Department of Physiology, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721-0093, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2011 May;105(5):2330-6. doi: 10.1152/jn.01078.2010. Epub 2011 Feb 9.
The respiratory central pattern generator distributes rhythmic excitatory input to phrenic, intercostal, and hypoglossal premotor neurons. The degree to which this input shapes motor neuron activity can vary across respiratory muscles and motor neuron pools. We evaluated the extent to which respiratory drive synchronizes the activation of motor unit pairs in tongue (genioglossus, hyoglossus) and chest-wall (diaphragm, external intercostals) muscles using coherence analysis. This is a frequency domain technique, which characterizes the frequency and relative strength of neural inputs that are common to each of the recorded motor units. We also examined coherence across the two tongue muscles, as our previous work shows that, despite being antagonists, they are strongly coactivated during the inspiratory phase, suggesting that excitatory input from the premotor neurons is distributed broadly throughout the hypoglossal motoneuron pool. All motor unit pairs showed highly correlated activity in the low-frequency range (1-8 Hz), reflecting the fundamental respiratory frequency and its harmonics. Coherence of motor unit pairs recorded either within or across the tongue muscles was similar, consistent with broadly distributed premotor input to the hypoglossal motoneuron pool. Interestingly, motor units from diaphragm and external intercostal muscles showed significantly higher coherence across the 10-20-Hz bandwidth than tongue-muscle units. We propose that the lower coherence in tongue-muscle motor units over this range reflects a larger constellation of presynaptic inputs, which collectively lead to a reduction in the coherence between hypoglossal motoneurons in this frequency band. This, in turn, may reflect the relative simplicity of the respiratory drive to the diaphragm and intercostal muscles, compared with the greater diversity of functions fulfilled by muscles of the tongue.
呼吸中枢模式发生器将节律性兴奋性输入分布到膈神经、肋间神经和舌下神经运动前神经元。这种输入对运动神经元活动的影响程度在呼吸肌和运动神经元池之间可能有所不同。我们使用相干性分析评估呼吸驱动在多大程度上同步舌(颏舌肌、舌下肌)和胸壁(膈肌、肋间外肌)肌肉中运动单位对的激活。这是一种频域技术,用于描述记录的每个运动单位共有的神经输入的频率和相对强度。我们还检查了两个舌肌之间的相干性,因为我们之前的工作表明,尽管它们是拮抗剂,但在吸气阶段它们强烈地共同激活,这表明来自运动前神经元的兴奋性输入广泛分布在舌下运动神经元池中。所有运动单位对在低频范围内(1-8 Hz)表现出高度相关的活动,反映了基本的呼吸频率及其谐波。在舌肌内或舌肌之间记录的运动单位对的相干性相似,这与舌下运动神经元池广泛分布的运动前输入一致。有趣的是,来自膈肌和肋间外肌的运动单位在 10-20 Hz 带宽内的相干性明显高于舌肌单位。我们提出,在这个范围内,舌肌运动单位的相干性较低反映了更大的突触前输入组合,这共同导致在这个频带中舌下运动神经元之间的相干性降低。反过来,这可能反映了与舌头肌肉相比,膈肌和肋间外肌的呼吸驱动相对简单,而舌头肌肉完成的功能更加多样化。