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1.
Chronic recording techniques in freely walking cats have been used to sample unitary activity from most large myelinated afferent classes. Cutaneous mechanoreceptors are highly sensitive and generate regular activity patterns predictable from their modalities. Knee joint afferents can fire briskly midrange locomotory movements but appear to be influenced by factors other than joint angle. Golgi tendon organs generate activity consistent with sensitivity to active muscle tension. Muscle spindle afferents do not appear to conform to any single functional pattern for all muscles. It is suggested that degree and rate of stretch are sensed by spindles (possibly under dynamic fusimotor bias) in extensor muscles which normally undergo isometric or lengthening contractions whereas rapidly modulated static fusimotor activity is employed to preserve spindle activity during the rapidly shortening contractions of flexor muscles. Both patterns may be represented in different spindles of bifunctional, biarticular muscles such as rectus femoris and sartorius.  相似文献   

2.
Muscle spindles provide critical information about movement position and velocity. They have been shown to act as stretch receptors in passive muscle, however, during active movements their behavior is less clear. In particular, spindle responses have been shown to be out-of-phase or phase advanced with respect to their expected muscle length-sensitivity. Whether this apparent discrepancy of spindle responses between passive and active movements is due to fusimotor (γ-drive) remains unresolved, since the activity of fusimotor neurons during voluntary non-locomotor movements are largely unknown. We developed a computational model to predict fusimotor activity and to investigate whether fusimotor activity could explain the empirically observed phase advance of spindle responses. The model links a biomechanical wrist model to length- and γ-drive-dependent transfer functions of type Ia and type II muscle spindle activity. Our simulations of two wrist-movement tasks suggest that (i) experimentally observed type Ia and type II activity profiles can to a large part be explained by appropriate, i.e. strongly modulated and task-dependent, γ-drive. That (ii) the empirically observed phase advance of type Ia or of type II profiles during active movement can be similarly explained by appropriate γ-drive. In summary, the simulation predicts that a highly task-modulated activation of the γ-system is instrumental in producing a large part of the empirically observed muscle spindle activity for voluntary wrist movements.  相似文献   

3.
Proprioception during voluntary movement   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In the last decade, a number of laboratories have accumulated data on the firing of single afferent fibres from muscle and skin during movement in awake cats, monkeys and human subjects. While there is general agreement on the firing behaviour of skin afferents and tendon organ (Ib) afferents during movement, there remains a significant divergence of opinion regarding the way in which the response of muscle spindle afferents (Ia and II) to length changes is modified by fusimotor action (e.g., alpha-gamma linkage versus "fusimotor set"). The controversies surrounding the fusimotor system have tended to overshadow the emergence of several important characteristics of proprioceptive behaviour, corroborated in separate laboratories. (i) Mean Ia firing rates during active movements are nearly always higher than at rest. Thus, activation of the fusimotor system is reserved for the control of, or preparation for, movement. In animals, there is now strong evidence that there is usually a tonic component of fusimotor action during rhythmical movements. (ii) During fast, unloaded movements (peak muscle speeds, 0.2 resting lengths/s or more), the firing of both Ia and II afferents usually increases during lengthening and decreases during shortening. Ib afferents fire during even the most rapid active shortening of their parent muscles. (iii) During powerful shortening contractions performed against significant loads, Ia firing is often appreciable, suggesting that there is at least some underlying alpha-gamma coactivation. (iv) During fast imposed muscle stretches, Ia afferents respond with segmented bursts of firing (threshold speed for segmentation, 0.5-1.0 resting length/s). Ib afferents show far less segmentation of discharge under similar circumstances.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The purpose of this study was to investigate secondary muscle spindle afferents from the triceps-plantaris (GS) and posterior biceps and semitendinosus (PBSt) muscles with respect to their fusimotor reflex control from different types of peripheral nerves and receptors. The activity of single secondary muscle spindle afferents was recorded from dissected and cut dorsal root filaments in alpha-chloralose anaesthetized cats. Both single spindle afferents and sets of simultaneously recorded units (2-3) were investigated. The modulation and mean rate of firing of the afferent response to sinusoidal stretching of the GS and PBSts muscle were determined. Control measurements were performed in the absence of any reflex stimulation, while test measurements were made during reflex stimulation. The reflex stimuli consisted of manually performed movements of the contralateral hind limb, muscle stretches, ligament tractions and electrical stimulations of cutaneous afferents. Altogether 21 secondary spindle afferents were investigated and 20 different reflex stimuli were employed. The general responsiveness (i.e. number of significant reflex effects/number of control-test series) was 52.4%, but a considerable variation between different stimuli was found, with the highest (89.9%) for contralateral whole limb extension and the lowest (25.0%) for stretch of the contralateral GS muscle. The size of the response to a given stimulus varied considerably between different afferents, and, in the same afferent, different reflex stimuli produced effects of varying size. Most responses were characterized by an increase in mean rate of discharge combined with a decrease in modulation, indicative of static fusimotor drive (Cussons et al., 1977). Since the secondary muscle spindle afferents are part of a positive feedback loop, projecting back to both static and dynamic fusimotor neurones (Appelberg Et al., 1892 a, 1983 b; Appelberg et al., 1986), it is suggested that the activity in the loop may work like an amplified which, during some circumstances, enhance the effect of other reflex inputs to the system (Johansson et al., 1991 b).  相似文献   

