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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 2 August 2002, pp. 732-739
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, The Hebrew University Medical School, Jerusalem 91120, Israel
Gabbay, H.,
I. Delvolvé, and
A. Lev-Tov.
Pattern Generation in Caudal-Lumbar and Sacrococcygeal Segments
of the Neonatal Rat Spinal Cord. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 732-739, 2002. The rhythmogenic capacity of the
tail-innervating segments (L4-Co3) of the spinal cord was studied in
isolated spinal cord and tail-spinal cord preparations of neonatal
rats. Bath-applied serotonin/N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) failed
to produce a robust sacrococcygeal rhythmicity following midlumbar
transection of the spinal cord. By contrast, a regular alternating
left-right rhythm could be induced in the sacrococcygeal segments by
application of noradrenaline (NA) or NA and NMDA before and after
midlumbar transection of the cord. This rhythm was accelerated with the concentration of NMDA and was blocked by
1 or
2 adrenoceptor antagonists. The efferent bursts induced by NA/NMDA were accompanied by
rhythmic tail movements produced by alternating activation of the left
and right tail muscles and by coactivation of flexors, extensors, and
abductors on a given side of the tail. This coactivation implies that
reciprocal inhibitory pathways were not activated during the rhythm.
Lesion experiments revealed that the rhythmogenic circuitry is
distributed along all or most of the sacrococcygeal segments. The
NA/NMDA-induced rhythm persisted in the isolated sacrococcygeal
(S1-Co3), sacral (S1-S4), coccygeal (Co1-Co3), and smaller isolated
regions of the sacrococcygeal cord. The rhythm also could be maintained
in longitudinally split sacrococcygeal hemicords in which flexor,
extensor, and abductor motoneurons are coactivated. This finding
indicates that neither left/right nor flexor/extensor inhibitory
interactions are required for rhythmogenesis in the sacrococcygeal
cord. A slow rhythm lacking the alternating left-right pattern was
induced by NA/NMDA in tail-innervating caudal lumbar segments of
isolated L4-Co3 preparations. This rhythm was independent of the
concurrent sacrococcygeal rhythm and the activity pattern of the tail
musculature and it does not seem to contribute to rhythmic tail
movements under these conditions. Comparative studies of the rhythm
produced in the isolated caudal lumbar, sacrococcygeal cord, and caudal
thoracic-rostral lumbar segments revealed that the S1-Co3 rhythm was
faster than the L4-L6 pattern and slower than the T6-L3 rhythm. It is
suggested that the caudal lumbar and sacrococcygeal segments of the
cord are normally driven by the faster rostral lumbar central pattern
generators. The relevance of the findings described above to pattern
generation in the mammalian spinal cord is discussed.
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