Effect of dilantin on spontaneous rhythmic activity of spinal cord internuncial neurons and their responses to afferent and suprasegmental stimulation

1967 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 1074-1077
Author(s):  
�. B. Arushanyan ◽  
A. V. Zav'yalov ◽  
P. V. Mel'nichuk
2004 ◽  
Vol 91 (5) ◽  
pp. 2101-2109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Blaise Yvert ◽  
Pascal Branchereau ◽  
Pierre Meyrand

Spontaneous rhythmic activity is a ubiquitous phenomenon in developing neural networks and is assumed to play an important role in the elaboration of mature circuitry. Here we describe the day-by-day evolution of spontaneous activity in the embryonic mouse spinal cord and show that, at a specific developmental stage, 2 distinct rhythms coexist. On embryonic days E12.5 and E13.5, we observed a single type of regularly recurring short spike-episodes synchronized across cervical, thoracic, and lumbar levels. By E14.5, in addition to this motor rhythm, another type of spontaneous synchronous activity appeared, characterized by much longer lasting episodes separated by longer time intervals. On E15.5, these long episodes disappeared. Short episodes were less numerous and more irregular except at the cervical level where a rhythm was occasionally observed. By E16.5, this cervical rhythm became more robust, whereas the lumbar level fell almost silent. Surprisingly, at E17.5, spontaneous activity resumed at caudal levels, now characterized by numerous erratic short episodes. A striking ontogenetic feature of spontaneous activity was the occurrence of long episodes only at E14.5. Although concomitant at all levels of the spinal cord, long episodes displayed different patterns along the spinal cord, with tonic firing at the thoracic level and rhythmic discharge with occasional sequences of left/right alternation at the lumbar level. Thus at E14.5, the originally synchronized network has started to segregate into more specialized subnetworks. In conclusion, this work suggests that ongoing spontaneous rhythms do not follow a smooth evolution during maturation, but rather undergo profound changes at very specific stages.


1999 ◽  
Vol 81 (5) ◽  
pp. 2037-2045 ◽  
Author(s):  
James T. Buchanan

Commissural interneurons in rhythm generation and intersegmental coupling in the lamprey spinal cord. To test the necessity of spinal commissural interneurons in the generation of the swim rhythm in lamprey, longitudinal midline cuts of the isolated spinal cord preparation were made. Fictive swimming was then induced by bath perfusion with an excitatory amino acid while recording ventral root activity. When the spinal cord preparation was cut completely along the midline into two lateral hemicords, the rhythmic activity of fictive swimming was lost, usually replaced with continuous ventral root spiking. The loss of the fictive swim rhythm was not due to nonspecific damage produced by the cut because rhythmic activity was present in split regions of spinal cord when the split region was still attached to intact cord. The quality of this persistent rhythmic activity, quantified with an autocorrelation method, declined with the distance of the split spinal segment from the remaining intact spinal cord. The deterioration of the rhythm was characterized by a lengthening of burst durations and a shortening of the interburst silent phases. This pattern of deterioration suggests a loss of rhythmic inhibitory inputs. The same pattern of rhythm deterioration was seen in preparations with the rostral end of the spinal cord cut compared with those with the caudal end cut. The results of this study indicate that commissural interneurons are necessary for the generation of the swimming rhythm in the lamprey spinal cord, and the characteristic loss of the silent interburst phases of the swimming rhythm is consistent with a loss of inhibitory commissural interneurons. The results also suggest that both descending and ascending commissural interneurons are important in the generation of the swimming rhythm. The swim rhythm that persists in the split cord while still attached to an intact portion of spinal cord is thus imposed by interneurons projecting from the intact region of cord into the split region. These projections are functionally short because rhythmic activity was lost within approximately five spinal segments from the intact region of spinal cord.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angèle N Merlet ◽  
Jonathan Harnie ◽  
Madalina Macovei ◽  
Adam Doelman ◽  
Nathaly Gaudreault ◽  
...  

