Stein Paul S G
Department of Biology, Washington University , St. Louis, Missouri.
J Neurophysiol. 2018 Feb 1;119(2):422-440. doi: 10.1152/jn.00602.2017. Epub 2017 Oct 25.
Neuronal networks in the turtle spinal cord have considerable computational complexity even in the absence of connections with supraspinal structures. These networks contain central pattern generators (CPGs) for each of several behaviors, including three forms of scratch, two forms of swim, and one form of flexion reflex. Each behavior is activated by a specific set of cutaneous or electrical stimuli. The process of selection among behaviors within the spinal cord has multisecond memories of specific motor patterns. Some spinal cord interneurons are partially shared among several CPGs, whereas other interneurons are active during only one type of behavior. Partial sharing is a proposed mechanism that contributes to the ability of the spinal cord to generate motor pattern blends with characteristics of multiple behaviors. Variations of motor patterns, termed deletions, assist in characterization of the organization of the pattern-generating components of CPGs. Single-neuron recordings during both normal and deletion motor patterns provide support for a CPG organizational structure with unit burst generators (UBGs) whose members serve a direction of a specific degree of freedom of the hindlimb, e.g., the hip-flexor UBG, the hip-extensor UBG, the knee-flexor UBG, the knee-extensor UBG, etc. The classic half-center hypothesis that includes all the hindlimb flexors in a single flexor half-center and all the hindlimb extensors in a single extensor half-center lacks the organizational complexity to account for the motor patterns produced by turtle spinal CPGs. Thus the turtle spinal cord is a valuable model system for studies of mechanisms responsible for selection and generation of motor behaviors. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The concept of the central pattern generator (CPG) is a major tenet in motor neuroethology that has influenced the design and interpretations of experiments for over a half century. This review concentrates on the turtle spinal cord and describes studies from the 1970s to the present responsible for key developments in understanding the CPG mechanisms responsible for the selection and production of coordinated motor patterns during turtle hindlimb motor behaviors.
即使在没有与脊髓上结构连接的情况下,乌龟脊髓中的神经网络也具有相当大的计算复杂性。这些网络包含针对多种行为中每一种行为的中枢模式发生器(CPG),包括三种形式的抓挠、两种形式的游泳以及一种形式的屈曲反射。每种行为都由一组特定的皮肤或电刺激激活。脊髓内行为选择过程具有特定运动模式的多秒记忆。一些脊髓中间神经元在几个CPG之间部分共享,而其他中间神经元仅在一种行为类型期间活跃。部分共享是一种提出的机制,有助于脊髓产生具有多种行为特征的运动模式混合。运动模式的变化,称为删除,有助于表征CPG模式生成组件的组织。正常和删除运动模式期间的单神经元记录为具有单位爆发发生器(UBG)的CPG组织结构提供了支持,其成员服务于后肢特定自由度的方向,例如髋屈肌UBG、髋伸肌UBG、膝屈肌UBG、膝伸肌UBG等。经典的半中枢假说将所有后肢屈肌包含在单个屈肌半中枢中,将所有后肢伸肌包含在单个伸肌半中枢中,缺乏解释乌龟脊髓CPG产生的运动模式的组织复杂性。因此,乌龟脊髓是研究负责运动行为选择和产生机制的有价值的模型系统。新观点与值得注意的内容 中枢模式发生器(CPG)的概念是运动神经行为学的一个主要原则,在半个多世纪以来一直影响着实验的设计和解释。本综述集中于乌龟脊髓,并描述了从20世纪70年代至今的研究,这些研究促成了在理解负责乌龟后肢运动行为中协调运动模式选择和产生的CPG机制方面的关键进展。