MacLaren Duncan A A, Santini Joseph A, Russell Ashley L, Markovic Tamara, Clark Stewart D
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, SUNY, Buffalo, NY, 14214, USA.
Eur J Neurosci. 2014 Oct;40(8):3224-36. doi: 10.1111/ejn.12666. Epub 2014 Jul 4.
Anatomically and functionally located between basal ganglia and brainstem circuitry, the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus (PPTg) is in a pivotal position to contribute to motor behavior. Studies in primates have reported akinesia and postural instability following destruction of the PPTg. In humans, the PPTg partially degenerates in Parkinson's disease and stimulation of this region is under investigation as a possible therapeutic. Studies in rats report no crude motor impairment following PPTg lesion, although a detailed assessment of the role of the PPTg in rat motor function has not been reported. Our studies applied motor tests generally used in rodent models of Parkinson's disease to rats bearing either excitotoxic damage to all neuronal populations within PPTg, or selective destruction of the cholinergic subpopulation created with the toxin Dtx-UII. Neither lesion type altered baseline locomotion. On the rotarod, excitotoxic lesions produced a persistent impairment on the accelerating, but not fixed speed, conditions. In the vermicelli handling task (a quantitative measure of fine motor control and effective behavioral sequencing) excitotoxic lesions produced no single impairment, but globally increased the number of normal and abnormal behaviors. In contrast, depletion of cholinergic PPTg neurons produced impairment on the accelerating rotarod but no changes in vermicelli handling. Together, these results show that while PPTg lesions produce no impairment in the execution of individual motor actions, impairments emerge when the demands of the task increase. Results are discussed in terms of PPTg acting as part of a rapid action selection system, which integrates sensory information into motor output.
脚桥被盖核(PPTg)在解剖学和功能上位于基底神经节和脑干神经回路之间,在促进运动行为方面处于关键位置。对灵长类动物的研究报告称,破坏PPTg后会出现运动不能和姿势不稳。在人类中,PPTg在帕金森病中会部分退化,对该区域的刺激作为一种可能的治疗方法正在研究中。对大鼠的研究报告称,PPTg损伤后没有明显的运动障碍,尽管尚未有关于PPTg在大鼠运动功能中作用的详细评估报告。我们的研究将帕金森病啮齿动物模型中常用的运动测试应用于对PPTg内所有神经元群体进行兴奋性毒性损伤或用毒素Dtx-UII选择性破坏胆碱能亚群的大鼠。两种损伤类型均未改变基线运动。在转棒实验中,兴奋性毒性损伤在加速条件下产生了持续的损伤,但在固定速度条件下没有。在细面条处理任务(一种精细运动控制和有效行为序列的定量测量)中,兴奋性毒性损伤没有产生单一的损伤,但总体上增加了正常和异常行为的数量。相比之下,胆碱能PPTg神经元的缺失在加速转棒实验中产生了损伤,但在细面条处理中没有变化。总之,这些结果表明,虽然PPTg损伤在单个运动动作的执行中不会产生损伤,但当任务需求增加时就会出现损伤。根据PPTg作为快速动作选择系统的一部分发挥作用来讨论结果,该系统将感觉信息整合到运动输出中。