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清醒豚鼠对侧或双侧迷路切除术后前庭核中的神经元活动

Neuronal activity in the vestibular nuclei after contralateral or bilateral labyrinthectomy in the alert guinea pig.

作者信息

Ris L, Godaux E

机构信息

Laboratory of Neurosciences, University of Mons-Hainaut, B-7000 Mons, Belgium.

出版信息

J Neurophysiol. 1998 Nov;80(5):2352-67. doi: 10.1152/jn.1998.80.5.2352.

Abstract

In the guinea pig, a unilateral labyrinthectomy is followed by an initial depression and a subsequent restoration of the spontaneous activity in the neurons of the ipsilateral vestibular nuclei. In two previous works, we have established the time course of these changes in the alert guinea pig using electrical stimulation as a search stimulus to select the analyzed neurons. The latter criterion was important to capture the many ipsilateral neurons that are silent at rest during the immediate postlabyrinthectomy stage. Because it is known that a pathway originating from the vestibular nuclei on one side crosses the midline and functionally inhibits the activity of the vestibular nuclei on the other side, we investigated in the first part of this study the spiking behavior of the neurons in the vestibular nuclei contralateral to the labyrinthectomy using the same procedure as that used for the ipsilateral neurons. The spiking behavior of 976 neurons was studied during 4-h recording sessions in intact animals and 1 h, 1 day, 2 days, or 1 wk postlabyrinthectomy. Neurons selected according to the electrical activation criterion were classified further as type I (their firing rate increased during ipsilateral rotation), type II (their firing rate increased during contralateral rotation), or unresponsive. The resting activity of type I neurons, which was 38.1 +/- 20.9 spikes/s (mean +/- SD) in the control state, increased statistically significantly 1 h after the lesion (53.3 +/- 29.1 spikes/s) and remained at this level 1 wk later (56.0 +/- 20.3 spikes/s). The sensitivity of type I units, which was 0.80 +/- 0.46 spikes/s per deg/s in the control population, decreased to 0.49 +/- 0.26 spikes/s per deg/s 1 h after the lesion and remained at this level 1 wk later (0.50 +/- 0.39 spikes/s per deg/s). When all monosynaptically activated neurons (type I, type II, unresponsive) were pooled, the sensitivity to horizontal rotation fell from 0.58 +/- 0.51 spikes/s per deg/s in the control state to 0. 15 +/- 0.25 spikes/s per deg/s 1 h after the lesion and to 0.20 +/- 0.32 spikes/s per deg/s 1 wk later. The major findings of the first part of this study in the alert guinea pig are thus in accord with those of Curthoys et al. and Smith and Curthoys in anesthetized guinea pigs. In the second part of this work, we studied the spiking behavior of the neurons in the vestibular nuclei after bilateral labyrinthectomy. After unilateral labyrinthectomy, the resting discharge of the ipsilateral monosynaptically activated vestibular neurons fell from 36.9 +/- 21 spikes/s (basal activity) to 6.7 +/- 17.0 spikes/s 1 h after the lesion and then recovered, reaching 17.4 +/- 18.9 and 40.8 +/- 23.7 spikes/s 1 day and 1 wk after the lesion, respectively. These observations raise the two following questions. What are the relative contributions of the loss of the excitatory influence from the ipsilateral labyrinth (destroyed) and of the persistence of the inhibitory influence from the contralateral labyrinth (intact) in the labyrinthectomy-induced depression of activity? And are the left-right asymmetries caused by a unilateral labyrinthectomy the driving force for restoration of activity? Here, we addressed these two questions by studying the spiking behavior of 473 second-order vestibular neurons in the alert guinea pig after a bilateral labyrinthectomy. In the acute stage, 1 h after bilateral labyrinthectomy, the resting discharge of the second-order vestibular neurons was 16.2 +/- 22.4 spikes/s. From comparison with the results obtained in the acute stage after a unilateral labyrinthectomy, we inferred that the ipsilateral excitatory influence was between two and three times more powerful than the contralateral inhibitory influence. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

摘要

在豚鼠中,单侧迷路切除术后,同侧前庭核神经元的自发活动最初会出现抑制,随后恢复。在之前的两项研究中,我们以电刺激作为搜索刺激来选择分析的神经元,确定了清醒豚鼠中这些变化的时间进程。后一标准对于捕捉迷路切除术后即刻处于静息状态的许多同侧神经元很重要。由于已知一侧前庭核发出的通路会越过中线并在功能上抑制另一侧前庭核的活动,因此在本研究的第一部分,我们使用与同侧神经元相同的程序,研究了迷路切除术对侧前庭核神经元的放电行为。在完整动物以及迷路切除术后1小时、1天、2天或1周的4小时记录期间,研究了976个神经元的放电行为。根据电激活标准选择的神经元进一步分为I型(同侧旋转时放电频率增加)、II型(对侧旋转时放电频率增加)或无反应型。I型神经元的静息活动在对照状态下为38.1±20.9次/秒(平均值±标准差),损伤后1小时统计学显著增加(53.3±29.1次/秒),并在1周后保持在该水平(56.0±20.3次/秒)。I型单位的敏感性在对照群体中为0.80±0.46次/秒每度/秒,损伤后1小时降至0.49±0.26次/秒每度/秒,并在1周后保持在该水平(0.50±0.39次/秒每度/秒)。当所有单突触激活的神经元(I型、II型、无反应型)合并在一起时,对水平旋转的敏感性从对照状态下的0.58±0.51次/秒每度/秒降至损伤后1小时的0.15±0.25次/秒每度/秒以及损伤后1周的0.20±0.32次/秒每度/秒。因此,本研究第一部分在清醒豚鼠中的主要发现与Curthoys等人以及Smith和Curthoys在麻醉豚鼠中的发现一致。在本研究的第二部分,我们研究了双侧迷路切除术后前庭核神经元的放电行为。单侧迷路切除术后,同侧单突触激活的前庭神经元的静息放电从36.9±21次/秒(基础活动)降至损伤后1小时的6.7±17.0次/秒,然后恢复,分别在损伤后1天和1周达到17.4±18.9次/秒和40.8±23.7次/秒。这些观察结果提出了以下两个问题。在迷路切除术后活动抑制中,同侧迷路(已破坏)兴奋性影响的丧失与对侧迷路(完整)抑制性影响的持续存在的相对贡献是什么?单侧迷路切除术引起的左右不对称是否是活动恢复的驱动力?在此,我们通过研究清醒豚鼠双侧迷路切除术后473个二级前庭神经元的放电行为来解决这两个问题。在急性期,双侧迷路切除术后1小时,二级前庭神经元的静息放电为16.2±22.4次/秒。通过与单侧迷路切除术后急性期获得的结果进行比较,我们推断同侧兴奋性影响比侧抑制性影响强两到三倍。

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