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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 1 January 2001, pp. 211-218
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
The Nobel Institute for Neurophysiology, Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden
Aoki, Fumi,
Thierry Wannier, and
Sten Grillner.
Slow Dorsal-Ventral Rhythm Generator in the Lamprey Spinal Cord. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 211-218, 2001. In the isolated lamprey spinal cord, a very slow rhythm
(0.03-0.11 Hz), superimposed on fast
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-induced locomotor
activity (0.26-2.98 Hz), could be induced by a blockade of
GABAA or glycine receptors or by administration
of (1 s, 3 s)-l-aminocyclopentane-1,3-dicarboxylic acid a
metabotropic glutamate receptor agonist. Ventral root branches
supplying dorsal and ventral myotomes were exposed bilaterally to study
the motor pattern in detail. The slow rhythm was expressed in two main
forms: 1) a dorsal-ventral reciprocal pattern was the most
common (18 of 24 preparations), in which bilateral dorsal branches were
synchronous and alternated with the ventral branches, in two additional
cases a diagonal dorsal-ventral reciprocal pattern with alternation between the left (or right) dorsal and the right (or left) ventral branches was observed; 2) synchronous bursting in all
branches was encountered in four cases. In contrast, the fast locomotor rhythm occurred always in a left-right reciprocal pattern. Thus when
the slow rhythm appeared in a dorsal-ventral reciprocal pattern, fast
rhythms would simultaneously display left-right alternation. A
longitudinal midline section of the spinal cord during ongoing slow
bursting abolished the reciprocal pattern between ipsilateral dorsal
and ventral branches but a synchronous burst activity could still
remain. The fast swimming rhythm did not recover after the midline
section. These results suggest that in addition to the network
generating the swimming rhythm in the lamprey spinal cord, there is
also a network providing slow reciprocal alternation between dorsal and
ventral parts of the myotome. During steering, a selective activation
of dorsal and ventral myotomes is required and the neural network
generating the slow rhythm may represent activity in the spinal
machinery used for steering.
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