8 research outputs found

    Intense Synaptic Activity Enhances Temporal Resolution in Spinal Motoneurons

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    In neurons, spike timing is determined by integration of synaptic potentials in delicate concert with intrinsic properties. Although the integration time is functionally crucial, it remains elusive during network activity. While mechanisms of rapid processing are well documented in sensory systems, agility in motor systems has received little attention. Here we analyze how intense synaptic activity affects integration time in spinal motoneurons during functional motor activity and report a 10-fold decrease. As a result, action potentials can only be predicted from the membrane potential within 10 ms of their occurrence and detected for less than 10 ms after their occurrence. Being shorter than the average inter-spike interval, the AHP has little effect on integration time and spike timing, which instead is entirely determined by fluctuations in membrane potential caused by the barrage of inhibitory and excitatory synaptic activity. By shortening the effective integration time, this intense synaptic input may serve to facilitate the generation of rapid changes in movements

    GABAA and glycine receptors in regulation of intercostal and abdominal expiratory activity in vitro in neonatal rat

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    The roles played by GABAA and glycine receptors in inspiratory-expiratory motor co-ordination and in tonic inhibitory regulation of expiratory motor activity were studied using brainstem-spinal cord (-rib) preparations from neonatal rats. Inspiratory activity was recorded from the C4 ventral root. Expiratory activity in internal intercostal muscle, internal oblique muscle or T13 ventral root was evoked by a decrease in perfusate pH from 7.4 to 7.1 (i.e. from normal to low pH conditions) and was limited to the first part of the expiratory phase. Under low pH conditions, bath application of 10 μm bicuculline, a GABAA receptor antagonist, caused the inspiratory burst to overlap the expiratory burst in 2/7 preparations. Overlapping of the expiratory burst with the inspiratory burst was observed in 7/7 preparations made under 10 μm bicuculline. Furthermore, such preparations exhibited expiratory bursts under bicuculline-containing normal pH conditions. Local application of 10 μm bicuculline to the brainstem under normal pH conditions evoked expiratory bursts, some of which overlapped the inspiratory bursts. Picrotoxin, another antagonist of the GABAA receptor, had similar effects. Under normal pH conditions, application of strychnine (0.2– 2.0 μm; a glycine receptor antagonist) to the brainstem did not evoke expiratory bursts. On subsequent application of strychnine-containing low pH solution, expiratory bursts were evoked and some (0.5 μm) or all (2.0 μm) of these overlapped the inspiratory burst. Simultaneous application of picrotoxin and strychnine to the brainstem evoked expiratory bursts that overlapped the inspiratory bursts and a subsequent decrease in perfusate pH to 7.1 increased the frequency of the respiratory rhythm. It was a characteristic finding that the duration of the expiratory burst exceeded that of the inspiratory burst under control low pH conditions. This remained true during concurrent blockade of GABAA and glycine receptors. The results suggest that in the in vitro preparation from neonatal rats: (1) GABAA and glycine receptors within the brainstem play important roles in the co-ordination between inspiratory and expiratory motor activity, (2) tonic inhibition via GABAA receptors, but not glycine receptors, plays a role in the regulation of expiratory motor activity and (3) inspiratory and expiratory burst termination is independent of both GABAA and glycine receptors

    Normal and pathological oscillatory communication in the brain.

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    The huge number of neurons in the human brain are connected to form functionally specialized assemblies. The brain's amazing processing capabilities rest on local communication within and long-range communication between these assemblies. Even simple sensory, motor and cognitive tasks depend on the precise coordination of many brain areas. Recent improvements in the methods of studying long-range communication have allowed us to address several important questions. What are the common mechanisms that govern local and long-range communication and how do they relate to the structure of the brain? How does oscillatory synchronization subserve neural communication? And what are the consequences of abnormal synchronization

    Normal and pathological oscillatory communication in the brain

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    The Cellular Building Blocks of Breathing

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