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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 3 September 1999, pp. 1156-1163
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Biology, Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201-1881
Buchanan, James T. and
Stefan Kasicki.
Segmental Distribution of Common Synaptic Inputs to Spinal
Motoneurons During Fictive Swimming in the Lamprey. J. Neurophysiol. 82: 1156-1163, 1999. These experiments were
designed to measure the degree of shared synaptic inputs coming to
pairs of myotomal motoneurons during swimming activity in the isolated
spinal cord of the lamprey. In addition, the experiments measured the
decrease in the degree of shared synaptic inputs with the distance
between the motoneurons to assess the segmental distribution of these
shared inputs. Intracellular microelectrode recordings of membrane
potential were made simultaneously on pairs of myotomal motoneurons
during swimming activity induced with an excitatory amino acid. The
swim cycle oscillations of motoneuron membrane potentials were removed
with a digital notch filter, thus leaving the fast synaptic activities
that underlie these slower oscillations. Cross-correlations of the fast
synaptic activities in two simultaneously recorded motoneurons were
made to measure the degree of shared inputs. The cross-correlation was
done on time windows restricted to one swim cycle or to part of a swim
cycle, and 50 consecutive swim cycle cross-correlograms then were
averaged. The peak coefficients of the cross-correlations exhibited a
wide range, even for pairs of motoneurons located near one another
(range = 0.06-0.74, for pairs located within 2 segments). This
observation suggests that there may be different functional classes of
myotomal motoneurons with inputs originating from different sets of
premotor interneurons. In spite of this variability, the mean peak
correlation coefficients of motoneuron pairs clearly decreased with the
distance between them. With separations of more than five segments,
there was little or no clear correlation between the motoneurons
(range = 0.04-0.10). These results suggest that common synaptic
inputs to motoneurons during fictive swimming originate from local
premotor interneurons and that beyond five spinal segments, common
premotor inputs are rare or weak to motoneurons. Thus the premotor
signals originating from the locomotor network have relatively short
distribution lengths, on the order of 5 segments of 120 total spinal segments.
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