5.
Arterial pulsations are known to modulate muscle spindle firing; however, the physiological significance of such synchronised modulation has not been investigated. Unitary recordings were made from 75 human muscle spindle afferents innervating the pretibial muscles. The modulation of muscle spindle discharge by arterial pulsations was evaluated by R-wave triggered averaging and power spectral analysis. We describe various effects arterial pulsations may have on muscle spindle afferent discharge. Afferents could be "driven" by arterial pulsations, e.g., showing no other spontaneous activity than spikes generated with cardiac rhythmicity. Among afferents showing ongoing discharge that was not primarily related to cardiac rhythmicity we illustrate several mechanisms by which individual spikes may become phase-locked. However, in the majority of afferents the discharge rate was modulated by the pulse wave without spikes being phase locked. Then we assessed whether these influences changed in two physiological conditions in which a sustained increase in muscle sympathetic nerve activity was observed without activation of fusimotor neurones: a maximal inspiratory breath-hold, which causes a fall in systolic pressure, and acute muscle pain, which causes an increase in systolic pressure. The majority of primary muscle spindle afferents displayed pulse-wave modulation, but neither apnoea nor pain had any significant effect on the strength of this modulation, suggesting that the physiological noise injected by the arterial pulsations is robust and relatively insensitive to fluctuations in blood pressure. Within the afferent population there was a similar number of muscle spindles that were inhibited and that were excited by the arterial pulse wave, indicating that after signal integration at the population level, arterial pulsations of opposite polarity would cancel each other out. We speculate that with close-to-threshold stimuli the arterial pulsations may serve as an endogenous noise source that may synchronise the sporadic discharge within the afferent population and thus facilitate the detection of weak stimuli.  相似文献   

6.
The influence of fusimotor activity via the gamma-loop on reflex responses of motoneurons to stretch or vibration stimulation of mm. triceps surae was studied in decerebrate cats. Action potentials of single fusimotor neurons were derived from thin filaments isolated from nerves innervating this muscle group, leaving their main nerve supply intact. Most fusimotor neurons tested were found to be coactivated with motor units during reflex muscle contraction. In the initial period of development of reflex muscle contraction a weak autogenetic inhibitory effect on discharge of fusimotor neurons was found. The results suggest that reduction of the reflex motor signal, leading to a "silent period," is partly the result of a transient decrease in the fusimotor output effect on contracting muscles. A study of changes in fusimotor discharge generation during the ascending phase of reflex muscle contraction may provide data useful for identification of autogenetic reflex influences on these motoneurons and for elucidating the conditions necessary for servoassistance of muscle contractions.Medical Research Institute, Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 16, No. 5, pp. 630–637, September–October, 1984.  相似文献   

