Raastad M, Johnson B R, Kiehn O
Section of Neurophysiology, Department of Physiology, University of Copenhagen, 2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark.
J Neurophysiol. 1997 Oct;78(4):1851-9. doi: 10.1152/jn.1997.78.4.1851.
To understand better the synaptic language used by neurons in active networks, we have analyzed postsynaptic currents (PSCs) received by interneurons in the isolated spinal cord from neonatal rats during 5-hydroxytryptamine- and N-methyl--aspartate-induced fictive locomotion. Using a computer algorithm, we identified PSCs in rhythmically active interneurons in laminae VII and X. To test whether the PSCs actually participated in the transmission of the cyclic, locomotor-related signal, we constructed an analytic current trace based on only the identified events. Each identified PSC was fitted by a mathematical function, and the shape of this function was added to a baseline with time delays given by the time positions of the identified PSCs. By averaging the resulting analytic current trace over several cycles, we showed that the identified PSCs built a cyclic signal locked to the rhythmic activity recorded from the ventral roots. Furthermore, subtraction of the analytic from the original current trace reduced the amplitude of the cyclic signal received by these cells. Thus the identified PSCs contributed to the cyclic information, allowing us to analyze how they built the compound cyclic signal. Most often there was an inverse relationship between the contribution from excitatory and inhibitory PSCs during the cyclic modulation, indicating that there was a reciprocal regulation of the presynaptic inhibitory and excitatory cells. Comparing the most inhibitory and most excitatory halves of the locomotor related cycle, there was a considerably larger modulation of the frequency of PSCs than of their amplitude. The small and sometimes insignificant modulation of PSC amplitude suggests that facilitation and depression had little importance for the information transfer. The modest amplitude modification also suggests that the large range of available PSC amplitudes seen in these neurons was not used very efficiently to code the cyclic information.
为了更好地理解活跃网络中神经元所使用的突触语言,我们分析了新生大鼠离体脊髓中中间神经元在5-羟色胺和N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸诱导的虚构运动过程中所接收的突触后电流(PSC)。我们使用计算机算法,识别出了VII层和X层中有节律性活动的中间神经元中的PSC。为了测试这些PSC是否实际参与了与运动相关的周期性信号的传递,我们仅基于识别出的事件构建了一个分析电流轨迹。每个识别出的PSC都用一个数学函数进行拟合,该函数的形状以识别出的PSC的时间位置所给出的时间延迟添加到基线中。通过在几个周期内对所得的分析电流轨迹进行平均,我们表明识别出的PSC构建了一个与从腹根记录的节律性活动锁定的周期性信号。此外,从原始电流轨迹中减去分析电流轨迹会降低这些细胞所接收的周期性信号的幅度。因此,识别出的PSC对周期性信息有贡献,这使我们能够分析它们如何构建复合周期性信号。在周期性调制期间,兴奋性和抑制性PSC的贡献之间最常存在反比关系,这表明突触前抑制性和兴奋性细胞之间存在相互调节。比较运动相关周期中抑制性最强和兴奋性最强的两半,PSC频率的调制比其幅度的调制要大得多。PSC幅度的微小且有时不显著的调制表明易化和抑制对信息传递的重要性不大。适度的幅度改变还表明,在这些神经元中看到的可用PSC幅度的大范围并未被非常有效地用于编码周期性信息。