The present series of investigations was aimed to disclose the possible sites of action of excitatory and inhibitory inputs on tho-interneuron pathway mediating the primary afferent depolarization (PAD) of group I afferents of extensor muscles in the cat spinal cord. To this end we compared the effects produced by stimulation of segmental and descending pathways on the PAD generated either by stimulation of group I fibers of flexor muscles or by intraspinal microstimulation. It was assumed that under the appropriate conditions the PAD produced by intraspinal microstimulation results from the activation of the last-order interneurons in the PAD pathway and may, therefore, allow detection pathway. The PAD of single group I afferent fibers was determined in barbiturate-anesthetized preparations by measuring the test stimulus current required to maintain a constant probability of antidromic firing. This was achieved by means of a feedback system that continuously adjusted the test stimulus current to the required values. The PAD of individual group Ia gastrocnemius soleus (GS) fibers that is produced by activation of the low-threshold afferents of the posterior biceps and semitendinosus nerve was found to be inhibited by conditioning stimulation of the relatively low-threshold cutaneous fibers and also by stimulation of supraspinal structures such as the ipsilateral brain stem reticular formation, the contralateral red nucleus, and the contralateral pyramidal tract. In contrast, the PAD of group Ia fibers produced by microstimulation applied in the intermediate nucleus could be inhibited only by stimulation of the brain stem reticular formation but not by stimulation of the other descending inputs presently tested or by stimulation of cutaneous nerves. PAD of group Ia fibers was produced also by microstimulation applied within the motor nucleus. However, in most fibers the resulting PAD could not be inhibited either by stimulation of the brain stem reticular formation, the red nucleus, the pyramidal tract, or cutaneous nerves. Stimulation of cutaneous and of flexor muscle nerves of the brain stem reticular formation, the red nucleus, and the pyramidal tract all produced PAD of the group Ib GS fibers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Recently we showed that the neurotensin polyplex is a nanoparticle carrier system that targets reporter genes in nigral dopamine neurons in vivo. Herein, we report its first practical application in experimental parkinsonism, which consisted of transfecting dopamine neurons with the gene coding for human glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (hGDNF). Hemiparkinsonism was induced in rats by a single dose of 6-hydroxydopamine (30 microg) into the ventrolateral part of the striatum. We showed that transfection of the hGDNF gene into the substantia nigra of rats 1 week after the neurotoxin injection produced biochemical, anatomical, and functional recovery from hemiparkinsonism. RT-PCR analysis showed mRNA expression of exogenous hGDNF in the transfected substantia nigra. Western blot analysis verified transgene expression by recognizing the flag epitope added at the C-terminus of the hGDNF polypeptide, which was found mainly in dopamine neurons by double immunofluorescence techniques. These data indicate that the neurotensin polyplex holds great promise for the neuroprotective therapy of Parkinson disease.
Spike-triggered averaging of dorsal and ventral root potentials was used in anesthetized cats to disclose possible synaptic connections of spinal interneurons in the intermediate nucleus with afferent fibers and/or motoneurons. With this method we have been able to document the existence of a distinct group of interneurons whose activity was associated with the recording of inhibitory potentials in the ventral roots (iVRPs), but not with negative dorsal root potentials (nDRPs). The iVRPs had mean durations of 60.8 +/- 22.1 ms and latencies between 1.7 and 5.1 ms relative to the onset of the interneuronal spikes. Within this group of neurons it was possible to characterize two categories depending on their responses to segmental inputs. Most type A interneurons were mono- or disynaptically activated by group I muscle afferents and polysynaptically by low threshold (1.08-1.69 X T) cutaneous fibers. Type B interneurons were instead polysynaptically activated by group II muscle and by cutaneous fibers with thresholds ranging from 1.02 to 3.1 X T. Whenever tested, both type A and B interneurons could be antidromically activated from Clarke's columns. There was a second group of interneurons whose activity was associated with the generation of both iVRPs and nDRPs. These potentials had mean durations of 107.5 +/- 35.6 and 131.5 +/- 32 ms, respectively, and onset latencies between 1.7 and 6.1 ms. The interneurons belonging to this group, which appear not to send axonal projections to Clarke's column, could be classified in three categories depending on their responses to peripheral inputs. Type C interneurons responded mono- or disynaptically to group I muscle volleys and polysynaptically to intermediate threshold (1.22-2.7 X T) cutaneous afferents. Type D interneurons were polysynaptically activated by group II muscle afferents (2.3-8.5 X T) and by intermediate threshold (1.4-3 X T) cutaneous fibers and type E interneurons only by group I muscle afferents with mono- or disynaptic latencies. A third group of interneurons produced nDRPs without iVRPs. The nDRPs had onset latencies varying from 1.9 to 6.2 ms and mean durations of 130.0 +/- 34.6 ms. These neurons (type F) showed spontaneous and evoked bursts of activity and were not antidromically activated from Clarke's column. They responded to stimulation of low- and intermediate-threshold cutaneous fibers (1.04-2.9 X T) with mono- and polysynaptic latencies, but not by group I muscle fibers. Type F interneurons appear to be located in more superficial layers than all the other interneurons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
The characteristics of the primary afferent depolarization (PAD) of Ia- and Ib-fibers generated by segmental and descending inputs have been analyzed in the spinal cord of anesthetized cats. The PAD was inferred from the changes produced by conditioning inputs on the intraspinal stimulus current required to produce a constant antidromic firing of single group I afferent fibers from the gastrocnemius (GS) or posterior biceps and semitendinosus (PBSt) nerves. Group I GS and PBSt fibers ending in the intermediate nucleus could be classified in three different types according to their PAD patterns in response to stimulation of cutaneous nerves and of descending fibers. In one set of group I fibers stimulation of cutaneous nerves and of the ipsilateral brain stem reticular formation, or the contralateral red nucleus, produced no PAD, but was able to inhibit the PAD generated by stimulation of group I fibers from flexors (type A PAD pattern). PBSt nerve fibers with this PAD pattern had peripheral thresholds and conduction velocities between 1.01 and 1.56 times threshold and 76.3 to 118 m/s, respectively. A second set of group I fibers was found to be depolarized by cutaneous nerves as well as by stimulation of rubrospinal and reticulospinal fibers (type B PAD pattern). The peripheral thresholds and conduction velocities of PBSt afferent fibers with a type B PAD pattern were of 1.66-2.03 times threshold and 71-83 m/s, respectively. We found a third set of group I fibers that were also depolarized by reticulospinal and rubrospinal inputs, but not by cutaneous nerves that instead inhibited the PAD elicited by group I volleys in flexor nerves (type C PAD pattern). All PBSt afferent fibers with a type C PAD pattern, with the exception of two, had peripheral thresholds and velocities between 1.46 and 2.16 times threshold and between 72 and 89 m/s, respectively. Stimulation of the Deiter's nucleus was found to depolarize the intraspinal terminals of a small fraction of group I GS fibers with a type A PAD pattern and of all group I GS and PBSt fibers with type B and C PAD patterns. The PAD produced by vestibulospinal stimulation in fibers with type A and C PAD patterns could be inhibited by conditioning volleys applied to cutaneous nerves. It is suggested that group I afferent fibers from flexors and extensors with a type A PAD pattern are group Ia, and that most fibers with type B and type C PAD patterns are group Ib.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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