Factors influencing motoneuron rhythmic firing: results from a voltage-clamp study

1982 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 875-890 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. C. Schwindt ◽  
W. E. Crill

1. The rhythmic firing properties of cat lumbar motoneurons were determined by intracellular injection of constant-current pulses. The activation thresholds of various membrane current components were subsequently determined in the same neurons using the technique of somatic voltage clamp. Voltage steps were employed that traversed the same voltage range as the membrane potential between rhythmic spikes (the "pacemaker potential"). 2. At fast firing rates (e.g., secondary-range firing), the pacemaker potential remains entirely within the range of voltages over which a previously described (42), persistent, inward, calcium current (Ii) is activated during voltage clamp. Thus Ii is tonically activated and counters the repolarizing, outward, potassium currents during fast firing. At slower firing rates (e.g., primary-range firing), the pacemaker potential only partially enters the voltage range where Ii is activated, and this voltage range may not be entered at all the slowest firing rates. Cells in which Ii deteriorated could not be made to fire at fast rates although they could still fire at slow rates. 3. The use of two independent intracellular microelectrodes allowed accurate measurement of the somatic voltage at which spike initiation occurred ("firing level"). In all cells, firing level increased significantly as steady firing rate increased. During a given injected-current pulse, firing level also exhibited a more moderate variation with time. 4. The variation in firing level was caused by the accommodative properties of the axon initial segment. Except at the fastest firing rates, firing level occurs at less depolarized voltages than the somatic sodium conductance threshold. In addition, somatic sodium current shows minimal inactivation over the voltage range traversed by the pacemaker potentials during slower firing rates. An inactivation of about 50% is attained during the maximum firing rate. 5. We discuss the ways by which Ii activation and thr progressive rise in firing level influence motoneuron rhythmic firing. We propose that the basic role of Ii is to aid in maintaining a linear f-I curve, especially at faster firing rates. We hypothesize that the relative balance between persistent inward and outward ionic currents plays a major role in determining the f-I curve slope among different neurons and between primary- and secondary-range firing of cat lumbar motoneurons.

1989 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 245-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. C. Foehring ◽  
P. C. Schwindt ◽  
W. E. Crill

1. The effects of norepinephrine (NE) and related agonists and antagonists were examined on large neurons from layer V of cat sensorimotor cortex ("Betz cells") were examined in a brain slice preparation using intracellular recording, constant current stimulation and single microelectrode voltage clamp. 2. Application of NE (0.1-100 microM) usually caused a small depolarization from resting potential; hyperpolarizations were rare. Application of NE reversibly reduced rheobase and both the Ca2+- and Na+-dependent portions of the slow afterhyperpolarization (sAHP) that followed sustained firing evoked by constant current injection. The faster Ca2+-dependent medium afterhyperpolarization (mAHP), the fast afterhyperpolarization (fAHP), the action potential, and input resistance were unaffected. 3. The changes in excitability produced by NE application were most apparent during prolonged stimulation. The cells exhibited steady repetitive firing to currents that were formerly ineffective. The slow phase of spike frequency adaptation was reduced selectively and less habituation occurred during repeated long-lasting stimuli. The relation between firing rate and injected current became steeper if firing rate was averaged over several hundred milliseconds. 4. During voltage clamp in TTX, NE application selectively reduced the slow component of Ca2+-mediated K+ current. The faster Ca2+-mediated K+ current was unaffected, as were two voltage-dependent, transient K+ currents, the anomalous rectifier and leakage conductance measured at resting potential. Depolarizing voltage steps in the presence of Cd2+ revealed an apparent time- and voltage-dependent increase of the persistent Na+ current after NE application. The voltage-clamp results suggested ionic mechanisms for all effects seen during constant current stimulation except the depolarization from resting potential. The latter was insensitive to Cd2+ and TTX and occurred without a detectable change in membrane conductance. 5. NE application did not alter Ca2+ spikes evoked in the presence of TTX and 10 mM TEA. Inward Ca2+ currents examined during voltage clamp in TTX (with K+ currents reduced) became slightly larger after NE application. We conclude that NEs reduction of the slow Ca2+-mediated K+ current is not caused by reduction of Ca2+ influx. 6. Effects on membrane potential, rheobase, and the sAHP were mimicked by the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol, but not by the alpha-adrenergic agonists clonidine or phenylephrine at higher concentrations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Eslam Mounier ◽  
Bassem Abdullah ◽  
Hani Mahdi ◽  
Seif Eldawlatly

