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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 6 December 2000, pp. 2880-2887
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
1The Nobel Institute for Neurophysiology, Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, SE-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden; and 2A. N. Belozersky Institute of Physico-Chemical Biology, Moscow State University, Moscow 119 899, Russia
Zelenin, P. V.,
T. G. Deliagina,
S. Grillner, and
G. N. Orlovsky.
Postural Control in the Lamprey: A Study With a
Neuro-Mechanical Model. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 2880-2887, 2000. The swimming lamprey normally maintains the
dorsal-side-up orientation due to activity of the postural control
system driven by vestibular organs. Commands for postural corrections
are transmitted from the brain stem to the spinal cord mainly by the
reticulospinal (RS) pathways. As shown in previous studies, RS neurons
are activated by contralateral roll tilt, they exhibit a strong dynamic
response, but much weaker static response. Here we test a hypothesis
that decoding of these commands in the spinal cord is based on the subtraction of signals in the left and right RS pathways. In this study, we used a neuro-mechanical model. An intact lamprey was mounted
on a platform that restrained its postural activity but allowed lateral
locomotor undulations to occur. The activity in the left and right RS
pathways was recorded by implanted electrodes. These natural biological
signals were then used to control an electrical motor rotating the
animal around its longitudinal axis toward the stronger signal. It was
found that this "hybrid" system automatically stabilized a normal
orientation of the lamprey in the gravitational field. The system
compensated for large postural disturbances (lateral tilt up to
±180°) due to wide angular zones of the gravitational sensitivity of
RS neurons. In the nonswimming lamprey, activity of RS neurons and
their vestibular responses were considerably reduced, and the system
was not able to stabilize the normal orientation. However, the balance
could be restored by imposing small oscillations on the lamprey, which
elicited additional activation of the vestibular organs. This finding
indicates that head oscillations caused by locomotor movements may
contribute to postural stabilization. In addition to postural
stabilization, the neuro-mechanical model reproduced a number of
postural effects characteristic of the lamprey: 1)
unilateral eye illumination elicited a lateral tilt ("dorsal light
response") due to a shift of the equilibrium point in the
vestibular-driven postural network; 2) removal of one
labyrinth resulted in a loss of postural control due to an induced
left-right asymmetry in the vestibulo-reticulospinal reflexes, which
3) could be compensated for by asymmetrical visual input.
The main conclusion of the present study is that natural supraspinal
commands for postural corrections in the roll plane can be effectively
decoded on the basis of subtraction of the effects of signals delivered
by the left and right RS pathways. Possible mechanisms for this
transformation are discussed.
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