Activation of Type-Identified Motor Units during Centrally Evoked
Contractions in the Cat Medial Gastrocnemius Muscle. II. Motoneuron Firing-
Rate Modulation.
Tansey, K. E., and B. R. Botterman.
Department of Cell Biology and Neuroscience, University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75235.
APStracts 2:0241N, 1995.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
1. The aim of this study was to examine the nature of motoneuron firing-rate
modulation in type-identified motor units during smoothly graded contractions
of the cat medial gastrocnemius (MG) muscle evoked by stimulation of the
mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR). Motoneuron discharge patterns, firing
rates and the extent of firing-rate modulation in individual units were
studied, as was the extent of concomitant changes in firing rates within pairs
of simultaneously active units. 2. In 21 pairs of simultaneously active motor
units, studied during 41 evoked contractions, the motoneurons' discharge rates
and patterns were measured by processing the cells' recorded action potentials
through windowing devices and storing their timing in computer memory. Once
recruited, most motoneurons increased their firing rates over a limited range
of increasing muscle tension and then maintained a fairly constant firing rate
as muscle force continued to rise. Most motoneurons also decreased their
firing rates over a slightly larger, but still limited, range of declining
muscle force before they were de-recruited. Although this was the most common
discharge pattern recorded, several other interesting patterns were also seen.
3. The mean firing rate for slow twitch (type S) motor units (27.8 imp/s, 5092
activations) was found to be significantly different from the mean firing rate
for fast twitch (type F) motor units (48.4 imp/s, 11,272 activations)
(Student's t test, P<0.001). There was no significant difference between the
mean firing rates of fast twitch, fatigue resistant (type FR) and fast twitch,
fatiguable (type FF) motor units. When the relationship between motoneuron
firing rate and whole-muscle force was analyzed, it was noted that, in
general, smaller, lower threshold motor units began firing at lower rates and
reached lower peak firing rates than did larger, higher threshold motor units.
These results confirm both earlier experimental observations and predictions
made by other investigators based on computer simulations of the cat MG motor
pool, but are in contrast to motor-unit discharge behavior recorded in some
human motor-unit studies. 4. The extent of concomitant changes in firing rate
within pairs of simultaneously active motor units was examined to estimate the
extent of simultaneous motoneuron firing-rate modulation across the motoneuron
pool. A smoothed (5 point sliding average) version of the 2 motoneurons'
instantaneous firing rates were plotted against each other and the slope and
statistical significance of the relationship was determined. In 16 motor-unit
pairs, the slope of the motoneurons' firing-rate relationship was
significantly distinct from 0. Parallel firing-rate modulation (less than
tenfold difference in firing rate change reflected by a slope of > 0.1) was
noted only in pairs containing motor units of like physiological type and then
only if they were of similar recruitment threshold. 5. Other investigators
have demonstrated that changes in a motoneuron's 'steady-state' firing rate
predictably reflect changes in the amount of effective synaptic current that
cell is receiving. The finding in the present study of limited parallel
firing-rate modulation between simultaneously active motoneurons would suggest
that changes in the synaptic drive to the various motoneurons of the pool is
unevenly distributed. This finding, in addition to the findings of orderly
motor-unit recruitment and the relationship between motor-unit recruitment
threshold and motoneuron firing rate, cannot be adequately accommodated for by
the existing models of the synaptic organization in motoneuron pools.
Therefore, a new model of the synaptic organization within the motoneuron pool
has been proposed.
Received 13 September 1994; accepted in final form 9 August 1995.
APS Manuscript Number J.
Article publication pending J. Neurophysiol.
ISSN 1080-4757 Copyright 1995 The American Physiological Society.
Published in APStracts on 24 August 1995.