AbstractThe Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (LGN) represents one of the major processing sites along the visual pathway. Despite its crucial role in processing visual information and its utility as one target for recently developed visual prostheses, it is much less studied compared to the retina and the visual cortex. In this paper, we introduce a deep learning encoder to predict LGN neuronal firing in response to different visual stimulation patterns. The encoder comprises a deep Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) that incorporates visual stimulus spatiotemporal representation in addition to LGN neuronal firing history to predict the response of LGN neurons. Extracellular activity was recorded in vivo using multi-electrode arrays from single units in the LGN in 12 anesthetized rats with a total neuronal population of 150 units. Neural activity was recorded in response to single-pixel, checkerboard and geometrical shapes visual stimulation patterns. Extracted firing rates and the corresponding stimulation patterns were used to train the model. The performance of the model was assessed using different testing data sets and different firing rate windows. An overall mean correlation coefficient between the actual and the predicted firing rates of 0.57 and 0.7 was achieved for the 10 ms and the 50 ms firing rate windows, respectively. Results demonstrate that the model is robust to variability in the spatiotemporal properties of the recorded neurons outperforming other examined models including the state-of-the-art Generalized Linear Model (GLM). The results indicate the potential of deep convolutional neural networks as viable models of LGN firing.


1997 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
pp. 405-420 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelvin E. Jones ◽  
Parveen Bawa

Jones, Kelvin E. and Parveen Bawa. Computer simulation of the responses of human motoneurons to composite 1A EPSPS: effects of background firing rate. J. Neurophysiol. 77: 405–420, 1997. Two compartmental models of spinal alpha motoneurons were constructed to explore the relationship between background firing rate and response to an excitatory input. The results of these simulations were compared with previous results obtained from human motoneurons and discussed in relation to the current model for repetitively firing human motoneurons. The morphologies and cable parameters of the models were based on two type-identified cat motoneurons previously reported in the literature. Each model included five voltage-dependent channels that were modeled using Hodgkin-Huxley formalism. These included fast Na+ and K+ channels in the initial segment and fast Na+ and K+ channels as well as a slow K+ channel in the soma compartment. The density and rate factors for the slow K+ channel were varied until the models could reproduce single spike AHP parameters for type-identified motoneurons in the cat. Excitatory synaptic conductances were distributed along the equivalent dendrites with the same density described for la synapses from muscle spindles to type-identified cat motoneurons. Simultaneous activation of all synapses on the dendrite resulted in a large compound excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP). Brief depolarizing pulses injected into a compartment of the equivalent dendrite resulted in pulse potentials (PPs), which resembled the compound EPSPs. The effects of compound EPSPs and PPs on firing probability of the two motoneuron models were examined during rhythmic firing. Peristimulus time histograms, constructed between the stimulus and the spikes of the model motoneuron, showed excitatory peaks whose integrated time course approximated the time course of the underlying EPSP or PP as has been shown in cat motoneurons. The excitatory peaks were quantified in terms of response probability, and the relationship between background firing rate and response probability was explored. As in real human motoneurons, the models exhibited an inverse relationship between response probability and background firing rate. The biophysical properties responsible for the relationship between response probability and firing rate included the shapes of the membrane voltage trajectories between spikes and nonlinear changes in PP amplitude during the interspike interval at different firing rates. The results from these simulations suggest that the relationship between response probability and background firing rate is an intrinsic feature of motoneurons. The similarity of the results from the models, which were based on the properties of cat motoneurons, and those from human motoneurons suggests that the biophysical properties governing rhythmic firing in human motoneurons are similar to those of the cat.


