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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 1998, 18(1):467-479
Reconstruction of Flexor/Extensor Alternation during Fictive
Rostral Scratching by Two-Site Stimulation in the Spinal Turtle with a
Transverse Spinal Hemisection
Paul S. G.
Stein1,
Margaret L.
McCullough1, and
Scott N.
Currie2
1 Department of Biology, Washington University, St.
Louis, Missouri 63130, and 2 Department of Neuroscience,
University of California Riverside, Riverside, California 92521
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ABSTRACT |
Analyses of fictive scratching motor patterns in the spinal turtle
with transverse hemisection provided support for the concept of
bilateral shared spinal cord circuitry among neurons responsible for
generating left- and right-side rostral, pocket, and caudal fictive
scratching. Rhythmic bursts of hip flexor activity, the hip extensor
deletion variation of fictive rostral scratching, were elicited by
ipsilateral stimulation in the rostral scratch receptive field of a
spinal turtle [transection at the segmental border between the second
(D2) and third (D3) postcervical spinal segments] with a contralateral
transverse hemisection one segment anterior to the hindlimb enlargement
(at the D6-D7 segmental border). In addition, other sites were
stimulated in this preparation: (1) contralateral sites in a rostral,
pocket, or caudal scratch receptive field or (2) ipsilateral sites in a
caudal scratch receptive field. A reconstructed fictive rostral scratch
motor pattern of rhythmic alternation between hip flexor and hip
extensor activation was produced by simultaneous stimulation of one
site in the ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive field and another
site in one of the other scratch receptive fields. This reconstructed
rostral scratch motor pattern resembled the normal rostral scratch
motor pattern produced by one-site rostral scratch stimulation of a
spinal turtle (D2-D3 transection) with no additional transections. The
observation of a reconstructed rostral scratch motor pattern produced
by two-site stimulation in the spinal turtle with transverse
hemisection supports the concept that hip extensor circuitry activated
by stimulation of other scratch receptive fields is shared with
circuitry activated by ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive field
stimulation.
Key words:
spinal cord; scratch reflex; half-center; central pattern
generator; turtle; reciprocal inhibition; fictive motor patterns
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INTRODUCTION |
Rhythmic alternation between
agonist and antagonist motor activity occurs during many rhythmic motor
behaviors (Stein and Smith, 1997 ). Some half-center models of circuitry
responsible for such rhythmic alternation postulate that rhythmogenesis
is dependent on reciprocal inhibitory connections between agonist and
antagonist half-centers (Brown, 1911 , 1914 ; Jankowska et al., 1967 ;
Lundberg, 1981 ; Calabrese and Feldman, 1997 ). In contrast, certain
modular models (Grillner, 1981 ; Jordan, 1991 ; Stein et al., 1995b )
postulate that some modules may be rhythmogenic in the absence of
activity of antagonist modules; these models also propose reciprocal
inhibitory pathways that assist in pattern formation and provide
additional mechanisms for rhythmogenesis.
Rhythmic alternation between activation of hip flexor and hip extensor
motoneurons occurs during most episodes of fictive rostral scratching
in the spinal turtle with complete transection of the spinal cord just
posterior to the forelimb enlargement, at the segmental border between
the second (D2) and third (D3) postcervical spinal segments (Robertson
et al., 1985 ; Robertson and Stein, 1988 ); such alternation is a
characteristic of "normal" rostral scratching. A spontaneous
variation termed a "hip extensor deletion" occurs occasionally.
During hip extensor deletion rostral scratching, successive bursts of
hip flexor activation occur with no intervening hip extensor activity
and no hip flexor quiescence (Robertson and Stein, 1988 ). Stein et al.
(1995b) demonstrated that hip extensor deletion rostral scratching
occurs most of the time in a hemi-enlargement preparation, a spinal
turtle with the additional removal of the contralateral halves of the
segments of the hindlimb enlargement.
