Back to Search Start Over

Plasticity of rat motoneuron rhythmic firing properties with varying levels of afferent and descending inputs

Authors :
Bruno Cormery
Phillip F. Gardiner
Duane C. Button
Eric Beaumont
Christopher W. MacDonell
Source :
Journal of Neurophysiology. 107:265-272
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Physiological Society, 2012.

Abstract

Hindlimb motoneuron excitability was compared among exercise-trained (E), sedentary (S), and spinal cord transected (T) Sprague-Dawley rats by examining the slope of the frequency-current (F/I) relationship with standard intracellular recording techniques in rats anesthetized with ketamine-xylazine. The T group included spinal transected and spinal isolated rats; the E animals were either spontaneously active (exercise wheel) or treadmill trained; and rats in the S group were housed in pairs. An analysis of motoneuron initial [1st interspike interval (ISI)], early (mean of 1st three ISIs), and steady-state (mean of last 3 ISIs) discharge rate slopes resulting from increasing and decreasing 500-ms injected square-wave depolarizing current pulses was used to describe rhythmic motoneuron properties. The steepest slope occurred in the S group (55.3 ± 22.2 Hz/nA), followed by the T group (35.5 ± 15.3 Hz/nA), while the flattest slope was found in the E group (25.4 ± 10.9 Hz/nA). The steepest steady-state slope occurred in the S group but was found to be similar between the T and E groups. Furthermore, a spike-frequency adaptation (SFA) index revealed a slower adaptation in motoneurons of the E animals only (∼40% lower). Finally, evidence for a secondary range of firing existed more frequently in the T group (41%) compared with the S (12%) and E (31%) groups. The lower F/I slope and lower SFA index of motoneurons for E rats may be a result of an increase in Na+ conductance at the initial segment. The results show that motoneuronal rhythmic firing behavior is plastic, depending on the volume of daily activation and on intact descending pathways.

Details

ISSN :
15221598 and 00223077
Volume :
107
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0a54cbb957f2f897c74e3f96f2d78fdf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00122.2011