Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 1, 1052-1066, Copyright © 1981 by Society for Neuroscience
Relation between cell size and response characteristics of vestibulospinal neurons to labyrinth and neck inputs
R Boyle and O Pompeiano
(1) The activity of 136 Deiters' neurons projecting to lumbosacral segments
of the spinal cord has been recorded in decerebrate, partially
cerebellectomized cats, and their response characteristics to sinusoidal
stimulation of labyrinth and neck receptors have been related to cell size
inferred from the conduction velocity of the corresponding axons. (2)
Vestibulospinal neurons with faster conduction velocity and, by inference,
having thicker axons and larger cell bodies differed from those neurons
having lower axonal conduction velocity by displaying (i) a relatively
irregular interspike interval distribution; (ii) a lower resting discharge
rate; (iii) a periodically modulated response to the labyrinth input
elicited by sinusoidal tilt around the animal's longitudinal axis (0.026
Hz, 10 degrees) characterized by an increase in firing rate during
side-down roll tilt; (iv) an increase in gain (impulses per sec per degree)
and phase lag relative to the displacement of the labyrinth response to
increasing angular acceleration; (v) a greater gain in labyrinth than neck
input, the latter elicited by sinusoidal neck rotation (0.026 Hz, 5 or 10
degrees); and (vi) due to the imbalance of the gains of the separate
labyrinth and neck responses and their predictable vectorial summation, a
response to both inputs elicited by head rotation resembling that obtained
by labyrinth stimulation alone. (3) These findings are discussed in terms
of the reciprocal distribution of synaptic contacts of vestibular and neck
afferents on vestibulospinal neurons as a function of cell size. The
evidence indicates that, in addition to intrinsic neuronal properties
related to cell size, the quantitative and qualitative organization of
synaptic inputs represents the critical factor controlling the
responsiveness of vestibulospinal neurons.