In the present paper, we use a turtle with an intact hindlimb
enlargement. We demonstrate that a spinal turtle with a contralateral transverse hemisection at the D6-D7 segmental border (one segment anterior to the hindlimb enlargement) also generates rhythmic bursts of
hip flexor activity, hip extensor deletion rostral scratching, in
response to stimulation of a single site in the ipsilateral rostral
scratch receptive field. In previous work (Currie and Stein, 1989 ;
Berkowitz and Stein, 1994a ; Stein et al., 1995b ; Field and Stein,
1997a ), rhythmic hip extensor activity could be elicited by stimulation
in contralateral scratch receptive fields (rostral, pocket, and caudal)
as well as in the ipsilateral caudal scratch receptive field. In our
experiments with the contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation, we
used two-site stimulation paradigms to reconstruct normal patterns of
rostral scratching with rhythmic alternation between hip flexor and hip
extensor activity. We demonstrate reconstruction in response to
simultaneous stimulation of two sites: (1) stimulation of a site in an
ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive field that activates hip flexor
rhythmic activity and (2) stimulation of one of the sites described
above in a different scratch receptive field. These reconstructions
provide support for the concept of shared neuronal circuitry among the
motor pattern generators for several forms of left- and right-side
scratching.
Parts of this paper have been published previously in an abstract
(Stein et al., 1997 ). Successful reconstruction in the hemi-enlargement preparation with bilateral stimulation of symmetric sites in the left
and the right rostral scratch receptive fields was also reported previously in an abstract (Stein et al., 1995a ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Surgical preparation. Red-eared turtles
(n = 12; Kons Scientific, Germantown, WI, and Charles
D. Sullivan Company, Nashville, TN), Trachemys scripta
elegans (formerly Pseudemys scripta elegans), weighing
450-650 gm, were placed on crushed ice at least 1 hr before surgery to
induce hypothermic analgesia (Melby and Altman, 1974 ). Each turtle was
then spinalized just caudal to the forelimb enlargement by complete
spinal transection midway between the D2 and the D3 dorsal roots. A
preparation with a D2-D3 complete transection and no other spinal
transection was termed the "D3-end" preparation. After spinal
transection, the cord was covered with Gelfoam surgical sponges
(Upjohn, Kalamazoo, MI) soaked in turtle saline (Stein and Schild,
1989 ), and the opening was sealed with a wax plug that was glued to the
shell.
The spinal cord was further exposed from the D6 segment to the D8
segment so that the dorsal roots of segments D6, D7, and D8 could be
clearly visualized (Mortin and Stein, 1990 ). This exposed cord was
covered with Gelfoam surgical sponges soaked in turtle physiological
saline. The hip flexor nerves, at least one of two knee extensor
nerves, and the hip extensor nerves were dissected free for recordings
of electroneurograms (ENGs) on both the left and the right sides
(n = 11 of 12) (see Fig.
1A; for a description
of these nerves, see Robertson et al., 1985 ). In one turtle, only the
nerves on the right side were dissected. The nerves dissected were the
hip flexor nerve VP-HP that innervates the puboischiofemoralis
internus, pars anteroventralis muscle; the knee extensor nerve FT-KE
that innervates the monoarticular triceps femoris, pars femorotibialis
muscle; the knee extensor nerve AM-KE that innervates the biarticular
triceps femoris, pars ambiens muscle; and the hip extensor nerve HR-KF
that innervates the flexor cruris, pars flexor tibialis internus muscle
and several other muscles that extend the hip and flex the knee. The
turtle remained on crushed ice throughout all of the above surgical
procedures.

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Figure 1.
Illustration of the D6-D7 transverse hemisection
preparation and the transverse hemisection lesion. A,
Illustration of a left D6-D7 hemisection preparation. The spinal cord
was completely transected at the D2-D3 segmental border just posterior
to the forelimb enlargement. In addition, the left half of the spinal cord was transected at the D6-D7 segmental border, one segment anterior to the hindlimb enlargement. Bilateral recordings were obtained from hip flexor (VP-HP), hip extensor
(HR-KF), and knee extensor (AM-KE
and/or FT-KE) nerves. This sketch illustrates a
stimulation paradigm used in some experiments: mechanical stimulation (MECH SHELL STIM) applied to a site in the left
rostral scratch receptive field and/or to a site in the right rostral
scratch receptive field. Other experiments used stimulation of a site in the rostral scratch receptive field contralateral to the hemisection and/or stimulation of a site in a scratch receptive field (pocket scratch or caudal scratch) posterior to the hemisection.