1961 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 317-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Trautwein ◽  
Donald G. Kassebaum

Rhythmic activity in Purkinje fibers of sheep and in fibers of the rabbit sinus can be produced or enhanced when a constant depolarizing current is applied. When extracellular calcium is reduced successively, the required current strength is less, and eventually spontaneous beating occurs. These effects are believed due to an increase in steady-state sodium conductance. A significant hyperpolarization occurs in fibers of the rabbit sinus bathed in a sodium-free medium, suggesting an appreciable sodium conductance of the "resting" membrane. During diastole, there occurs a voltage-dependent and, to a smaller extent, time-dependent reduction in potassium conductance, and a pacemaker potential occurs as a result of a large resting sodium conductance. It is postulated that the mechanism underlying the spontaneous heart beat is a high resting sodium current in pacemaker tissue which acts as the generator of the heart beat when, after a regenerative repolarization, the decrease in potassium conductance during diastole reestablishes the condition of threshold.


1994 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
pp. 1925-1937 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. J. Spain

1. Intracellular recording from cat Betz cells in vitro revealed a strong correlation between the dominant effect of serotonin (5-HT) and the Betz cell subtype in which it occurred. In large Betz cells that show posthyperpolarization excitation (termed PHE cells), 5-HT evoked a long-lasting membrane depolarization, whereas 5-HT evoked an initial hyperpolarization of variable duration in smaller Betz cells that show posthyperpolorization inhibition (termed PHI cells). 2. Voltage-clamp studies revealed that 5-HT caused a depolarizing shift of activation of the cation current Ih, which resulted in the depolarization in PHE cells, whereas the hyperpolarization in PHI cells is caused by an increase in a resting potassium conductance. 3. The effect of 5-HT on firing properties during constant current stimulation also differed consistently in the two types of Betz cells. In PHE cells the initial firing rate increased after 5-HT application, but the steady firing was unaffected. The depolarizing shift of Ih activation caused the increase of initial firing rate. 4. In PHI cells 5-HT caused a decrease in spike frequency adaptation. The decrease in adaptation was caused by a combination of two conductance changes. First, 5-HT caused a slow afterdepolarization in PHI cells that could trigger repetitive firing in the absence of further stimulation. The sADP depended on calcium entry through voltage-gated channels and was associated with a decrease in membrane conductance. Second, 5-HT caused reduction of a slow calcium-dependent potassium current that normally contributes to slow adaptation. 5. In conclusion, the effect of 5-HT on excitability differs systematically in Betz cell subtypes in part because they have different dominant ionic mechanisms that are modulated. If we assume that PHE cells and PHI cells represent fast and slow pyramidal tract (PT) neurons respectively, 5-HT will cause early recruitment of fast PT cells and delay recruitment of slow PT cells during low levels of synaptic excitation.


1986 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 261-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. S. Rhode ◽  
P. H. Smith

Physiological response properties of neurons in the ventral cochlear nucleus have a variety of features that are substantially different from the stereotypical auditory nerve responses that serve as the principal source of activation for these neurons. These emergent features are the result of the varying distribution of auditory nerve inputs on the soma and dendrites of the various cell types within the nucleus; the intrinsic membrane characteristics of the various cell types causing different responses to the same input in different cell types; and secondary excitatory and inhibitory inputs to different cell types. Well-isolated units were recorded with high-impedance glass microelectrodes, both intracellularly and extracellularly. Units were characterized by their temporal response to short tones, rate vs. intensity relation, and response areas. The principal response patterns were onset, chopper, and primary-like. Onset units are characterized by a well-timed first spike in response to tones at the characteristic frequency. For frequencies less than 1 kHz, onset units can entrain to the stimulus frequency with greater precision than their auditory nerve inputs. This implies that onset units receive converging inputs from a number of auditory nerve fibers. Onset units are divided into three subcategories, OC, OL, and OI. OC units have extraordinarily wide dynamic ranges and low-frequency selectivity. Some are capable of sustaining firing rates of 800 spikes/s at high intensities. They have the smallest standard deviation and coefficient of variation of the first spike latency of any cells in the cochlear nuclei. OC units are candidates for encoding intensity. OI and OL units differ from OC units in that they have dynamic ranges and frequency selectivity ranges much like those of auditory nerve fibers. They differ from one another in their steady-state firing rates; OI units fire mainly at the onset of a tone. OI units also differ from OL units in that they prefer frequency sweeps in the low to high direction. Primary-like-with-notch (PLN) units also respond to tones with a well-timed first spike. They differ from onset cells in that the onset peak is not always as precise as the spontaneous rate is higher. A comparison of spontaneous firing rate and saturation firing rate of PLN units with auditory nerve fibers suggest that PLN units receive one to four auditory nerve fiber inputs. Chopper units fire in a sustained regular manner when they are excited by sound.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2002 ◽  
Vol 88 (2) ◽  
pp. 751-760 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Phanachet ◽  
T. Whittle ◽  
K. Wanigaratne ◽  
G. M. Murray