AbstractIt is well known that mechanically stimulating the perineal region potently facilitates hindlimb locomotion and weight support in mammals with a spinal transection (spinal mammals). However, how perineal stimulation mediates this excitatory effect is poorly understood. We evaluated the effect of mechanically stimulating (vibration or pinch) the perineal region on ipsilateral (9-14 ms onset) and contralateral (14-18 ms onset) short-latency cutaneous reflex responses evoked by electrically stimulating the superficial peroneal or distal tibial nerve in seven adult spinal cats where hindlimb movement was restrained. Cutaneous reflexes were evoked before, during, and after mechanical stimulation of the perineal region. We found that vibration or pinch of the perineal region effectively triggered rhythmic activity, unilateral and bilateral to nerve stimulation. When electrically stimulating nerves, adding perineal stimulation modulated rhythmic activity by decreasing cycle and burst durations and by increasing the amplitude of flexors and extensors. Perineal stimulation also disrupted the timing of the ipsilateral rhythm, which had been entrained by nerve stimulation. Mechanically stimulating the perineal region decreased ipsilateral and contralateral short-latency reflex responses evoked by cutaneous inputs, a phenomenon we observed in muscles crossing different joints and located in different limbs. The results suggest that the excitatory effect of perineal stimulation on locomotion and weight support is not mediated by increasing cutaneous reflex gain and instead points to an excitation of central pattern-generating circuitry. Our results are consistent with a state-dependent modulation of reflexes by spinal interneuronal circuits.Significance StatementMechanically stimulating the skin of the perineal region strongly facilitates hindlimb locomotion in mammals following a complete spinal cord injury (SCI). Despite its remarkable effectiveness in promoting hindlimb locomotion in spinal cord-injured mammals, we do not know how this is mediated. The present study provides data on how inputs from the perineal region interact with neuronal circuits that generate locomotor-like activity and reflexes from the foot. A better understanding of how inputs from the perineal region interact with neuronal circuits of the spinal cord could lead to non-invasive approaches to restore walking in people with SCI.


2010 ◽  
Vol 104 (1) ◽  
pp. 366-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Dai ◽  
Larry M. Jordan

Hyperpolarization-activated inward current ( Ih) has been shown to be involved in production of bursting during various forms of rhythmic activity. However, details of Ih in spinal interneurons related to locomotion remain unknown. Using Cfos-EGFP transgenic mice (P6–P12) we are able to target the spinal interneurons activated by locomotion. Following a locomotor task, whole cell patch-clamp recordings were obtained from ventral EGFP+ neurons in spinal cord slices (T13–L4, 200–250 μm). Ih was found in 51% of EGFP+ neurons ( n = 149) with almost even distribution in lamina VII (51%), VIII (47%), and X (55%). Ih could be blocked by ZD7288 (10–20 μM) or cesium (1–1.5 mM) but was insensitive to barium (2–2.5 mM). Ih activated at −80.1 ± 9.2 mV with half-maximal activation −95.5 ± 13.3 mV, activation rate 10.0 ± 3.2 mV, time constant 745 ± 501 ms, maximal conductance 1.0 ± 0.7 nS, and reversal potential −34.3 ± 3.6 mV. 5-HT (15–20 μM) and ACh (20–30 μM) produced variable effects on Ih. 5-HT increased Ih in 43% of EGFP+ neurons ( n = 37), decreased Ih in 24%, and had no effect on Ih in 33% of the neurons. ACh decreased Ih in 67% of EGFP+ neurons ( n = 18) with unchanged Ih in 33% of the neurons. This study characterizes the Ih in locomotor-related interneurons and is the first to demonstrate the variable effects of 5-HT and ACh on Ih in rodent spinal interneurons. The finding of 5-HT and ACh-induced reduction of Ih in EGFP+ neurons suggests a novel mechanism that the motor system could use to limit the participation of certain neurons in locomotion.


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