Stoney S D
Department of Physiology and Endocrinology, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta 30912-3385.
Exp Brain Res. 1990;80(3):512-24. doi: 10.1007/BF00227992.
Impulse conduction at the branch point of afferent axons in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) has been studied using intracellular recording from frog DRG neurons in vitro. The least conduction interval (LCI, the minimum inter-response interval) was determined for pairs of impulses to successfully propagate through the branch point into the dorsal root. At 21 degrees-23 degrees C, average branch point LCI was significantly longer than for afferent fibers in the peripheral nerve. This result suggested that the branch point would limit the maximum frequency of action potentials that could conduct into the dorsal root. This was found to be the case. The maximum frequency of impulses in short trains (less than or equal to 40 ms) which could conduct into the dorsal root without failure (363 Hz) was accurately predicted by branch point LCI and was far less than the maximum frequency predicted from the LCI of axons in the peripheral nerve (610 Hz). Branch point LCI was correlated (r = -0.78) with the natural log of peripheral axon conduction velocity (CV). However, the relationship of LCI and CV was different for different types of neurons and the shape of the somatic action potential was found to be a reliable predictor of branch point LCI. Neurons with long-duration somatic action potentials with a shoulder on the falling phase tended to have low CV and invariably had long LCI's. Neurons with brief, smooth action potentials had short LCI's regardless of CV. These cells, which appear to be the most differentiated type, have found a way to minimize branch point LCI which is virtually independent of their axonal CV. For the latter neurons, branch point LCI was correlated (r = 0.42) with the reciprocal of the hyperpolarization level, at the cell body, required to block conduction through the branch point, suggesting that the proximity of the cell body to the branch point might play a role in determining the LCI of some neurons. Over a range of 12 degrees C to around 35 degrees C, branch point LCI was inversely related and maximum firing frequency directly related to temperature. At high temperatures (30 degrees-40 degrees C) conduction failure occurred at sites having particularly long LCI's. It is concluded that a) these axon branch points act as low-pass filters and set the maximum frequency of conducted impulses that can access the central nervous system; b) certain varieties of DRG neurons exhibit more branch point filtering action than others; and c) warming, within limits, reduces branch point filtering action.
利用体外青蛙背根神经节(DRG)神经元的细胞内记录,对传入轴突在背根神经节分支点处的冲动传导进行了研究。确定了成对冲动成功通过分支点传入背根的最小传导间隔(LCI,即最小反应间隔)。在21摄氏度至23摄氏度时,分支点的平均LCI明显长于外周神经中传入纤维的LCI。这一结果表明,分支点会限制能够传入背根的动作电位的最大频率。事实证明确实如此。分支点LCI准确预测了短串冲动(小于或等于40毫秒)能够无故障传入背根的最大频率(363赫兹),且远低于根据外周神经轴突LCI预测的最大频率(610赫兹)。分支点LCI与外周轴突传导速度(CV)的自然对数相关(r = -0.78)。然而,不同类型神经元的LCI与CV关系不同,且发现体细胞动作电位的形状是分支点LCI的可靠预测指标。下降阶段有肩部的长时程体细胞动作电位的神经元往往CV较低,且LCI总是很长。动作电位短暂且平滑的神经元,无论CV如何,LCI都很短。这些细胞似乎是分化程度最高的类型,它们找到了一种方法将分支点LCI降至最低,而分支点LCI实际上与它们的轴突CV无关。对于后一种神经元,分支点LCI与阻断通过分支点传导所需的细胞体超极化水平的倒数相关(r = 0.42),这表明细胞体与分支点的距离可能在决定某些神经元的LCI中起作用。在12摄氏度至约35摄氏度的范围内,分支点LCI与温度呈负相关,最大放电频率与温度呈正相关。在高温(30摄氏度至40摄氏度)下,LCI特别长的部位会发生传导失败。得出的结论是:a)这些轴突分支点起到低通滤波器的作用,设定了能够进入中枢神经系统的传导冲动的最大频率;b)某些种类的DRG神经元比其他神经元表现出更强的分支点滤波作用;c)在一定限度内升温会降低分支点滤波作用。