7.
Experiments were performed in forty-five cats anaesthetized with alpha-chloralose. The aim of the study was to investigate a sample of primary muscle spindle afferents from triceps muscle with respect to their fusimotor reflex control from ipsi- as well as contralateral hind limb. Primary muscle spindle afferents of the triceps surae muscle were recorded from the mean rate of firing and the modulation of the afferent response to sinusoidal stretching of the triceps surae muscle was determined. Test measurements were made during tonic stretch of the ipsilateral PBSt, contralateral PBSt, contralateral triceps muscle or during extension of the intact contralateral hind limb. Control measurements were made with ipsi- and contralateral PBSt as well as contralateral triceps muscles relaxed and with contralateral hind limb in resting position. The occurrence and types of fusimotor effects were assessed by comparing test to control responses. The main finding of the present investigation was the great variability in type and size of the fusimotor effects evoked by different ipsi- and contralateral reflex stimuli. Both ipsi- and contralateral stimulations gave rise to predominantly dynamic, predominantly static or mixed static and dynamic fusimotor reflexes. In the same preparation, a given reflex stimulus often caused different reflex responses in different triceps surae primary spindle afferents. In the same afferent unit, different reflex stimuli usually produced fusimotor effects which differed from each other in type and/or size. In general, contralateral whole limb extension and stretch of contralateral PBSt muscles were more potent as reflex stimuli than stretch of the ipsilateral PBSt muscle. Stretch of the contralateral triceps surae muscle was, but for a few afferent units, ineffective as reflexogenic stimulus. It is concluded that the individualized receptive profiles of the primary muscle spindle afferents, which have been postulated in earlier investigations where the effects of different stimuli have been investigated on different cell populations, still seems to hold good when the stimuli are tested on the same units. The individuality of the receptive profiles of gamma-motoneurones is discussed in relation to different motor control hypotheses.  相似文献   

8.
The arrangement of muscle spindles in m. ext. long. dig. IV has been examined by microdissection. It is confirmed that spindle systems generally appear to consist of individual receptors. Stimulation effects of fast motor fibres (conduction velocities greater than 12 m/sec) on the spindles of the same muscle were studied. Receptors were isolated with their nerves and the appropriate spinal roots, the latter ones were used for stimulating efferent fibres and recording sensory discharges. Single shocks to the ventral root filaments caused afferent responses ranging from a single action potential to a train of impulses. During repetitive stimulation (train of stimuli at frequency of 10 to 150/sec) a marked increase in afferent activity was found. Afferent activity could be driven by the frequency of stimuli ("driving") and the stimulus/action potentials ratio varied from 1:1 to 1:3 or more. The rate of sensory discharge depended on the frequency of stimuli: the maximum effect, was attained at 30 to 50 stimuli/sec and, in the most responsive receptors, up to 80 stimuli/sec. Slight increases of the initial lengths of the receptors caused facilitation of sensory responses to motor stimulation. Moreover, impairing effects, which appear during sustained or high-frequency stimulation, possibly related to fatigue in intrafusal neuromuscular transmission, could be relieved by increasing the initial length. The repetitive stimulation of fast fusimotor fibres increased both dynamic and static responses and also raised the afferent activity after a period of stretching, when usually a depression occurs; these effects varied according to the preparation, its initial tension and the frequency of stimulation. The main feature of the examined motor fibres, when stimulated, is the constant excitatory action on muscle spindle static response. Results are discussed. It is suggested that the different characteristics of intrafusal muscle fibres, the receptor initial tension and the frequency of motor units discharges, may together affect muscle spindles static or dynamic performance.  相似文献   

