Contraction-induced excitation in cat peroneal motoneurons
N. Kouchtir, J. F. Perrier, D. Zytnicki and L. Jami Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique URA 1448, Universite Rene Descartes, UFR Biomedicale, Paris, France. 1. Motoneurons innervating peroneal muscles were recorded intracellularly in anesthetized cats during sustained submaximal isometric c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1995-03, Vol.73 (3), p.974-982 |
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Zusammenfassung: | N. Kouchtir, J. F. Perrier, D. Zytnicki and L. Jami
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique URA 1448, Universite Rene Descartes, UFR Biomedicale, Paris, France.
1. Motoneurons innervating peroneal muscles were recorded intracellularly
in anesthetized cats during sustained submaximal isometric contractions of
peroneus brevis produced by repetitive electrical stimulation of motor
axons in the distal portion of cut ventral root filaments. 2. In contrast
with the inhibition previously observed during contractions of
gastrocnemius medialis muscle in triceps surae motoneurons, the afferent
input generated by peroneus brevis contraction elicited excitatory
potentials in nearly all motoneurons supplying peroneus brevis, peroneus
tertius, or peroneus longus muscles. 3. We ascribed the contraction-induced
excitation of peroneal motoneurons to spindle afferents for two reasons.
First, the amplitude of contraction-induced excitatory potentials increased
when the ventral root stimulation strength was increased to recruit
gamma-axons. Second, with stimulation strengths under gamma-threshold,
peroneus brevis contraction still excited peroneal motoneurons, and we
obtained evidence that activation of spindles by skeletofusimotor
beta-axons could account at least partly for this excitation. 4. The lack
of contraction-induced inhibition in peroneal motoneurons and the
prevalence of contraction-induced excitation raised the possibility that,
in contrast to the usual effects of tendon organ afferents, Ib afferents
from peroneus brevis might exert an excitatory influence on homonymous
motoneurons. The fact that electrical stimulation of group I afferents in
the nerve to peroneus brevis only exceptionally evoked inhibition in
peroneal motoneurons would appear compatible with this hypothesis.
Furthermore, stimulation of cutaneous afferents, known to facilitate
transmission in Ib pathways, only exceptionally revealed a weak
contraction-induced inhibition. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1995.73.3.974 |