Chan Y S, Lai C H, Shum D K Y
Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
J Biomed Sci. 2002 Nov-Dec;9(6 Pt 2):574-86. doi: 10.1159/000067284.
Recent work on the coding of spatial information in central otolith neurons has significantly advanced our knowledge of signal transformation from head-fixed otolith coordinates to space-centered coordinates during motion. In this review, emphasis is placed on the neural mechanisms by which signals generated at the bilateral labyrinths are recognized as gravity-dependent spatial information and in turn as substrate for otolithic reflexes. We first focus on the spatiotemporal neuronal response patterns (i.e. one- and two-dimensional neurons) to pure otolith stimulation, as assessed by single unit recording from the vestibular nucleus in labyrinth-intact animals. These spatiotemporal features are also analyzed in association with other electrophysiological properties to evaluate their role in the central construction of a spatial frame of reference in the otolith system. Data derived from animals with elimination of inputs from one labyrinth then provide evidence that during vestibular stimulation signals arising from a single utricle are operative at the level of both the ipsilateral and contralateral vestibular nuclei. Hemilabyrinthectomy also revealed neural asymmetries in spontaneous activity, response dynamics and spatial coding behavior between neuronal subpopulations on the two sides and as a result suggested a segregation of otolith signals reaching the ipsilateral and contralateral vestibular nuclei. Recent studies have confirmed and extended previous observations that the recovery of resting activity within the vestibular nuclear complex during vestibular compensation is related to changes in both intrinsic membrane properties and capacities to respond to extracellular factors. The bilateral imbalance provides the basis for deranged spatial coding and motor deficits accompanying hemilabyrinthectomy. Taken together, these experimental findings indicate that in the normal state converging inputs from bilateral vestibular labyrinths are essential to spatiotemporal signal transformation at the central otolith neurons during low-frequency head movements.
近期关于中枢耳石神经元空间信息编码的研究,极大地推进了我们对运动过程中从头部固定的耳石坐标到以空间为中心的坐标信号转换的认识。在这篇综述中,重点关注的是双侧迷路产生的信号如何被识别为重力相关的空间信息,并进而作为耳石反射基础的神经机制。我们首先聚焦于通过对完整迷路动物前庭核的单单位记录评估的,对纯耳石刺激的时空神经元反应模式(即一维和二维神经元)。这些时空特征也与其他电生理特性相关联进行分析,以评估它们在耳石系统空间参照系中枢构建中的作用。来自消除一侧迷路输入的动物的数据,随后提供了证据表明,在前庭刺激期间,来自单个椭圆囊的信号在同侧和对侧前庭核水平均起作用。半规管切除术还揭示了两侧神经元亚群之间在自发活动、反应动力学和空间编码行为方面的神经不对称性,结果表明到达同侧和对侧前庭核的耳石信号存在分离。最近的研究证实并扩展了先前的观察结果,即在前庭代偿期间前庭核复合体内静息活动的恢复与内在膜特性和对细胞外因子反应能力的变化有关。双侧失衡为半规管切除术后空间编码紊乱和运动缺陷提供了基础。综上所述,这些实验结果表明,在正常状态下,来自双侧前庭迷路的汇聚输入对于低频头部运动期间中枢耳石神经元的时空信号转换至关重要。