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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 3 March 2000, pp. 1480-1501
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Medical College of Pennsylvania/Hahnemann Medical School, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19129
Kargo, William J. and
Simon F. Giszter.
Afferent Roles in Hindlimb Wipe-Reflex Trajectories: Free-Limb
Kinematics and Motor Patterns. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 1480-1501, 2000. The hindlimb wiping reflex of
the frog is an example of a targeted trajectory that is organized at
the spinal level. In this paper, we examine this reflex in 45 spinal
frogs to test the importance of proprioceptive afferents in trajectory
formation at the spinal level. We tested hindlimb to hindlimb wiping,
in which the wiping or effector limb and the target limb move together.
Loss of afferent feedback from the wiping limb was produced by cutting
dorsal roots 7-9. This caused altered initial trajectory direction,
increased ankle path curvature, knee-joint velocity reversals, and
overshooting misses of the target limb. We established that these
kinematic and motor-pattern changes were due mainly to the loss of
ipsilateral muscular and joint afferents. Loss of cutaneous afferents
alone did not alter the initial trajectory up to target limb contact. However, there were cutaneous effects in later motor-pattern phases after the wiping and target limb had made contact: The knee extension or whisk phase of wiping was often lost. Finally, there was a minor and
nonspecific excitatory effect of phasic contralateral feedback in the
motor-pattern changes after deafferentation. Specific muscle groups
were altered as a result of proprioceptive loss. These muscles also
showed configuration-based regulation during wiping. Biceps,
semitendinosus, and sartorius (all contributing knee flexor torques)
all were regulated in amplitude based on the initial position of the
limb. These muscles contributed to an initial electromyographic (EMG)
burst in the motor pattern. Rectus internus and semimembranosus
(contributing hip extensor torques) were regulated in onset but not in
the time of peak EMG or in termination of EMG based on initial
position. These two muscles contributed to a second EMG burst in the
motor pattern. After deafferentation the initial burst was reduced and
more synchronous with the second burst, and the second burst often was
broadened in duration. Ankle path curvature and its degree of change
after loss of proprioception depended on the degree of joint staggering used by the frog (i.e., the relative phasing between knee and hip
motion) and on the degree of motor-pattern change. We examined these
variations in 31 frogs. Twenty percent (6/31) of frogs showed largely
synchronous joint coordination and little effect of deafferentation on
joint coordination, end-point path, or the underlying synchronous motor
pattern. Eighty percent of frogs (25/31) showed some degree of
staggered joint coordination and also strong effects of loss of
afferents. Loss of afferents caused two major joint level changes in
these frogs: collapse of joint phasing into synchronous joint motion
and increased hip velocity. Fifty percent of frogs (16/31) showed
joint-coordination changes of type (1) without type (2). This change
was associated with reduction, loss, or collapse of phasing of the
sartorius, semitendinosus and biceps (iliofibularis) in the initial EMG
burst in the motor pattern. The remaining 30% (9/31) of frogs showed
both joint-coordination changes 1 and 2. These changes were associated
with both the knee flexor EMG changes seen in the other frogs and with
additional increased activity of rectus internus and semimembranosus
muscles. Our data show that multiple ipsilateral modalities all play
some role in regulating muscle activity patterns in the wiping limb.
Our data support a strong role of ipsilateral proprioception in the
process of trajectory formation and specifically in the control of limb
segment interactions during wiping by way of the regulation and
coordination of muscle groups based on initial limb configuration.
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