scholarly journals Muscle afferent excitability testing in spinal root-intact rats: dissociating peripheral afferent and efferent volleys generated by intraspinal microstimulation

2017 ◽  
Vol 117 (2) ◽  
pp. 796-807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saeka Tomatsu ◽  
Geehee Kim ◽  
Joachim Confais ◽  
Kazuhiko Seki

Presynaptic inhibition of the sensory input from the periphery to the spinal cord can be evaluated directly by intra-axonal recording of primary afferent depolarization (PAD) or indirectly by intraspinal microstimulation (excitability testing). Excitability testing is superior for use in normal behaving animals, because this methodology bypasses the technically challenging intra-axonal recording. However, use of excitability testing on the muscle or joint afferent in intact animals presents its own technical challenges. Because these afferents, in many cases, are mixed with motor axons in the peripheral nervous system, it is crucial to dissociate antidromic volleys in the primary afferents from orthodromic volleys in the motor axon, both of which are evoked by intraspinal microstimulation. We have demonstrated in rats that application of a paired stimulation protocol with a short interstimulus interval (ISI) successfully dissociated the antidromic volley in the nerve innervating the medial gastrocnemius muscle. By using a 2-ms ISI, the amplitude of the volleys evoked by the second stimulation was decreased in dorsal root-sectioned rats, but the amplitude did not change or was slightly increased in ventral root-sectioned rats. Excitability testing in rats with intact spinal roots indicated that the putative antidromic volleys exhibited dominant primary afferent depolarization, which was reasonably induced from the more dorsal side of the spinal cord. We concluded that excitability testing with a paired-pulse protocol can be used for studying presynaptic inhibition of somatosensory afferents in animals with intact spinal roots. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Excitability testing of primary afferents has been used to evaluate presynaptic modulation of synaptic transmission in experiments conducted in vivo. However, to apply this method to muscle afferents of animals with intact spinal roots, it is crucial to dissociate antidromic and orthodromic volleys induced by spinal microstimulation. We propose a new method to make this dissociation possible without cutting spinal roots and demonstrate that it facilitates excitability testing of muscle afferents.

2002 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
pp. 163-171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ariane Ménard ◽  
Hugues Leblond ◽  
Jean-Pierre Gossard

The aim of this study is to understand how sensory inputs of different modalities are integrated into spinal cord pathways controlling presynaptic inhibition during locomotion. Primary afferent depolarization (PAD), an estimate of presynaptic inhibition, was recorded intra-axonally in group I afferents ( n = 31) from seven hindlimb muscles in L6–S1 segments during fictive locomotion in the decerebrate cat. PADs were evoked by stimulating alternatively low-threshold afferents from a flexor nerve, a cutaneous nerve and a combination of both. The fictive step cycle was divided in five bins and PADs were averaged in each bin and their amplitude compared. PADs evoked by muscle stimuli alone showed a significant phase-dependent modulation in 20/31 group I afferents. In 12/20 afferents, the cutaneous stimuli alone evoked a phase-dependent modulation of primary afferent hyperpolarization (PAH, n = 9) or of PADs ( n = 3). Combining the two sensory modalities showed that cutaneous volleys could significantly modify the amplitude of PADs evoked by muscle stimuli in at least one part (bin) of the step cycle in 17/31 (55%) of group I afferents. The most common effect (13/17) was a decrease in the PAD amplitude by 35% on average, whereas it was increased by 17% on average in the others (4/17). Moreover, in 8/13 afferents, the PAD reduction was obtained in 4/5 bins i.e., for most of the duration of the step cycle. These effects were seen in group I afferents from all seven muscles. On the other hand, we found that different cutaneous nerves had quite different efficacy; the superficial peroneal (SP) being the most efficient (85% of trials) followed by Saphenous (60%) and caudal sural (44%) nerves. The results indicate that cutaneous interneurons may act, in part, by modulating the transmission in PAD pathways activated by group I muscle afferents. We conclude that cutaneous input, especially from the skin area on the dorsum of the paw (SP), could subtract presynaptic inhibition in some group I afferents during perturbations of stepping (e.g., hitting an obstacle) and could thus adjust the influence of proprioceptive feedback onto motoneuronal excitability.


2013 ◽  
Vol 110 (9) ◽  
pp. 2175-2184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emanuel Loeza-Alcocer ◽  
Martha Canto-Bustos ◽  
Justo Aguilar ◽  
Ricardo González-Ramírez ◽  
Ricardo Felix ◽  
...  

γ-Amino butyric acid (GABA) plays a key role in the regulation of central nervous system by activating synaptic and extrasynaptic GABAA receptors. It is acknowledged that extrasynaptic GABAA receptors located in the soma, dendrites, and axons may be activated tonically by low extracellular GABA concentrations. The activation of these receptors produces a persistent conductance that can hyperpolarize or depolarize nerve cells depending on the Cl− equilibrium potential. In an in vitro preparation of the turtle spinal cord we show that extrasynaptic α5GABAA receptors mediate the tonic state of excitability of primary afferents independently of the phasic primary afferent depolarization mediated by synaptic GABAA receptors. Blockade of α5GABAA receptors with the inverse agonist L-655,708 depressed the dorsal root reflex (DRR) without affecting the phasic increase in excitability of primary afferents. Using RT-PCR and Western blotting, we corroborated the presence of the mRNA and the α5GABAA protein in the dorsal root ganglia of the turtle spinal cord. The receptors were localized in primary afferents in dorsal root, dorsal root ganglia, and peripheral nerve terminals using immunoconfocal microscopy. Considering the implications of the DRR in neurogenic inflammation, α5GABAA receptors may serve as potential pharmacological targets for the treatment of pain.


