Presynaptic control of transmission along the pathway mediating disynaptic reciprocal inhibition in the cat
In cat lumbar motoneurones, disynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) evoked by stimulation of antagonist motor nerves were depressed for at least 150 ms following conditioning stimulation of flexor (1.7-2 times threshold ( T) ) and ankle extensor (5 T ) nerves. The aim of the present st...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2000-08, Vol.526 (3), p.623-637 |
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Zusammenfassung: | In cat lumbar motoneurones, disynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) evoked by stimulation of antagonist motor
nerves were depressed for at least 150 ms following conditioning stimulation of flexor (1.7-2 times threshold ( T) ) and ankle extensor (5 T ) nerves. The aim of the present study was to investigate the possibility that this depression is caused by presynaptic inhibitory
mechanisms acting at the terminals of group I afferent fibres projecting to the Ia inhibitory interneurones and/or the terminals
of these interneurones to the target motoneurones.
Conditioning stimulation of flexor, but not ankle extensor, nerves evoked a depression of the monosynaptic Ia excitatory postsynaptic
potentials (EPSPs) recorded intracellularly in Ia inhibitory interneurones. This depression lasted between 200 and 700 ms
and was not accompanied by a depression of the monosynaptic EPSPs evoked by stimulation of descending pathways. These results
suggest that flexor, but not ankle extensor, group I afferent fibres can modulate sensory transmission at the synapse between
Ia afferent fibres and Ia inhibitory interneurones.
Conditioning stimulation of flexor muscle nerves, extensor muscle nerves and cutaneous nerves produced a long-lasting increase
in excitability of the terminals of the Ia inhibitory interneurones. The increase in the excitability of the terminals was
not secondary to an electrotonic spread of synaptic excitation at the soma. Indeed, concomitant with the excitability increase
of the terminals there were signs of synaptic inhibition in the soma.
The unitary IPSPs induced in target motoneurones following the spike activity of single Ia inhibitory interneurones were depressed
by conditioning stimulation of muscle and cutaneous nerves. Since the conditioning stimulation also evoked compound IPSPs
in those motoneurones, a firm conclusion as to whether unitary IPSP depression involved presynaptic inhibitory mechanism of
the terminals of the interneurones could not be reached.
The possibility that the changes in excitability of the Ia interneuronal terminals reflect the presence of a presynaptic inhibitory
mechanism similar to that operating at the terminals of the afferent fibres (presynaptic inhibition) is discussed.1. In cat
lumbar motoneurones, disynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) evoked by stimulation of antagonist motor nerves
were depressed for at least 150 ms following conditioning stimulation of flexor (1.7-2 times threshold |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1469-7793.2000.t01-1-00623.x |