B, Camera-lucida outline of a representative
cross-section of the spinal cord at the level of the left-side
hemisection at the border of the D6 and D7 segments. Gray
shading indicates the extent of the lesion. DF,
Dorsal funiculus; LF, lateral funiculus;
VF, ventral funiculus; DH, dorsal horn;
VH, ventral horn.
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After the above procedures were completed, the turtle was removed from
the crushed ice, allowed to warm up to room temperature, and
immobilized with gallamine (Flaxedil; American Cyanamid, Pearl River,
NY, and Rhone-Poulenc Rorer Canada, Montreal, Canada), a neuromuscular
blocking agent, at a dosage of 6-8 mg/kg body weight. Dental wax
(Modern Materials Red Utility Wax Strips; Miles, Elkhart, IN) was
molded into wells to surround each of the surgically exposed regions;
the wells were glued to the shell with Permabond 910 adhesive
(Permabond; Englewood, NJ). Each peripheral-nerve well was filled with
mineral oil. The well around the D6-D8 spinal cord exposure was filled
with saline. The trachea was intubated, and the turtle was maintained
on artificial respiration for the remainder of the experiment.
After control recordings with stimulation in the left and the right
rostral, pocket, and caudal scratch receptive fields were completed in
the D3-end preparation, the spinal cord was hemisected transversely at
the border of the D6 and the D7 spinal cord segments (Fig.
1A). The transverse hemisection was performed on the
left side in six preparations and on the right side in six
preparations. In the turtle with only right nerve recordings, the
transverse hemisection was performed on the left side. Preparations
with a complete transection at the D2-D3 border and a transverse
hemisection at the D6-D7 border were termed "D6-D7
hemisection" preparations (Fig. 1A). The procedure
for the D6-D7 hemisection began with removal of the Gelfoam over
the D6 and D7 segments, followed by removal with fine forceps of dorsal
portions of the spinal meninges in the vicinity of the D6-D7 border.
The central line at the dorsal midline of the spinal cord was clearly
visible. This line was used as a guide to insert fine forceps with
points held together at the dorsal midline at the D6-D7 border. The
forceps were moved ventrally until their tips contacted the floor of
the spinal canal. The points of the forceps were allowed to spread
apart, thus separating the left and the right halves of the spinal
cord. The separation was extended over a length of 1-2 mm. Fine
surgical scissors were inserted at the anterior border of the
separation and used to transect either the left half or the right half
of the spinal cord. These scissors were used to make a second
transverse hemisection ~0.5 mm posterior to the first hemisection.
The spinal hemicord between the two transverse hemisections was
removed. We verified the complete transverse hemisection in
situ by visualizing the cross-sections of the gray and the white
matter at the cut face of the hemisected spinal cord. The exposed
spinal cord was covered with turtle physiological saline. Physiological
recordings were obtained after a recovery period of 0.5-1 hr.
Recordings. ENGs from each nerve were obtained using a pair
of silver wire electrodes 100 µm in diameter that were immersed in
the mineral oil pool. The ENGs were amplified, filtered (100-1000 Hz
bandpass), and stored on digital audio tape (DC-5 kHz bandpass) for
later analyses and hard-copy printouts. In some turtles, both the AM-KE
and FT-KE knee extensor nerves were recorded; in other turtles, only
one of these nerves was recorded on a given side. All of the recordings
labeled knee extensor in the figures of this paper (see Figs. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7)
were AM-KE nerve ENGs.