The precise function of the inferior head of the human lateral pterygoid muscle (IHLP) is unclear. The aim of this study was to clarify the normal function of the IHLP. The hypothesis was that an important function of the IHLP is the generation and fine control of horizontal (i.e., anteroposterior and mediolateral) jaw movements. The activities of 50 single motor units (SMUs) were recorded from IHLP (14 subjects) during two- or three-step contralateral movement ( n = 36) and/or protrusion ( n = 33). Most recording sites were identified by computer tomography. There was a statistically significant overall increase in firing rate as the magnitude of jaw displacement increased between the holding phases (range of increments: 0.3–1.6 mm). The firing rates during the dynamic phases for each unit were significantly greater than those during the previous holding phases but less than those during the subsequent holding phases. For the contralateral step task at the intermediate rate, the cross-correlation coefficients between jaw displacement in the mediolateral axis and the mean firing rate of each unit ranged from r = 0.29 to 0.77; mean ± SD; r = 0.49 ± 0.13 (protrusive step task: r = 0.12–0.74, r = 0.44 ± 0.14 for correlation with anterior–posterior axis). The correlation coefficients at the fast rate during the contralateral step task and the protrusive step task were significantly higher than those at the slow rate. The firing rate change of the SMUs per unit displacement between holding phases was significantly greater for the lower-threshold than for the higher-threshold units during contralateral movement and protrusion. After dividing IHLP into four regions, the SMUs recorded in the superior part exhibited significantly greater mean firing rate changes per unit displacement during protrusion than for the SMUs recorded in the inferior part. Significantly fewer units were related to the protrusive task in the superior–medial part. These data support previously proposed notions of functional heterogeneity within IHLP. The present findings provide further evidence for an involvement of the IHLP in the generation and fine control of horizontal jaw movements.


1999 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 188-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhongzeng Li ◽  
Kendall F. Morris ◽  
David M. Baekey ◽  
Roger Shannon ◽  
Bruce G. Lindsey

This study addresses the hypothesis that multiple sensory systems, each capable of reflexly altering breathing, jointly influence neurons of the brain stem respiratory network. Carotid chemoreceptors, baroreceptors, and foot pad nociceptors were stimulated sequentially in 33 Dial-urethan–anesthetized or decerebrate vagotomized adult cats. Neuronal impulses were monitored with microelectrode arrays in the rostral and caudal ventral respiratory group (VRG), nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS), and n. raphe obscurus. Efferent phrenic nerve activity was recorded. Spike trains of 889 neurons were analyzed with cycle-triggered histograms and tested for respiratory-modulated firing rates. Responses to stimulus protocols were assessed with peristimulus time and cumulative sum histograms. Cross-correlation analysis was used to test for nonrandom temporal relationships between spike trains. Spike-triggered averages of efferent phrenic activity and antidromic stimulation methods provided evidence for functional associations of bulbar neurons with phrenic motoneurons. Spike train cross-correlograms were calculated for 6,471 pairs of neurons. Significant correlogram features were detected for 425 pairs, including 189 primary central peaks or troughs, 156 offset peaks or troughs, and 80 pairs with multiple peaks and troughs. The results provide evidence that correlational medullary assemblies include neurons with overlapping memberships in groups responsive to different sets of sensory modalities. The data suggest and support several hypotheses concerning cooperative relationships that modulate the respiratory motor pattern. 1) Neurons responsive to a single tested modality promote or limit changes in firing rate of multimodal target neurons. 2) Multimodal neurons contribute to changes in firing rate of neurons responsive to a single tested modality. 3) Multimodal neurons may promote responses during stimulation of one modality and “limit” changes in firing rates during stimulation of another sensory modality. 4) Caudal VRG inspiratory neurons have inhibitory connections that provide negative feedback regulation of inspiratory drive and phase duration.


