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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 4 April 1999, pp. 1730-1740
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Nobel Institute for Neurophysiology, Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, S-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden
Ullström, Maria,
David Parker,
Erik Svensson, and
Sten Grillner.
Neuropeptide-mediated facilitation and inhibition of sensory
inputs and spinal cord reflexes in the lamprey. The effects of neuromodulators present in the dorsal horn [tachykinins, neuropeptide Y (NPY), bombesin, and GABAB agonists] were studied on
reflex responses evoked by cutaneous stimulation in the lamprey. Reflex responses were elicited in an isolated spinal cord preparation by
electrical stimulation of the attached tail fin. To be able to separate
modulator-induced effects at the sensory level from that at the motor
or premotor level, the spinal cord was separated into three pools with
Vaseline barriers. The caudal pool contained the tail fin.
Neuromodulators were added to this pool to modulate sensory inputs
evoked by tail fin stimulation. The middle pool contained high divalent
cation or low calcium Ringer to block polysynaptic transmission and
thus limit the input to the rostral pool to that from ascending axons
that project through the middle pool. Ascending inputs and reflex
responses were monitored by making intracellular recordings from motor
neurons and extracellular recordings from ventral roots in the rostral
pool. The tachykinin neuropeptide substance P, which has previously
been shown to potentiate sensory input at the cellular and synaptic
levels, facilitated tail fin-evoked synaptic inputs to neurons in the
rostral pool and concentration dependently facilitated rostral ventral
root activity. Substance P also facilitated the modulatory effects of
tail fin stimulation on ongoing locomotor activity in the rostral pool.
In contrast, NPY and the GABAB receptor agonist baclofen, both of which have presynaptic inhibitory effects on sensory afferents, reduced the strength of ascending inputs and rostral ventral root responses. We also examined the effects of the neuropeptide bombesin, which is present in sensory axons, at the cellular, synaptic, and
reflex levels. As with substance P, bombesin increased tail fin
stimulation-evoked inputs and ventral root responses in the rostral
pool. These effects were associated with the increased excitability of
slowly adapting mechanosensory neurons and the potentiation of
glutamatergic synaptic inputs to spinobulbar neurons. These results
show the possible behavioral relevance of neuropeptide-mediated modulation of sensory inputs at the cellular and synaptic levels. Given
that the types and locations of neuropeptides in the dorsal spinal cord
of the lamprey show strong homologies to that of higher vertebrates,
these results are presumably relevant to other vertebrate systems.
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