Short-Term Plasticity in Hindlimb Motoneurons of Decerebrate Cats

1998 ◽  
Vol 80 (4) ◽  
pp. 2038-2045 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Bennett ◽  
Hans Hultborn ◽  
Brent Fedirchuk ◽  
Monica Gorassini

Bennett, David J., Hans Hultborn, Brent Fedirchuk, and Monica Gorassini. Short-term plasticity in hindlimb motoneurons of decerebrate cats. J. Neurophysiol. 80: 2038–2045, 1998. Cat hindlimb motoneurons possess noninactivating voltage-gated inward currents that can, under appropriate conditions, regeneratively produce sustained increments in depolarization and firing of the cell (i.e., plateau potentials). Recent studies in turtle dorsal horn neurons and motoneurons indicate that facilitation of plateaus occurs with repeated plateau activation (decreased threshold and increased duration; this phenomenon is referred to as warm-up). The purpose of the present study was to study warm-up in cat motoneurons. Initially, cells were studied by injecting a slow triangular current ramp intracellularly to determine the threshold for activation of the plateau. In cells where the sodium spikes were blocked with intracellular QX314, plateau activation was readily seen as a sudden jump in membrane potential, which was not directly reversed as the current was decreased (cf. hysteresis). With normal spiking, the plateau activation (the noninactivating inward current) was reflected by a steep and sustained jump in firing rate, which was not directly reversed as the current was decreased (hysteresis). Repetitive plateau activation significantly lowered the plateau activation threshold in 83% of cells (by on average 5 mV and 11 Hz with and without QX314, respectively). This interaction between successive plateaus (warm-up) occurred when tested with 3- to 6-s intervals; no interaction occurred at times >20 s. Plateaus initiated by synaptic activation from muscle stretch were also facilitated by repetition. Repeated slow muscle stretches that produced small phasic responses when a cell was hyperpolarized with intracellular current bias produced a larger and more prolonged responses (plateau) when the bias was removed, and the amplitude and duration of this response grew with repetition. The effects of warm-up seen with intracellular recordings during muscle stretch could also be recorded extracellularly with gross electromyographic (EMG) recordings. That is, the same repetitive stretch as above produced a progressively larger and more prolonged EMG response. Warm-up may be a functionally important form of short-term plasticity in motoneurons that secures efficient motor output once a threshold level is reached for a significant period. Finally, the finding that warm-up can be readily observed with gross EMG recordings will be useful in future studies of plateaus in awake animals and humans.

1998 ◽  
Vol 80 (4) ◽  
pp. 2023-2037 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Bennett ◽  
Hans Hultborn ◽  
Brent Fedirchuk ◽  
Monica Gorassini

Bennett, David J., Hans Hultborn, Brent Fedirchuk, and Monica Gorassini. Synaptic activation of plateaus in hindlimb motoneurons of decerebrate cats. J. Neurophysiol. 80: 2023–2037, 1998. Intracellular recordings were made from hindlimb motoneurons in decerebrate cats to study how synaptic inputs could affect the threshold at which plateau potentials are activated with current injections through the recording microelectrode in the cell body. This study was prompted by recent evidence that the noninactivating inward currents that regeneratively produce the plateau potentials arise (partly) from dendritic conductances, which may be relatively more accessible to synaptic input than to current injected into the soma. Initially, cells were studied by injecting a slow triangular current ramp intracellularly to determine the threshold for activation of the plateau. In cells where the sodium spikes were blocked with intracellular QX314, plateau activation was readily seen as a sudden jump in membrane potential, which was not directly reversed as the current was decreased. With normal spiking, the plateau activation (the noninactivating inward current) was reflected by a steep and sustained jump in firing rate that was not directly reversed as the current was decreased. Importantly, the threshold for plateau activation (at 34 Hz on average) was significantly above the recruitment level (13 Hz on average). When tonic synaptic excitation [excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs)] was provided either by stretching the triceps surae muscle or by stimulating its nerve at a high frequency, the threshold for plateau activation by intracellular current injection was significantly lowered (by 12 Hz or 5.8 mV on average, without and with QX314, respectively). Conversely, tonic synaptic inhibition [inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs)], provided by appropriate nerve stimulation, significantly raised the plateau threshold (by 19 Hz or 7.6 mV on average). These effects were graded with the intensity of tonic EPSPs and IPSPs. Strong enough EPSPs brought the plateau threshold down sufficiently that it was activated by the intracellular current soon after recruitment. A further increase in tonic EPSPs recruited the cell directly, and in this case the plateau was activated at or before recruitment. The finding that synaptic excitation can produce plateau activation below the recruitment level is of importance for the interpretation of its function. With this low-threshold activation, the plateau potentials are likely important in securing an effective recruitment to frequencies that produce significant force generation and would subsequently have no further affect on the frequency modulation, other than to provide a steady depolarizing bias that would help to sustain firing (cf. self-sustained firing). Additional jumps in frequency after recruitment (i.e., bistable firing) would not be expected.


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