9.
Whether the fusimotor system contributes to reflex gain changes during reinforcement maneuvers is re-examined in the light of new data. Recently, from direct recordings of spindle afferent activity originating from ankle flexor muscles, we showed that mental computation increased the muscle spindle mechanical sensitivity in completely relaxed human subjects without concomitant alpha-motoneuron activation, providing evidence for selective fusimotor drive activation. In the present study, the effects of mental computation were investigated on monosynaptic reflexes elicited in non-contracting soleus muscle either by direct nerve stimulation (Hoffmann reflex, H) or by tendon tap (Tendinous reflex, T). The aim was to relate the time course of the changes in reflex size to the increase in spindle sensitivity during mental task in order to explore whether fusimotor activation can influence the size of the monosynaptic reflex. The results show changes in reflex amplitude that parallel the increase in muscle spindle sensitivity. When T-reflex is consistently facilitated during mental effort, the H-reflex is either depressed or facilitated, depending on the subjects. These findings suggest that the increased activity in muscle spindle primary endings may account for mental computation-induced changes in both tendon jerk and H-reflex. The facilitation of T-reflex is attributed to the enhanced spindle mechanical sensitivity and the inhibition of H-reflex is attributed to post-activation depression following the increased Ia ongoing discharge. This study supports the view that the fusimotor sensitization of muscle spindles is responsible for changes in both the mechanically and electrically elicited reflexes. It is concluded that the fusimotor drive contributed to adjustment of the size of tendon jerk and H-reflex during mental effort. The possibility that a mental computation task may also operate by reducing the level of presynaptic inhibition is discussed on the basis of H-reflex facilitation.  相似文献   

10.
The motor innervation of cat spindles was examined in hindlimb muscles using a variety of techniques employed in light and electron microscopy. Observations were made on teased, silver preparations of 267 spindles sampled from the peroneal, flexor hallucis longus, and soleus muscles, hereafter referred to as the PER/FHL/SOL series. The γ innervation. Trail endings are almost invariably present, and innervate both bag and chain muscle fibres. Trail fibres accounted for 64.6 to 74.8% of the total fusimotor supply to samples of spindle poles in the PER/FHL/SOL series, the mean number of fibres per pole varying from 2.7 to 5.0 in the different muscles, and the mean number of ramifications (areas of synaptic contact) per fibre being 3.7. By contrast, the p?innervation of a spindle pole generally consists of a single fibre supplying only one plate. In the above samples p(2) fibres accounted for 4.1 to 28.0% of the total fusimotor supply, and the mean number of fibres per pole varied from 0.3 to 1.2 in the different muscles. Ninety per cent of p(2) plates innervate bag fibres. The α innervation. The structure of p?plates as seen in both light and electron microscopy compares very closely with that of extrafusal plates. After nerve section p?plates degenerate at the same time as extrafusal plates, being the first of the three types of fusimotor ending to disappear. The frequency of the p?innervation is similar to that of the p?innervation. In the same samples of PER/FHL/SOL spindle poles as above p? fibres accounted for 6.0 to 28.8% of the total fusimotor supply, the mean number of fibres per pole varying from 0.25 to 2.1 in the different muscles. The majority of p? fibres enter a pole to terminate in one plate only. Seventy-five per cent of the plates innervate bag fibres. The three types of fusimotor ending are thus not selectively distributed to the two types of intrafusal muscle fibre. All three types of fusimotor fibre may branch within the spindle so as to innervate both bag and chain fibres. Bag fibres receive both types of plate ending as well as trail endings. Most chain fibres receive trail endings only; the rest receive either a p?or a p?plate innervation in addition, 25% of the p?and 10% of the p?innervation being distributed to chain fibres. The significance of this nonselective innervation is interpreted as indicating that the type of contraction elicited by stimulating a fusimotor fibre depends upon the type of ending initiating it rather than upon the type of muscle fibre executing it. Reasons are given for concluding that the dynamic response is controlled via the p?and p?plates, and that the static response is controlled by the trail endings. The participation of the α fibres in mammalian fusimotor innervation, previously regarded as a vestigial feature, proved to be widespread in the muscles studied and more prevalent in fast muscles (FHL, peroneus digiti quinti) than slow (soleus). A low frequency of p?innervation is offset by a high frequency of p?(as in peroneus longus), and vice versa (as in FHL). It is unlikely that collaterals from slow α fibres innervating type B muscle fibres are wholly responsible for the high frequency of the p?innervation in FHL, and it is suggested that collaterals may also be derived from fast α fibres innervating type C muscle fibres. The possibility of there being some motor fibres of α conduction velocity and with an exclusively fusimotor distribution is also taken into account.  相似文献   

