Gardiner T W, Kitai S T
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, College of Medicine, University of Tennessee, Memphis 38163.
Exp Brain Res. 1992;88(3):517-30. doi: 10.1007/BF00228181.
Single-unit extracellular neuronal recordings were obtained from the globus pallidus (GP) and the neostriatum (NS) of rats while they performed a learned head movement in response to an auditory cue. In both GP and NS, units that altered their discharge rate in association with head movements and with the cues that triggered these head movements were prevalent. Frequently, the responses were directionally-specific (i.e., the magnitude or direction of change in firing rate of these neurons was substantially different for trials in which head movements were made to the left vs. the right). For some units, firing rates were altered only in response to the movement cue or only in association with head movements. However, the majority of neurons exhibited responses with both cue-related and movement-related components. Neuronal responses to the auditory cue usually were context-dependent, in that they did not occur if the same stimulus was presented when the animal was not performing the task. At least a small proportion of GP and NS neurons also appeared to exhibit context-dependent movement-related activity, in that responses occasionally were observed that were associated either with sensory-triggered head movements or with spontaneous head movements, but not with both. These data are consistent with previous suggestions that the activity of basal ganglia neurons during movement performance is highly dependent on the conditions associated with movement initiation. The data also indicate that the response characteristics of both GP and NS neurons in the rat are generally similar to those that have been described for basal ganglia neurons in primates and cats during sensory-triggered movement tasks. However, the proportion of task-related neurons that exhibited responses with both movement-related and cue-related components was greater than has generally been reported in studies of cats and primates, suggesting that neurons with these response properties may be more predominant in the rat basal ganglia.
在大鼠对听觉提示做出习得的头部运动时,从其苍白球(GP)和新纹状体(NS)获取了单单位细胞外神经元记录。在GP和NS中,那些与头部运动以及触发这些头部运动的提示相关联而改变其放电率的神经元很普遍。通常,这些反应具有方向特异性(即,对于向左或向右进行头部运动的试验,这些神经元的放电率变化幅度或方向有很大不同)。对于一些神经元,放电率仅在对运动提示做出反应时或仅与头部运动相关联时发生改变。然而,大多数神经元表现出与提示相关和与运动相关的成分的反应。神经元对听觉提示的反应通常依赖于上下文,因为当动物不执行任务时呈现相同刺激时,这些反应不会发生。至少一小部分GP和NS神经元似乎也表现出依赖于上下文的与运动相关的活动,因为偶尔会观察到与感觉触发的头部运动或自发头部运动相关的反应,但不是两者都有。这些数据与先前的建议一致,即基底神经节神经元在运动执行期间的活动高度依赖于与运动启动相关的条件。数据还表明,大鼠中GP和NS神经元的反应特征通常与在灵长类动物和猫的感觉触发运动任务中描述的基底神经节神经元的反应特征相似。然而,表现出与运动相关和与提示相关成分的反应的与任务相关的神经元比例大于在猫和灵长类动物研究中通常报道的比例,这表明具有这些反应特性的神经元在大鼠基底神经节中可能更占主导地位。