1979 ◽  
Vol 57 (10) ◽  
pp. 1157-1167 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. R. Sastry

The effects of iontophoretically applied γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), (−)-nipecotic acid (NCA), 2,4-diaminobutyric acid (DABA), and pentobarbital were examined on the thresholds for antidromic activation of single group I muscle afferents, in decerebrated spinal cats. GABA decreased the threshold for antidromic activation of the majority of the afferents. During this decrease in the threshold, the preterminal axons were depolarized. This depolarization was decreased by a prior depolarization, but increased by a hyperpolarization, of the afferent. During the depolarization of the afferent produced by GABA, the size of the orthodromic action potential was decreased. Iontophoretically applied bicuculline antagonized the effect of GABA on the threshold for antidromic activation of the afferents. NCA, DABA, and pentobarbital potentiated the action of GABA on the afferent terminal excitability. Pre-treatment of the animals with semicarbazide, which reportedly depletes spinal GABA, resulted in a reduction in the threshold produced by a conditioning stimulation of other group I afferents. GABA decreased the threshold for antidromic activation of the nonterminal regions of the afferents when applied near the stimulation sites. The amounts of GABA required to produce a decrease in the threshold of the nonterminal afferents were greater than those required to produce a comparable effect on the terminal regions of the fibres. Iontophoretically applied NCA and bicuculline, in amounts that were adequate to alter the effects of applied GABA, failed to affect the nerve stimulation-induced decrease in the threshold for antidromic activation of the fibres. Intravenously injected bicuculline, however, antagonized the actions of GABA as well as of the reduction in the threshold produced by nerve stimulation.These results indicate that (1) GABA-induced increase in the excitability of group I afferent terminals is associated with a depolarization of the afferent, (2) the uptake of iontophoretically applied amino acid into the spinal cord tissue appears to limit its action on the afferent terminal excitability, (3) GABA has a preterminal depolarizing action on group I muscle afferents, and (4) primary afferent depolarization produced by nerve stimulation may be of diffuse origin and, hence, cannot be significantly affected by iontophoretically applied NCA and bicuculline.


1996 ◽  
Vol 76 (6) ◽  
pp. 4104-4112 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. P. Gossard

1. Primary afferent depolarization (PAD) can be evoked by sensory volleys, supraspinal commands, or the activity of spinal locomotor networks (locomotor-related PAD). In this study we investigated the effect of locomotor-related PAD and of sensory-evoked PAD on the monosynaptic transmission between the group IA muscle afferents and motoneurons in the lumbosacral spinal cord. 2. Six pairs of group IA afferents and motoneurons [4 tibialis anterior (TA), 1 medial gastrocnemius (MG), 1 lateral gastrocnemius-soleus (LGS)] were successfully recorded intracellularly during spontaneous fictive locomotion in the decerebrate cat. The membrane potentials of TA axons and motoneurons were maximally depolarized during the flexor phase of the locomotor cycle. In MG and LGS pairs, the maximum depolarization in IA axons occurred during the flexor phase and, in motoneurons, during the extensor phase. There were no antidromic discharges in the recorded axons. The effects of locomotor-related PAD on IA transmission were evaluated by comparing the unitary excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in the motoneuron evoked by the spontaneous orthodromic firing of the group IA axon during the flexor and extensor phases, respectively. In TA pairs, the maximum amplitude of unitary EPSPs occurred during the flexor phase when the motoneuron and the axon were maximally depolarized. In the MG and LGS pairs, the maximal amplitude of unitary EPSPs occurred during the extensor phase when the motoneuron was maximally depolarized and when the axon was the least depolarized. Overall, the amplitude of unitary EPSPs was clearly modulated during the fictive step cycle and always reached a maximum during the depolarized phase of the motoneuron, whether the group IA axon was maximally depolarized or not during that phase. 3. The effect of sensory-evoked PAD on synaptic transmission was also studied in nonlocomoting preparations. One TA pair was successfully recorded and PADs were evoked by the stimulation of a peripheral nerve. The amplitude of unitary EPSPs in the motoneuron was greatly depressed during the PADs. This result is a direct demonstration of the presynaptic inhibition associated with the sensory-evoked PAD in the monosynaptic reflex pathway of the cat. 4. We conclude from these results that the locomotor-related PAD did not contribute significantly to the modulation of transmission in the monosynaptic reflex pathway of the cat during fictive locomotion. On the other hand, the results confirmed that PAD evoked by sensory input decreases group IA afferent transmission efficiently most probably by presynaptic inhibition. The results suggest therefore that, during real locomotion, sensory feedback induced by the moving limbs or perturbations will evoke an important presynaptic inhibition of the release from group IA primary afferent terminals.


1982 ◽  
Vol 60 (6) ◽  
pp. 850-855 ◽  
Author(s):  
Radan Čapek ◽  
Barbara Esplin

Effects of taurine and homotaurine (3-aminopropancsuIfonic acid), on excitability of primary afferents were compared with effects of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in spinal unanaesthesized cats. Homotaurine and GABA, administered intravenously or topically, produced a marked increase in afferent excitability. Homotaurine was about 10 times more potent than GABA. Taurine (up to 2 mmol/kg i.v., or 10 mM topically) did not produce a consistent change in afferent excitability. The effect of homotaurine was antagonized by bicuculline or picrotoxin in doses which suppressed the primary afferent depolarization, as indicated by an increase of afferent excitability, evoked by conditioning stimulation of an antagonistic muscle nerve. Semicarbazidc, an inhibitor of GABA synthesis, did not attenuate the homotaurine-induced excitability changes of afferents while suppressing entirely the primary afferent depolarization. These findings suggest that homotaurine exerts a direct GABA-like action on feline primary afferents.


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