Enríquez-Denton M, Morita H, Christensen L O D, Petersen N, Sinkjaer T, Nielsen J B
Division of Neurophysiology, Department of Medical Physiology, The Panum Institute. University of Copenhagen, Blegdamsvej 3, 2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark.
J Neurophysiol. 2002 Oct;88(4):1664-74. doi: 10.1152/jn.2002.88.4.1664.
It has been demonstrated in man that the H-reflex is more depressed by presynaptic inhibition than the stretch reflex. Here we investigated this finding further in the alpha-chloralose-anesthetized cat. Soleus monosynaptic reflexes were evoked by electrical stimulation of the tibial nerve or by stretch of the triceps surae muscle. Conditioning stimulation of the posterior biceps and semitendinosus nerve (PBSt) produced a significantly stronger depression of the electrically than the mechanically evoked reflexes. The depression of the reflexes has been shown to be caused by presynaptic inhibition of triceps surae Ia afferents. We investigated the hypothesis that repetitive activation of peripheral afferents may reduce their sensitivity to presynaptic inhibition. In triceps surae motoneurones, we measured the effect of presynaptic inhibition on excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) produced by repetitive activation of the peripheral afferents or by fast and slow muscle stretch. EPSPs evoked by single electrical stimulation of the tibial nerve or by fast muscle stretch were significantly depressed by PBSt stimulation. However, the last EPSP in a series of EPSPs evoked by a train of electrical stimuli (5-6 shocks, 150-200 Hz) was significantly less depressed by the conditioning stimulation than the first EPSP. In addition, the last part of the long-lasting EPSPs evoked by a slow muscle stretch was also less depressed than the first part. A single EPSP evoked by stimulation of the medial gastrocnemius nerve was less depressed when preceded by a train of stimuli applied to the same nerve than when the same train of stimuli was applied to a synergistic nerve. The decreased sensitivity of the test EPSP to presynaptic inhibition was maximal when it was evoked within 20 ms after the train of EPSPs. It was not observed at intervals longer than 30 ms. These findings suggest that afferent activity may decrease the efficiency of presynaptic inhibition. We propose that the described interaction between afferent nerve activity and presynaptic inhibition may partly explain why electrically and mechanically evoked reflexes are differently sensitive to presynaptic inhibition.
在人体中已证实,H反射比牵张反射更容易受到突触前抑制的抑制。在此,我们在α-氯醛糖麻醉的猫身上进一步研究了这一发现。通过电刺激胫神经或拉伸小腿三头肌来诱发比目鱼肌单突触反射。对肱三头肌和半腱肌神经(PBSt)进行条件刺激时,电诱发的反射比机械诱发的反射受到的抑制作用明显更强。已证明反射的抑制是由小腿三头肌Ia传入神经的突触前抑制引起的。我们研究了这样一个假设,即外周传入神经的重复激活可能会降低其对突触前抑制的敏感性。在小腿三头肌运动神经元中,我们测量了突触前抑制对由外周传入神经的重复激活或快速和慢速肌肉拉伸所产生的兴奋性突触后电位(EPSP)的影响。由胫神经单次电刺激或快速肌肉拉伸诱发的EPSP在PBSt刺激下明显受到抑制。然而,由一串电刺激(5 - 6次电击,150 - 200 Hz)诱发的一系列EPSP中的最后一个EPSP,与第一个EPSP相比,受到条件刺激的抑制作用明显更小。此外,由慢速肌肉拉伸诱发的长时程EPSP的最后部分也比第一部分受到的抑制作用更小。当在同一神经上施加一串刺激后紧接着刺激腓肠内侧肌神经诱发的单个EPSP,与对协同神经施加相同一串刺激时相比,受到的抑制作用更小。测试EPSP对突触前抑制的敏感性降低在其在一串EPSP后20毫秒内诱发时最大。在间隔超过30毫秒时未观察到这种情况。这些发现表明传入神经活动可能会降低突触前抑制的效率。我们提出,所描述的传入神经活动与突触前抑制之间的相互作用可能部分解释了为什么电诱发和机械诱发的反射对突触前抑制的敏感性不同。