Zold Camila L, Larramendy Celia, Riquelme Luis A, Murer M Gustavo
Laboratorio de Fisiología de Circuitos Neuronales, Departamento de Fisiología y Biofísica, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Paraguay 2155, Ciudad de Buenos Aires (CP1121), Argentina.
Eur J Neurosci. 2007 Sep;26(5):1267-79. doi: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2007.05754.x.
The main clinical manifestations of Parkinson's disease are caused by alterations of basal ganglia activity that are tied in with the progressive loss of mesencephalic dopaminergic neurons. Recent theoretical and modeling studies have suggested that changes in resting neuronal activity occurred later in the course of the disease than those evoked by phasic cortical input. However, there is no empirical support for this proposal. Here we report a marked increase in the responsiveness of globus pallidus neurons to electrical motor cortex stimulation, in the absence of noticeable changes in resting activity, in anesthetized rats that had consistently shown a deficit in forelimb use during behavioral testing before the experiments, and had approximately 45% dopamine neurons spared in the substantia nigra. Pallidal neurons were also over-responsive to motor cortex stimulation and lost spatial selectivity for cortical inputs in rats with extensive nigrostriatal damage. After partial lesions, over-responsiveness was mainly due to an increased proportion of neurons showing excitatory responses, while extensive lesions led to an increased likelihood of inhibitory responding neurons. Changes in resting neuronal activity, comprising pauses disrupting tonic discharge, occurred across different global brain states, including an activated condition which shares similarities with natural patterns of cortical activity seen in awake states and rapid eye-movement sleep, but only after massive nigrostriatal degeneration. These results suggest that a loss of functional segregation and an abnormal temporal encoding of phasic cortical inputs by globus pallidus neurons may contribute to inducing early motor impairment in Parkinson's disease.
帕金森病的主要临床表现是由基底神经节活动改变引起的,这些改变与中脑多巴胺能神经元的逐渐丧失相关。最近的理论和模型研究表明,静息神经元活动的变化在疾病进程中比由相位性皮层输入诱发的变化出现得更晚。然而,这一观点缺乏实证支持。在此,我们报告,在实验前行为测试中一直表现出前肢使用缺陷、黑质中约45%的多巴胺神经元得以保留的麻醉大鼠中,苍白球神经元对运动皮层电刺激的反应性显著增加,而静息活动没有明显变化。在黑质纹状体广泛损伤的大鼠中,苍白球神经元对运动皮层刺激也反应过度,且对皮层输入失去空间选择性。部分损伤后,反应过度主要是由于显示兴奋性反应的神经元比例增加,而广泛损伤则导致抑制性反应神经元的可能性增加。静息神经元活动的变化,包括打断紧张性放电的停顿,发生在不同的全脑状态下,包括一种与清醒状态和快速眼动睡眠中观察到的自然皮层活动模式相似的激活状态,但这仅在黑质纹状体大量退化之后。这些结果表明,苍白球神经元功能分离的丧失以及对相位性皮层输入的异常时间编码可能导致帕金森病早期运动障碍。