Currie Stephen P, Combes Denis, Scott Nicholas W, Simmers John, Sillar Keith T
School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, Fife, Scotland, United Kingdom; and.
Institut de Neurosciences Cognitives et Intégratives d'Aquitaine, Université de Bordeaux, CNRS UMR 5287, Bordeaux, France.
J Neurophysiol. 2016 Mar;115(3):1446-57. doi: 10.1152/jn.00283.2015. Epub 2016 Jan 13.
Locomotor control requires functional flexibility to support an animal's full behavioral repertoire. This flexibility is partly endowed by neuromodulators, allowing neural networks to generate a range of motor output configurations. In hatchling Xenopus tadpoles, before the onset of free-swimming behavior, the gaseous modulator nitric oxide (NO) inhibits locomotor output, shortening swim episodes and decreasing swim cycle frequency. While populations of nitrergic neurons are already present in the tadpole's brain stem at hatching, neurons positive for the NO-synthetic enzyme, NO synthase, subsequently appear in the spinal cord, suggesting additional as yet unidentified roles for NO during larval development. Here, we first describe the expression of locomotor behavior during the animal's change from an early sessile to a later free-swimming lifestyle and then compare the effects of NO throughout tadpole development. We identify a discrete switch in nitrergic modulation from net inhibition to overall excitation, coincident with the transition to free-swimming locomotion. Additionally, we show in isolated brain stem-spinal cord preparations of older larvae that NO's excitatory effects are manifested as an increase in the probability of spontaneous swim episode occurrence, as found previously for the neurotransmitter dopamine, but that these effects are mediated within the brain stem. Moreover, while the effects of NO and dopamine are similar, the two modulators act in parallel rather than NO operating serially by modulating dopaminergic signaling. Finally, NO's activation of neurons in the brain stem also leads to the release of NO in the spinal cord that subsequently contributes to NO's facilitation of swimming.
运动控制需要功能灵活性来支持动物的全部行为指令。这种灵活性部分由神经调质赋予,使神经网络能够产生一系列运动输出配置。在非洲爪蟾蝌蚪幼体中,在自由游泳行为开始之前,气态调质一氧化氮(NO)会抑制运动输出,缩短游泳时长并降低游泳周期频率。虽然在孵化时蝌蚪脑干中就已存在一氧化氮能神经元群体,但一氧化氮合成酶阳性的神经元随后出现在脊髓中,这表明在幼体发育过程中,NO还有其他尚未明确的作用。在这里,我们首先描述动物从早期固着生活方式转变为后期自由游泳生活方式期间的运动行为表达,然后比较整个蝌蚪发育过程中NO的作用。我们发现一氧化氮能调节存在一个明显的转变,从净抑制转变为整体兴奋,这与向自由游泳运动的转变同时发生。此外,我们在 older larvae 的离体脑干 - 脊髓制剂中表明,NO的兴奋作用表现为自发游泳发作概率的增加,这与之前发现的神经递质多巴胺的情况相同,但这些作用是在脑干内介导的。而且,虽然NO和多巴胺的作用相似,但这两种调质是并行起作用的,而不是NO通过调节多巴胺能信号串行发挥作用。最后,NO对脑干神经元的激活也会导致脊髓中NO的释放,随后这有助于NO对游泳的促进作用。 (注:原文中“older larvae”未明确具体所指,可能存在信息不完整情况,翻译时保留原文表述。)