Stuart Douglas G, Hultborn Hans
Department of Physiology, University of Arizona, AHSC, Tucson, AZ 85724-5051, USA.
Brain Res Rev. 2008 Nov;59(1):74-95. doi: 10.1016/j.brainresrev.2008.06.001. Epub 2008 Jun 9.
Thomas Graham Brown (1882--1965) undertook experiments on the neural control of stepping in the University of Liverpool laboratory of Charles Sherrington (1857--1952) in 1910--13 and his own laboratory in 1913--15 at the University of Manchester. His results revealed the intrinsic capability of the spinal cord in the guinea pig and cat to generate a stepping output pattern whose timing did not depend upon descending or sensory inputs. This idea was then revolutionary because the prevailing viewpoint was that the stepping rhythm was generated by spinal reflexes. Sadly, Graham Brown's GBR peers gave little credence to this seminal accomplishment, except perhaps Sherrington, who waxed but largely waned on the potential significance of the work. It remained for the Swedish neuroscientist, Anders Lundberg (1920-), to rescue Graham Brown's concepts from obscurity: in seminars presented in several countries between 1957 and 1980, and in widely read articles and reviews (1965--1981). Graham Brown had proposed mutually inhibitory connections between a pair of intrinsically active flexor and extensor "half-centers" on each side of the spinal cord, with the rhythmic output modulated by sensory proprioceptive input. Lundberg, Elzbieta Jankowska (1930-), and their colleagues provided seminal, compelling evidence for spinal half-center interneuronal circuitry implicated in the control of stepping and Lundberg and Ingemar Engberg (1935--2005) made behavioral EMG observations on unrestrained cats that supported a central generation of the rhythm. Subsequently, models of the spinal pattern generators for mammalian locomotion have become progressively more complex but they mostly still include a half-center component.
托马斯·格雷厄姆·布朗(1882—1965)于1910年至1913年在利物浦大学查尔斯·谢灵顿(1857—1952)的实验室,以及1913年至1915年在曼彻斯特大学他自己的实验室中,进行了有关行走神经控制的实验。他的研究结果揭示了豚鼠和猫的脊髓具有内在能力,能够产生一种行走输出模式,其时间安排并不依赖于下行或感觉输入。这一观点在当时具有革命性,因为当时流行的观点认为行走节奏是由脊髓反射产生的。遗憾的是,格雷厄姆·布朗同时代的人几乎没有认可这一开创性的成就,或许只有谢灵顿除外,他对这项工作的潜在意义曾有过热情,但后来也逐渐冷淡了。瑞典神经科学家安德斯·伦德伯格(1920—)将格雷厄姆·布朗的概念从默默无闻中拯救了出来:在1957年至1980年间在多个国家举办的研讨会上,以及在广泛阅读的文章和评论(1965—1981)中。格雷厄姆·布朗曾提出,脊髓两侧一对具有内在活性的屈肌和伸肌“半中枢”之间存在相互抑制性连接,节律性输出由感觉本体感受输入进行调节。伦德伯格、埃尔齐别塔·扬科夫斯卡(1930—)及其同事为参与行走控制的脊髓半中枢中间神经元回路提供了开创性的、令人信服的证据,伦德伯格和英格玛·恩贝里(1935—2005)对未受约束的猫进行了行为肌电图观察,支持了节律的中枢产生。随后,哺乳动物运动的脊髓模式发生器模型变得越来越复杂,但大多仍包含半中枢成分。