11.
The experiments were performed on 21 cats anaesthetized with alpha-chloralose. The aim of the study was to investigate sets of simultaneously recorded spindle afferents (2-4 in each set) from the triceps surae muscle (GS) with respect to the pattern of fusimotor reflex effects evoked by different types of ipsi- and contralateral reflex stimulation. The afferents' responses to sinusoidal stretching of the GS muscle were determined and the fusimotor reflex effects were assessed by comparing the afferent responses (i.e. the mean rate of firing and the depth of modulation) elicited during reflex stimulation with those evoked in absence of any reflex stimulus. Natural of electrical activations of ipsi- and contralateral muscle, skin and joint receptor afferents were used as reflex stimuli. The spindle afferents were influenced by several modalities and from wide areas, with a majority responding to both ipsi- and contralateral stimuli. A particular reflex stimulus often caused different effects on different afferents, and the various reflex stimuli seldom gave similar effects on a particular afferent. Multivariate analysis revealed that the variation in response profiles among simultaneously recorded afferents were as great as between afferents recorded on different occasions. This suggests that the individualized response prifiles, observed in earlier investigations, represent a very diversified reflex control of the spindle primary afferents, and are not a reflection of changes in the setting of the spinal interneuronal network, occurring during the time interval between the recordings of different units. Also, there was no relation between the conduction velocity of the afferents and the reflex profiles of the afferents, but non-linear relations were found between effects elicited by different types of stimuli. Indications were also found that it may be possible to separate the population of GS muscle spindles into subgroups, according to the fusimotor effects exhibited by activation of various categories of ipsi- and contralateral receptor afferents. It is concluded that one possible way of making the very complex reflex system controlling the muscle spindles intelligible may be a combination of multiple simultaneous recordings of spindle afferents and multivariate analysis.  相似文献   

12.
Muscle spindle discharge during active movement is a function of mechanical and neural parameters. Muscle length changes (and their derivatives) represent its primary mechanical, fusimotor drive its neural component. However, neither the action nor the function of fusimotor and in particular of γ-drive, have been clearly established, since γ-motor activity during voluntary, non-locomotor movements remains largely unknown. Here, using a computational approach, we explored whether γ-drive emerges in an artificial neural network model of the corticospinal system linked to a biomechanical antagonist wrist simulator. The wrist simulator included length-sensitive and γ-drive-dependent type Ia and type II muscle spindle activity. Network activity and connectivity were derived by a gradient descent algorithm to generate reciprocal, known target α-motor unit activity during wrist flexion-extension (F/E) movements. Two tasks were simulated: an alternating F/E task and a slow F/E tracking task. Emergence of γ-motor activity in the alternating F/E network was a function of α-motor unit drive: if muscle afferent (together with supraspinal) input was required for driving α-motor units, then γ-drive emerged in the form of α-γ coactivation, as predicted by empirical studies. In the slow F/E tracking network, γ-drive emerged in the form of α-γ dissociation and provided critical, bidirectional muscle afferent activity to the cortical network, containing known bidirectional target units. The model thus demonstrates the complementary aspects of spindle output and hence γ-drive: i) muscle spindle activity as a driving force of α-motor unit activity, and ii) afferent activity providing continuous sensory information, both of which crucially depend on γ-drive.  相似文献   

13.
A previously proposed model to simulate the behaviour of the chelonian muscle spindle during mechanical stretch has been extended to include the properties of the spindle during activation of the intrafusal muscle fibres. It is assumed that the overall transfer function of the non-activated spindle can be entirely ascribed to the visco-elastic properties of its intrafusal fibres. It is found that the activated spindle can then be simulated by incorporating a force generator into the visco-elastic model and by accepting stepwise changes in its parameter values at the onset and at the end of fusimotor stimulation. The influence of extrafusal fibre contraction has been accounted for by inserting the Voigt muscle model in parallel with the spindle model.  相似文献   

