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Modulation of gamma and alpha spinal motor neurons activity by trans‐spinal direct current stimulation: effects on reflexive actions and locomotor activity
Author(s) -
Ahmed Zaghloul
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
physiological reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2051-817X
DOI - 10.14814/phy2.12696
Subject(s) - neuroscience , alpha (finance) , motor neuron , stimulation , psychology , motor system , reflex , spinal cord , developmental psychology , construct validity , psychometrics
Spontaneous and evoked spinal activities interact to set the characteristics of emergent motor responses. Gamma motor neurons have feedforward and feedback functions in motor control, which are crucial for transforming motor commands into action. Meanwhile, the intrinsic excitability and functional connectivity of alpha motor neurons determine the accuracy of actions. In this study, we investigated the effects of trans‐spinal direct current stimulation (ts DCS ) on spontaneous and cortically evoked activity of well‐isolated single units of gamma and alpha motor neurons in mice. We also investigated the effects of ts DCS on reflexive and locomotor actions. In general, motor neurons showed increased responses to cathodal ts DCS (c‐ts DCS ) and decreased responses to anodal ts DCS (a‐ts DCS ). These effects were observed for cortically evoked discharges and spontaneous firing rates of gamma motor neurons, cortically evoked discharges of larger alpha motor neurons, and spontaneous firing rates of smaller alpha motor neurons. An exception was that spontaneous firing rates of larger alpha motor neurons showed the opposite pattern of reduction by c‐ts DCS and increase by a‐ts DCS . Reflexive and voluntary behavior were also increased by c‐ts DCS and reduced by a‐ts DCS . Specifically, the amplitude and duration of crossed and tail pinch reflexes in decerebrate animals and the quality of ground and treadmill walking patterns in healthy awake animals showed this pattern. These polarity‐specific changes in behavior could be attributed to polarity‐mediated modulation of alpha and gamma motor neuron activity and spinal circuitry. The results reveal an important principle: effects of ts DCS on spinal motor neurons depend on current polarity and cell size.

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