Department of Physiology, University of Montreal, Montreal, QC, H3S 2J4, Canada.
J Physiol. 2010 May 1;588(Pt 9):1551-70. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2009.186858. Epub 2010 Mar 15.
It has previously been established that muscles become active in response to deviations from a threshold (referent) position of the body or its segments, and that intentional motor actions result from central shifts in the referent position. We tested the hypothesis that corticospinal pathways are involved in threshold position control during intentional changes in the wrist position in humans. Subjects moved the wrist from an initial extended to a final flexed position (and vice versa). Passive wrist muscle forces were compensated with a torque motor such that wrist muscle activity was equalized at the two positions. It appeared that motoneuronal excitability tested by brief muscle stretches was also similar at these positions. Responses to mechanical perturbations before and after movement showed that the wrist threshold position was reset when voluntary changes in the joint angle were made. Although the excitability of motoneurons was similar at the two positions, the same transcranial magnetic stimulus (TMS) elicited a wrist extensor jerk in the extension position and a flexor jerk in the flexion position. Extensor motor-evoked potentials (MEPs) elicited by TMS at the wrist extension position were substantially bigger compared to those at the flexion position and vice versa for flexor MEPs. MEPs were substantially reduced when subjects fully relaxed wrist muscles and the wrist was held passively in each position. Results suggest that the corticospinal pathway, possibly with other descending pathways, participates in threshold position control, a process that pre-determines the spatial frame of reference in which the neuromuscular periphery is constrained to work. This control strategy would underlie not only intentional changes in the joint position, but also muscle relaxation. The notion that the motor cortex may control motor actions by shifting spatial frames of reference opens a new avenue in the analysis and understanding of brain function.
先前已经证实,肌肉会对身体或其部位偏离参考位置(参照点)做出反应,而有意的运动动作则是由于参照点的中枢转移而产生的。我们测试了一个假设,即皮质脊髓通路参与了人类在有意改变手腕位置时的参考位置控制。受试者将手腕从初始伸展位置移动到最终弯曲位置(反之亦然)。通过扭矩电机补偿手腕肌肉的被动力,以使两个位置的手腕肌肉活动均等。似乎在这两个位置,通过短暂的肌肉拉伸测试的运动神经元兴奋性也相似。在运动前后对机械干扰的反应表明,当关节角度发生自愿变化时,手腕参考位置被重置。尽管在两个位置上运动神经元的兴奋性相似,但相同的经颅磁刺激(TMS)在伸展位置引发腕伸肌抽搐,在弯曲位置引发屈肌抽搐。TMS 在腕伸展位置引发的伸肌运动诱发电位(MEP)明显大于在弯曲位置引发的 MEPs,反之亦然,对于屈肌 MEPs 也是如此。当受试者完全放松手腕肌肉并将手腕被动地保持在每个位置时,MEPs 会大大减少。结果表明,皮质脊髓通路,可能还有其他下行通路,参与了参考位置控制,这一过程预先确定了神经肌肉外围必须工作的空间参考框架。这种控制策略不仅会导致关节位置的有意变化,还会导致肌肉放松。大脑皮层可能通过改变空间参考框架来控制运动动作的观点,为大脑功能的分析和理解开辟了一条新途径。