Sensory and corticospinal tract (CST) pathways activate spinal GABAergic interneurons that have axoaxonic connections onto proprioceptive (Ia) afferents that cause long-lasting depolarizations (termed primary afferent depolarization, PAD). In rodents, sensory-evoked PAD is produced by GABA(A) receptors at nodes of Ranvier in Ia afferents, rather than at presynaptic terminals, and facilitates spike propagation to motoneurons by preventing branch-point failures, rather than causing presynaptic inhibition. We examined in 40 human participants whether putative activation of Ia-PAD by sensory or CST pathways can also facilitate Ia afferent activation of motoneurons via the H-reflex. H-reflexes in several leg muscles were facilitated by prior conditioning from low-threshold proprioceptive, cutaneous or CST pathways, with a similar long-lasting time course (â¼200 ms) to phasic PAD measured in rodent Ia afferents. Long trains of cutaneous or proprioceptive afferent conditioning produced longer-lasting facilitation of the H-reflex for up to 2 min, consistent with tonic PAD in rodent Ia afferents mediated by nodal α5-GABA(A) receptors for similar stimulation trains. Facilitation of H-reflexes by this conditioning was likely not mediated by direct facilitation of the motoneurons because isolated stimulation of sensory or CST pathways did not alone facilitate the tonic firing rate of motor units. Furthermore, cutaneous conditioning increased the firing probability of single motor units (motoneurons) during the H-reflex without increasing their firing rate at this time, indicating that the underlying excitatory postsynaptic potential was more probable, but not larger. These results are consistent with sensory and CST pathways activating nodal GABA(A) receptors that reduce intermittent failure of action potentials propagating into Ia afferent branches. KEY POINTS: Controlled execution of posture and movement requires continually adjusted feedback from peripheral sensory pathways, especially those that carry proprioceptive information about body position, movement and effort. It was previously thought that the flow of proprioceptive feedback from Ia afferents was only reduced by GABAergic neurons in the spinal cord that sent axoaxonic projections to the terminal endings of sensory axons (termed GABA(axo) neurons). Based on new findings in rodents, we provide complementary evidence in humans to suggest that sensory and corticospinal pathways known to activate GABA(axo) neurons that project to dorsal parts of the Ia afferent also increase the flow of proprioceptive feedback to motoneurons in the spinal cord. These findings support a new role for spinal GABA(axo) neurons in facilitating afferent feedback to the spinal cord during voluntary or reflexive movements.
Facilitation of sensory transmission to motoneurons during cortical or sensory-evoked primary afferent depolarization (PAD) in humans.
在人类皮层或感觉诱发的初级传入去极化(PAD)期间,促进感觉向运动神经元的传递
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作者:Metz Krista, Matos Isabel Concha, Li Yaqing, Afsharipour Babak, Thompson Christopher K, Negro Francesco, Quinlan Katharina A, Bennett David J, Gorassini Monica A
| 期刊: | Journal of Physiology-London | 影响因子: | 4.400 |
| 时间: | 2023 | 起止号: | 2023 May;601(10):1897-1924 |
| doi: | 10.1113/JP284275 | 研究方向: | 神经科学 |
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