Non-uniform olivocerebellar conduction time in the vermis of the rat cerebellum
It has been proposed that the conduction velocities of cerebellar climbing fibre (olivocerebellar) axons are tuned according to length, in order to precisely fix the conduction time between the inferior olive and cerebellar cortex. Some data conflict with this view. We have re-evaluated this issue u...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2006-02, Vol.570 (3), p.501-506 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | It has been proposed that the conduction velocities of cerebellar climbing fibre (olivocerebellar) axons are tuned according
to length, in order to precisely fix the conduction time between the inferior olive and cerebellar cortex. Some data conflict
with this view. We have re-evaluated this issue using the climbing fibre reflex. The white matter of the tip of one folium
in lobule VI or VII was stimulated electrically 0.5â1 mm below the surface and recordings were made from Purkinje cells in
lobules VIII and IX. Reflex evoked climbing fibre (CF) responses (33 units) were recorded at different depths from Purkinje
cells found in a narrow sagittal zone of cortex as complex spikes. The responses had latencies ranging from 4.3 ms to 11.3
ms. A consistent trend was that Purkinje cell responses recorded at greater depth had shorter CF reflex latencies than those
recorded more superficially, both in individual experiments and in grouped data. These data show that the CF reflex latency
is not constant, but is directly proportional to the distance an action potential has to travel along a CF. These data are
not consistent with tuning of CF conduction velocities to normalize olivocerebellar conduction time, but are consistent with
a CF conduction velocity in the cortex of approximately 0.6 m s â1 . This suggests that climbing fibres projecting to different parts of the cerebellar cortex may have differences in spike
conduction time of a few milliseconds, and that submillisecond precision is not an important element of the climbing fibre
signal. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2005.099176 |