Parkis M A, Dong X, Feldman J L, Funk G D
Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
J Neurosci. 1999 Mar 15;19(6):2368-80. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.19-06-02368.1999.
The movements that define behavior are controlled by motoneuron output, which depends on the excitability of motoneurons and the synaptic inputs they receive. Modulation of motoneuron excitability takes place over many time scales. To determine whether motoneuron excitability is specifically modulated during the active versus the quiescent phase of rhythmic behavior, we compared the input-output properties of phrenic motoneurons (PMNs) during inspiratory and expiratory phases of respiration. In neonatal rat brainstem-spinal cord preparations that generate rhythmic respiratory motor outflow, we blocked excitatory inspiratory synaptic drive to PMNs and then examined their phase-dependent responses to superthreshold current pulses. Pulses during inspiration elicited fewer action potentials compared with identical pulses during expiration. This reduced excitability arose from an inspiratory-phase inhibitory input that hyperpolarized PMNs in the absence of excitatory inspiratory inputs. Local application of bicuculline blocked this inhibition as well as the difference between inspiratory and expiratory firing. Correspondingly, bicuculline locally applied to the midcervical spinal cord enhanced fourth cervical nerve (C4) inspiratory burst amplitude. Strychnine had no effect on C4 output. Nicotinic receptor antagonists neither potentiated C4 output nor blocked its potentiation by bicuculline, further indicating that the inhibition is not from recurrent inhibitory pathways. We conclude that it is bulbospinal in origin. These data demonstrate that rapid changes in motoneuron excitability occur during behavior and suggest that integration of overlapping, opposing synaptic inputs to motoneurons is important in controlling motor outflow. Modulation of phasic inhibition may represent a means for regulating the transfer function of PMNs to suit behavioral demands.
定义行为的动作由运动神经元输出控制,而运动神经元输出取决于运动神经元的兴奋性及其所接收的突触输入。运动神经元兴奋性的调节发生在多个时间尺度上。为了确定在节律性运动行为的活跃期与静止期运动神经元兴奋性是否受到特异性调节,我们比较了呼吸过程中吸气和呼气阶段膈运动神经元(PMNs)的输入 - 输出特性。在能产生节律性呼吸运动输出的新生大鼠脑干 - 脊髓标本中,我们阻断了PMNs的兴奋性吸气突触驱动,然后检查它们对阈上电流脉冲的相位依赖性反应。与呼气期间相同的脉冲相比,吸气期间的脉冲引发的动作电位更少。这种兴奋性降低源于吸气相抑制性输入,在没有兴奋性吸气输入时使PMNs超极化。局部应用荷包牡丹碱可阻断这种抑制以及吸气和呼气放电之间的差异。相应地,局部应用于颈中脊髓的荷包牡丹碱可增强第四颈神经(C4)的吸气爆发幅度。士的宁对C4输出没有影响。烟碱受体拮抗剂既不能增强C4输出,也不能阻断荷包牡丹碱对其的增强作用,这进一步表明这种抑制并非来自反馈抑制通路。我们得出结论,它起源于延髓脊髓。这些数据表明,在行为过程中运动神经元兴奋性会发生快速变化,并表明对运动神经元的重叠、相反突触输入的整合在控制运动输出中很重要。相位抑制的调节可能代表一种调节PMNs传递函数以适应行为需求的方式。