Stimulation. Fictive scratch motor patterns were elicited by
stimulation of specific sites in the left and the right rostral, pocket, and caudal scratch receptive fields (for a detailed description of scratch receptive field stimulation sites and dermatomes, see Mortin
and Stein, 1990 ). All of the scratch motor patterns in the present
study were "fictive," that is, they were obtained in the
immobilized preparation in the absence of movement; when "scratching" is described in the remainder of this paper, it refers to fictive scratching. We allowed at least a 3 min recovery between stimulus presentations. In most cases, mechanical stimulation with the
smooth, fire-polished end of a glass rod was used to activate fictive
scratching. Force was measured with a Grass FT-03 force transducer
(Astromed, West Warwick, RI) attached to the glass rod; forces from
0.2-1.0 N were used. In a few cases, a pair of pins was inserted into
specific regions of the shell; electrical pulses (2-10 V, 1 msec)
delivered via the pins were used to activate the peripheral processes
of cutaneous afferents (Currie and Stein, 1990 ; Stein et al.,
1995b ).
Cutaneous afferents from rostral scratch receptive fields enter the
spinal cord via the D3-D6 dorsal roots. In this study we focused on
rostral scratch receptive field stimulation sites SP1.5-SP3.0 and
M7.5; afferents from these sites enter the spinal cord via the D3-D5
dorsal roots (Mortin and Stein, 1990 ). Cutaneous afferents that enter
the spinal cord via the D7 and the more posterior dorsal roots include
afferents from the pocket and caudal scratch receptive fields (Mortin
and Stein, 1990 ). Also posterior to the D6-D7 border are the somata of
all hindlimb motor neurons, located in segments D8-D10 and S1-S2 of
the hindlimb enlargement (Ruigrok and Crowe, 1984 ).
Spinal cord morphology of the transverse D6-D7 hemisection.
After all physiological recordings were completed, the remaining portions of the D6-D8 spinal cord were removed for microscopic examination to verify that half of the spinal cord had been completely transected in the earlier surgical procedure. An additional transverse transection was made with fine surgical scissors at the level of the
hemisection. In this freshly transected tissue, the boundaries of the
gray matter and the white matter in the transverse section could be
discerned easily. Using this procedure, we verified that, in all 12 preparations, half of the spinal cord had been totally transected in
the earlier surgical procedure at the site of the D6-D7 transverse
hemisection. In some of these preparations, a small portion of the
remaining dorsal funiculus was also transected. We used a camera lucida
to outline the extent of the transection. Figure 1B
illustrates a lesion that was typical of the D6-D7 transverse hemisection.
Analyses of rostral scratching motor patterns. We analyzed
unilateral rostral scratch motor patterns in response to one-site stimulation of a site in an ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive field. We also analyzed unilateral rostral scratch motor patterns in
response to two-site stimulation, one site in an ipsilateral rostral
scratch receptive field and the other site in another scratch receptive
field (contralateral rostral, pocket, or caudal or ipsilateral caudal).
We analyzed cycles that displayed the characteristic rostral scratch
motor pattern with knee extensor (AM-KE or FT-KE) activation during the
latter portion of hip flexor activation. For some stimulus conditions
(e.g., ipsilateral rostral scratch stimulation combined with either
ipsilateral or contralateral caudal scratch stimulation), some cycles
displayed the rostral form, whereas other cycles displayed a different
form (e.g., caudal); only those cycles with the characteristic rostral
timing of knee extensor activation were analyzed (Stein et al.,
1986 ).
We recognized four distinct rostral scratching motor patterns. The
first was the normal pattern of rostral scratching with hip flexor
activation that alternated with hip flexor quiescence; hip extensor
activation occurred during hip flexor quiescence (e.g., see Fig.
2B,C,F, the right
nerves). The second was the hip extensor deletion variation of rostral
scratching with a burst of hip flexor activation followed immediately
by another burst of hip flexor activation; there was no hip extensor
activation and no hip flexor quiescence (e.g., see Fig. 2G,
the right nerves). The third was the hip extensor omission variation of
rostral scratching with hip flexor activation that alternated with hip
flexor quiescence; there was no hip extensor activation (e.g., see Fig.
7B, the hip flexor quiescence marked with a
triangle). The fourth was a variation of rostral scratching
in which a burst of hip flexor activation was followed immediately by
another burst of hip flexor activation. There was no hip flexor
quiescence; hip extensor activation occurred during low-amplitude hip
flexor activation (e.g., see Fig. 3D, the hip extensor burst
marked with a triangle). The first three categories were
described previously (see Robertson et al., 1985 ; also Robertson and
Stein, 1988 ; Stein et al., 1995b ). The last category was not described
previously; it was observed in only a very low percentage of cases.
