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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 4 October 2002, pp. 1791-1814
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Physiology, University of Montréal, Montreal, Quebec H3C 3J7, Canada
Lavoie, Sylvain and
Trevor Drew.
Discharge Characteristics of Neurons in the Red Nucleus During
Voluntary Gait Modifications: A Comparison with the Motor Cortex. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 1791-1814, 2002. We have examined the contribution of the red nucleus to the
control of locomotion in the cat. Neuronal activity was recorded from
157 rubral neurons, including identified rubrospinal neurons, in three
cats trained to walk on a treadmill and to step over obstacles attached
to the moving belt. Of 72 neurons with a receptive field confined to
the contralateral forelimb, 66 were phasically active during
unobstructed locomotion. The maximal activity of the majority of
neurons (59/66) was centered around the swing phase of locomotion.
Slightly more than half of the neurons (36/66) were phasically activity
during both swing and stance. In addition, some rubral neurons (14/66)
showed multiple periods of phasic activity within the swing phase of
the locomotor cycle. Periods of phasic discharge temporally coincident
with the swing phase of the ipsilateral limb were observed in 7/66
neurons. During voluntary gait modifications, most forelimb-related
neurons (70/72) showed a significant increase in their discharge
activity when the contralateral limb was the first to step over the
obstacle (lead condition). Maximal activity in nearly all cells (63/70) was observed during the swing phase, and 23/63 rubral neurons exhibited
multiple increases of activity during the modified swing phase. A
number of cells (18/70) showed multiple periods of increased activity
during swing and stance. Many of the neurons (35/63, 56%) showed an
increase in activity at the end of the swing phase; this period of
activity was temporally coincident with the period of activity in wrist
dorsiflexors, such as the extensor digitorum communis. A smaller
proportion of neurons with receptive fields restricted to the hindlimbs
showed similar characteristics to those observed in the population of
forelimb-related neurons. The overall characteristics of these rubral
neurons are similar to those that we obtained previously from pyramidal
tract neurons recorded from the motor cortex during an identical task.
However, in contrast to the results obtained in the rubral neurons,
most motor cortical neurons showed only one period of increased
activity during the step cycle. We suggest that both structures
contribute to the modifications of the pattern of EMG activity that are
required to produce the change in limb trajectory needed to step over
an obstacle. However, the results suggest an additional role for the
red nucleus in regulating intra- and interlimb coordination.
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