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J Neurophysiol 97: 1428-1444, 2007. First published December 13, 2006; doi:10.1152/jn.01014.2006
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Different Motor Neuron Spike Patterns Produce Contractions With Very Similar Rises in Graded Slow Muscles

Scott L. Hooper1,2, Christoph Guschlbauer2, Géraldine von Uckermann2 and Ansgar Büschges2

1Department of Biological Sciences, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio; and 2Tierphysiologie, Zoologisches Institut, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany

Submitted 23 September 2006; accepted in final form 5 December 2006

Graded muscles produce small twitches in response to individual motor neuron spikes. During the early part of their contractions, contraction amplitude in many such muscles depends primarily on the number of spikes the muscle has received, not the frequency or pattern with which they were delivered. Stick insect (Carausius morosus) extensor muscles are graded and thus would likely show spike-number dependency early in their contractions. Tonic stimulations of the extensor motor nerve showed that the response of the muscles differed from the simplest form of spike-number dependency. However, these differences actually increased the spike-number range over which spike-number dependency was present. When the motor nerve was stimulated with patterns mimicking the motor neuron activity present during walking, amplitude during contraction rises also depended much more on spike number than on spike frequency. A consequence of spike-number dependency is that brief changes in spike frequency do not alter contraction slope and we show here that extensor motor neuron bursts with different spike patterns give rise to contractions with very similar contraction rises. We also examined in detail the early portions of a large number of extensor motor neuron bursts recorded during single-leg walking and show that these portions of the bursts do not appear to have any common spike pattern. Although alternative explanations are possible, the simplest interpretation of these data is that extensor motor neuron firing during leg swing is not tightly controlled.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: S. L. Hooper, Department of Biological Sciences, Irvine Hall, Ohio University, Athens, OH 45701 (E-mail: hooper{at}ohio.edu)




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