14.
An earlier proposed mechanical model of the de-efferented muscle spindle endings has been developed further in order to study whether the functional effects of activating the static fusimotor fibres may be accounted for by relatively simple mechanical events in the intrafusal muscle fibres. Particular attention has been paid to important controversial problems related to the processes involved in the fusimotor activation of the mammalian muscle spindles. In order to develop an adequate model, preliminary simulation studies of the functional effects of various reasonable modifications of the original “de-efferented” model were first carried out by means of a convenient direct electronic analogue of the mechanical system. The following results apparently reflect pertinent details about the peripheral receptor mechanisms associated with the activation of the static fusimotor fibres:
  1. The γ s-activation is most adequately accounted for by mechanical events occurring in the nuclear chain fibres.
  2. Any uniform chain fibre contraction fails to account for the effects of the γ s-activation.
  3. The simulation of a local chain fibre contraction could apparently account for all significant effects of the γ s-activation.
  4. A reasonable increase of the position sensitivity and the vibration sensitivity of both the primary and the secondary endings could be accounted for by increasing the stiffness of about 1/4–1/2 of the length of the simulated nuclear chain fibre by a factor of about 2–10.
  5. The powerful modulation of the background discharge of the receptor endings that is associated with the γ s-activation could be accounted for by an independent contraction force related to the intensity of the static fusimotor activity.
  6. The model predicts a decrease of the rate sensitivity of the primary endings (group Ia) and a slight increase of the (moderate) rate sensitivity of the secondary endings.
  7. By an adequate selection of the parameters, the simulated γ s-activation showed a negligible influence on the absolute level of the dynamic phase of the ramp response of the simulated primary endings, in spite of a considerable increase of the steady state (background) discharge before and after the termination of a simulated stretch.
  相似文献   

15.
Firing pattern of skeletomotor neurones innervating triceps surae muscles in response to pseudorandom muscle stretching and white noise modulated transmembrane current stimulation was investigated in decerebrate cats. Pseudo-random muscle stretching (upper cut-off frequency 60 Hz, amplitude (standard deviation) ranging from 18.5 m to 40 m) was applied to triceps surae muscles. Membrane potential changes and action potentials of skeletomotor neurones were recorded intracellularly. White noise modulated current was applied through the same (recording) microelectrode. Sequences of ten identical 5 s periods of either muscle stretching or transmembrane current stimulation were applied. Skeletomotor neurones belonging to slow motor units (rheobase less than 8.5 nA) generated action potentials in response to both pseudo-random muscle stretching and transmembrane current stimulation, while firing threshold of those belonging to fast motor units could not be reached by the muscle stretches applied. Peri-spike averaging of muscle length and injected current records showed that the action potentials appeared at the peak of either depolarizing current wave or muscle stretching both preceded by a change in opposite direction (the spikes coinciding with the peak in muscle length PSA being actually elicited by muscle spindle action potentials triggered at the moment of the peak stretching velocity). Time coupling of action potentials occurred during both muscle stretching and transmembrane stimulation, being more tight in the latter case as well as when larger amplitudes of the stimuli were applied. It is supposed that discharges from muscle spindle primary endings phase-locked to small pseudo-random muscle length changes may, due to the time coupling of skeletomotor action potentials, provoke a synchronous firing of skeletomotor neurones, mostly of those belonging to slow motor units. Possible effects of such a firing pattern on the resulting muscle reflex contraction and the stretch reflex stability as well as a possibility of it being provoked by fusimotor discharges are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of muscle spindle secondary ending activity on the stretch reflex were studied in unanesthetized decerebrate cats. Activation of secondary endings was accomplished by reducing the muscle temperature. This has been shown to cause a sustained asynchronous discharge from secondary endings. Cooling of the medial gastrocnemius or lateral gastrocnemius-soleus muscles caused an increase in the phasic and tonic components of their stretch reflexes. Cooling of the relaxed medial gastrocnemius muscle caused similar increases in the components of the stretch reflex of the synergistic lateral gastrocnemius-soleus muscle and an increase in its monosynaptic reflex. It was concluded that the facilitatory autogenetic and synergistic effects of muscle cooling on the stretch and monosynaptic reflexes were brought about by activity in group II afferents from muscle spindle secondary endings and could not be ascribed to any other type of muscle receptor. These results support the concept of an excitatory role for the secondary endings of the muscle spindle in the stretch reflex of the decerebrate cat.  相似文献   

