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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 2 August 2001, pp. 616-628
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Physiology, Medical School, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322; and 2Department of Physiology, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois 60611
Haftel, Valerie K.,
Jonathan F. Prather,
C. J. Heckman, and
Timothy C. Cope.
Recruitment of Cat Motoneurons in the Absence of Homonymous
Afferent Feedback. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 616-628, 2001. This study provides the first test in vivo of
the hypothesis that group Ia muscle-stretch afferents aid in preventing
reversals in the orderly recruitment of motoneurons. This hypothesis
was tested by studying recruitment of motoneurons deprived of
homonymous afferent input. Recruitment order was measured in
decerebrate, paralyzed cats from dual intra-axonal records obtained
simultaneously from pairs of medial gastrocnemius (MG) motoneurons.
Pairs of MG motor axons were recruited in eight separate trials of the reflex discharge evoked by stimulation of the caudal cutaneous sural
(CCS) nerve. Some reports suggest that reflex recruitment by this
cutaneous input should bias recruitment against order by the size
principle in which the axon with the slower conduction velocity (CV) in
a pair is recruited to fire before the faster CV axon. Recruitment was
studied in three groups of cats: ones with the MG nerve intact and
untreated (UNTREATED); ones with the MG nerve cut (CUT); and ones with
the MG nerve cut and bathed at its proximal end in lidocaine solution
(CUT+). The failure of electrical stimulation to initiate a dorsal root
volley and the absence of action potentials in MG afferents
demonstrated the effective elimination of afferent feedback in the CUT+
group. Recruitment order by the size principle predominated and was not statistically distinguishable among the three groups. The percentage of
pairs recruited in reverse order of the size principle was actually
smaller in the CUT+ group (6%) than in CUT (15%) or UNTREATED (19%)
groups. Thus homonymous afferent feedback is not necessary to prevent
recruitment reversal. However, removing homonymous afferent input did
result in the expression of inconsistency in order, i.e., switches in
recruitment sequence from one trial to the next, for more axon pairs in
the CUT+ group (33%) than for the other groups combined (13%).
Increased inconsistency in the absence of increased reversal of
recruitment order was approximated in computer simulations by
increasing time-varying fluctuations in synaptic drive to motoneurons
and could not be reproduced simply by deleting synaptic current from
group Ia homonymous afferents, regardless of how that current was
distributed to the motoneurons. These findings reject the hypothesis
that synaptic input from homonymous group Ia afferents is necessary to
prevent recruitment reversals, and they are consistent with the
assertion that recruitment order is established predominantly by
properties intrinsic to motoneurons.
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