1999 ◽  
Vol 82 (5) ◽  
pp. 2612-2632 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre A. Sylvestre ◽  
Kathleen E. Cullen

The mechanics of the eyeball and its surrounding tissues, which together form the oculomotor plant, have been shown to be the same for smooth pursuit and saccadic eye movements. Hence it was postulated that similar signals would be carried by motoneurons during slow and rapid eye movements. In the present study, we directly addressed this proposal by determining which eye movement–based models best describe the discharge dynamics of primate abducens neurons during a variety of eye movement behaviors. We first characterized abducens neuron spike trains, as has been classically done, during fixation and sinusoidal smooth pursuit. We then systematically analyzed the discharge dynamics of abducens neurons during and following saccades, during step-ramp pursuit and during high velocity slow-phase vestibular nystagmus. We found that the commonly utilized first-order description of abducens neuron firing rates (FR = b + kE + rE˙, where FR is firing rate, E and E˙ are eye position and velocity, respectively, and b, k, and r are constants) provided an adequate model of neuronal activity during saccades, smooth pursuit, and slow phase vestibular nystagmus. However, the use of a second-order model, which included an exponentially decaying term or “slide” (FR = b + kE + rE˙ + uË − c[Formula: see text]), notably improved our ability to describe neuronal activity when the eye was moving and also enabled us to model abducens neuron discharges during the postsaccadic interval. We also found that, for a given model, a single set of parameters could not be used to describe neuronal firing rates during both slow and rapid eye movements. Specifically, the eye velocity and position coefficients ( r and k in the above models, respectively) consistently decreased as a function of the mean (and peak) eye velocity that was generated. In contrast, the bias ( b, firing rate when looking straight ahead) invariably increased with eye velocity. Although these trends are likely to reflect, in part, nonlinearities that are intrinsic to the extraocular muscles, we propose that these results can also be explained by considering the time-varying resistance to movement that is generated by the antagonist muscle. We conclude that to create realistic and meaningful models of the neural control of horizontal eye movements, it is essential to consider the activation of the antagonist, as well as agonist motoneuron pools.


2006 ◽  
Vol 96 (6) ◽  
pp. 3257-3265 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ekaterina Likhtik ◽  
Joe Guillaume Pelletier ◽  
Andrei T. Popescu ◽  
Denis Paré

This study tested whether firing rate and spike shape could be used to distinguish projection cells from interneurons in extracellular recordings of basolateral amygdala (BLA) neurons. To this end, we recorded BLA neurons in isoflurane-anesthetized animals with tungsten microelectrodes. Projection cells were identified by antidromic activation from cortical projection sites of the BLA. Although most projection cells fired spontaneously at low rates (<1 Hz), an important subset fired at higher rates (up to 6.8 Hz). In fact, the distribution of firing rates in projection cells and unidentified BLA neurons overlapped extensively, even though the latter cell group presumably contains a higher proportion of interneurons. The only difference between the two distributions was a small subset (5.1%) of unidentified neurons with unusually high firing rates (9–16 Hz). Similarly, distributions of spike durations in both cell groups were indistinguishable, although most of the fast-firing neurons had spike durations at the low end of the distribution. However, we observed that spike durations depended on the exact position of the electrode with respect to the recorded cell, varying by as much as 0.7 ms. Thus neither firing rate nor spike waveform allowed for unequivocal separation of projection cells from interneurons. Nevertheless, we propose the use of two firing rate cutoffs to obtain relatively pure samples of projection cells and interneurons: ≤1 Hz for projection cells and ≥7 Hz for fast-spiking interneurons. Supplemented with spike-duration cutoffs of ≥0.7 ms for projection cells and ≤0.5 ms for interneurons, this approach should keep instances of misclassifications to a minimum.


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