locomotor commands. Cholinergic, dopaminergic, and excitatory amino acid-mediated mechanisms were shown to activate spinal cord circuits for locomotor pattern generation. Endogenous N-methyl-D-aspartic acid receptors in spinal networks were found to play a central role in the generation of locomotion. The chemically induced patterns of motor activity and rhythmic membrane potential oscillations of spinal motoneurons were characteristic of those during locomotion in other mammals in vivo. The in vitro brain stem and spinal cord model provides a versatile and powerful experimental system with potentially broad application for investigation of diverse aspects of the neurobiology of mammalian motor control systems.  相似文献   

19.
Microdialysis perfusion of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid (AMPA) in rat lumbar spinal cord produces severe motoneuron damage and consequently hindlimb paralysis. Here we studied the time course of the AMPA-induced neurodegenerative changes and motor alterations, and the protective effect of leupeptin, an inhibitor of calpain, a Ca(2+)-activated protease. Paralysis occurs at 4-6 h after AMPA perfusion, but cresyl violet staining showed that motoneuron damage starts at about 3 h and progresses until reaching 50% neuronal loss at 6 h and 90% loss at 12 h. In contrast, choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) immunohistochemistry revealed that the enzyme is already decreased at 30 min after AMPA perfusion and practically disappears at 3 h. Microdialysis coperfusion of leupeptin with AMPA prevented the motor alterations and paralysis and remarkably reduced both the decrement in ChAT immunoreactivity and the loss of motoneurons. We conclude that an increased Ca(2+) influx through Ca(2+)-permeable AMPA receptors activates calpain, and as a consequence ChAT content decreases earlier than other Ca(2+)-dependent processes, including the proteolytic activity of calpain, cause the death of motoneurons.  相似文献   

20.
In principle, nervous systems could generate a behavior either via neurons that are relatively specialized for producing one behavior or via multifunctional neurons that are shared among multiple, diverse behaviors. I recorded extracellularly from individual turtle spinal cord neurons while evoking hindlimb scratching, swimming, and withdrawal motor patterns. The majority of spinal neurons recorded were activated during both scratching and swimming motor patterns, consistent with the existence of shared circuitry for these types of limb movements. These neurons tended to have a similar degree of rhythmic modulation of their firing rate and a similar phase preference within the hip flexor activity cycle during scratching and swimming motor patterns. In addition, a substantial minority of neurons were activated during scratching motor patterns but silenced during swimming motor patterns. This raises the possibility that inhibitory interactions between some scratching and swimming neural circuitry play a role in motor pattern selection. These scratch-specialized neurons were also less likely than the putative shared neurons to be activated during withdrawal motor patterns. Thus, these neurons may represent two separate classes, one of which is used generally for hindlimb motor control and the other of which is relatively specialized for a subset of hindlimb movement types.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号