17.
The mode of action of acetylcholine (ACh) and succinylcholine (SCh) on the isolated frog's muscle spindle has been studied. Receptor afferent nervous supply was maintained; the appropriate spinal roots were dissected for stimulating motor axons and recording from sensory fibres. Excitatory effects on the afferent activity, when the receptor was held still and during stretching, were found with ACh or SCh concentrations of 10(-8) to 10(-3); 10(-6) g/ml being usually effective. These effects are similar to those obtained by stimulating fusimotor nerve fibres. The contractile activity of intrafusal muscle fibres which occurred during these effects was observed. Seldom, and only for high concentrations of ACh and SCh, a decrease in afferent activity following the excitatory effects was found. Tubocurarine chloride (10(-5)-10(04) g/ml) in the bath prevented both motor fibres and drugs effects. Sometimes slight transient excitation occurred at very high concentrations of the two tested substances; however, this effect was prevented by stronger curarization. The observed blocking effects were always reversed by removing tubocurarine from the bath. No more excitatory effects by motor fibres stimulation and by ACh and SCh action could be found after destruction of intrafusal muscle fibres, by pinching them as close as possible to the ends of the spindle. It is suggested that ACh and SCh act indirectly by causing mechanical changes in intrafusal muscle fibres, and that a direct action on sensory nerve endings, if any, cannot, by itself, increase the afferent activity of the receptor.  相似文献   

18.
A three-component model of the muscle is used in which the components change their values when the muscle is stimulated. In particular the elastic components change not only their moduli of elasticity but the unstretched lengths decrease when the muscle is in the active state. When the model is extended to the intrafusal muscle fibres of the mammalian muscle spindle it can reproduce some of the observed responses to mechanical stretch and fusimotor stimulation.  相似文献   

19.
Glial cell-line derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) is a potent survival factor for motor neurons. Previous studies have shown that some motor neurons depend upon GDNF during development but this GDNF-dependent motor neuron subpopulation has not been characterized. We examined GDNF expression patterns in muscle and the impact of altered GDNF expression on the development of subtypes of motor neurons. In GDNF hemizygous mice, motor neuron innervation to muscle spindle stretch receptors (fusimotor neuron innervation) was decreased, whereas in transgenic mice that overexpress GDNF in muscle, fusimotor innervation to muscle spindles was increased. Facial motor neurons, which do not contain fusimotor neurons, were not changed in number when GDNF was over expressed by facial muscles during their development. Taken together, these data indicate that fusimotor neurons depend upon GDNF for survival during development. Since the fraction of cervical and lumbar motor neurons lost in GDNF-deficient mice at birth closely approximates the size of the fusimotor neuron pool, these data suggest that motor neuron loss in GDNF-deficient mice may be primarily of fusimotor neuron origin.  相似文献   

20.
Intrafusal muscle fibres in adult muscle spindles differ in their myosin composition. After selective motor denervation intrafusal muscle fibres develop mature ultrastructural characteristics. In order to evaluate the role of fusimotor innervation on the maturation of the myosin composition of intrafusal muscle fibres we have examined with immunohistochemical techniques i) the postnatal development of muscle spindles in new-born rats and in 7-21 day old rats; ii) muscle spindles in the EDL of 21-day-old rats de-efferented at birth. For the characterization of myosins in intrafusal fibres we used three myosin antisera: antipectoral myosin, antiheart myosin and antiheart myosin adsorbed with muscle powder from the soleus muscle of guinea pig. We show in this study that during development intrafusal fibres change immunoreactivity and that in the absence of motor innervation bag fibres do not fully develop the myosin characteristics of control spindles. We conclude that the maturation of bag1 and bag2 fibres apparently requires next to the inductive influence of sensory axon terminals the presence and activity of fusimotor axons.  相似文献   

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