Goldberg Joshua A, Boraud Thomas, Maraton Sharon, Haber Suzanne N, Vaadia Eilon, Bergman Hagai
Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, the Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Computation, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem 91120, Israel.
J Neurosci. 2002 Jun 1;22(11):4639-53. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.22-11-04639.2002.
Primary motor cortex (MI) neurons discharge vigorously during voluntary movement. A cardinal symptom of Parkinson's disease (PD) is poverty of movement (akinesia). Current models of PD thus hypothesize that increased inhibitory pallidal output reduces firing rates in frontal cortex, including MI, resulting in akinesia and muscle rigidity. We recorded the simultaneous spontaneous discharge of several neurons in the arm-related area of MI of two monkeys and in the globus pallidus (GP) of one of the two. Accelerometers were fastened to the forelimbs to detect movement, and surface electromyograms were recorded from the contralateral arm of one monkey. The recordings were conducted before and after systemic treatment with 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP), rendering the animals severely akinetic and rigid with little or no tremor. The mean spontaneous MI rates during periods of immobility (four to five spikes/sec) did not change after MPTP; however, in this parkinsonian state, MI neurons discharged in long bursts (sometimes >2 sec long). These bursts were synchronized across many cells but failed to elicit detectable movement, indicating that even robust synchronous MI discharge need not result in movement. These synchronized population bursts were absent from the GP and were on a larger timescale than oscillatory synchrony found in the GP of tremulous MPTP primates, suggesting that MI parkinsonian synchrony arises independently of basal ganglia dynamics. After MPTP, MI neurons responded more vigorously and with less specificity to passive limb movement. Abnormal MI firing patterns and synchronization, rather than reduced firing rates, may underlie PD akinesia and persistent muscle rigidity.
初级运动皮层(MI)神经元在自主运动期间会剧烈放电。帕金森病(PD)的一个主要症状是运动减少(运动不能)。因此,目前的帕金森病模型假设,苍白球抑制性输出增加会降低额叶皮层(包括MI)的放电率,从而导致运动不能和肌肉僵硬。我们记录了两只猴子MI的手臂相关区域以及其中一只猴子的苍白球(GP)中几个神经元的同时自发放电。加速度计固定在前肢上以检测运动,并从其中一只猴子的对侧手臂记录表面肌电图。记录在使用1-甲基-4-苯基-1,2,3,6-四氢吡啶(MPTP)进行全身治疗之前和之后进行,使动物出现严重的运动不能和僵硬,几乎没有或没有震颤。在静止期(每秒4至5个峰电位),MI的平均自发放电率在MPTP治疗后没有变化;然而,在这种帕金森状态下,MI神经元以长时间爆发(有时>2秒长)的形式放电。这些爆发在许多细胞之间是同步的,但未能引发可检测到的运动,这表明即使是强烈的同步MI放电也不一定会导致运动。这些同步的群体爆发在GP中不存在,并且在时间尺度上比在震颤的MPTP灵长类动物的GP中发现的振荡同步更大,这表明MI帕金森同步性的产生独立于基底神经节动力学。MPTP治疗后,MI神经元对被动肢体运动的反应更强烈且特异性更低。异常的MI放电模式和同步性,而不是放电率降低,可能是PD运动不能和持续肌肉僵硬的基础。