We selected for quantitative analyses those episodes with at least four
cycles of rostral scratching. We scored each rostral scratch cycle as
one of the above four categories. If the episode had five or more
cycles, we scored the first five cycles; if the episode had four
cycles, we scored all four cycles. For each episode, we calculated the
percentage of cycles that expressed a given motor pattern. We performed
the nonparametric ranked-order Mann-Whitney U test (Siegel,
1956 ) on data from sites with three or more episodes of four or more
cycles of rostral scratching in each condition of a pair. For each site
with sufficient data in each turtle, we used the Mann-Whitney
U test to compare the percentage of normal rostral cycles
per episode in response to one-site ipsilateral rostral stimulation in
the D3-end preparation with the corresponding percentage in the
contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation. For each pair of sites
with sufficient data in each turtle, we also used the Mann-Whitney
U test to compare the percentage of normal rostral cycles
per episode in response to one-site ipsilateral rostral stimulation in
the contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation with the corresponding
percentage in response to two-site stimulation (with one of these sites
in the ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive field) in the same
preparation. In addition to these statistical analyses, we also
calculated the mean of the percentages of specific rostral scratch
patterns in each type of preparation; these were calculated by
combining the results from several sites in the same type of receptive
field in all the turtles in the study.
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RESULTS |
One-site stimulation in the rostral scratch receptive field in the
D3-end preparation
Normal pattern of rostral scratching with rhythmic ipsilateral
flexor and extensor alternation
Rhythmic alternation between ipsilateral hip flexor and
ipsilateral hip extensor activity was produced in response to
stimulation of a site in the rostral scratch receptive field (Fig.
2A, left nerve
responses to left stimulation; 2C, right nerve responses to
right stimulation; see also Robertson et al., 1985 ; Stein et al.,
1995b ) in a spinal turtle with a complete transection of the spinal
cord just posterior to the forelimb enlargement at the border of the D2
and D3 spinal segments, the D3-end preparation (Fig.
2D). In motor nerves ipsilateral to the stimulus
site, hip flexor activation alternated with hip flexor quiescence; hip
extensor activation coincided with hip flexor quiescence; and knee
extensor activation occurred during the latter portion of hip flexor
activation. This pattern of activation is the normal rostral scratch
motor pattern, and it occurred in all 12 turtles of this study. The average percentage of normal rostral cycles in each episode was 84.1%
(197 episodes in 12 turtles; see also Mortin and Stein, 1989 ; Stein et
al., 1995b ).

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Figure 2.
Bilateral recordings of fictive rostral scratching
ENGs in response to mechanical stimulation of SP3 in the rostral
scratch receptive field on the left side (A,
E), simultaneously on both sides (B,
F), and on the right side (C,
G). In each example, ENGs on both the left and the right
sides for knee extensor (AM-KE), hip flexor (VP-HP), and hip extensor
(HR-KF) are shown. D, Sketch of the spinal cord in the
D3-end preparation. Recordings shown in A-C were
obtained in the D3-end preparation. Note the normal pattern of rostral
scratching in the left nerves in A and B
and in the right nerves in B and C.
H, Sketch of the left D6-D7 hemisection (arrow) preparation. Recordings shown in
E-G were obtained in the left D6-D7 hemisection
preparation. Note the hip extensor deletion variation of rostral
scratching in the right nerves in G and the
reconstruction of the normal pattern of rostral scratching in the right
nerves in F. STIM, Stimulation.
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Variations of the normal pattern of rostral scratching with
rhythmic ipsilateral hip flexor activity
Three variations of the rostral scratching pattern in motor nerves
ipsilateral to the stimulated site occurred a low percentage of the
time in the D3-end preparation (for definitions of each, see Analyses
of rostral scratching motor patterns in Materials and Methods; see also
Robertson et al., 1985 ; Robertson and Stein, 1988 ; Mortin and Stein,
1989 ; Stein et al., 1995b ). In the present study, the average
percentage of cycles in an episode that showed hip extensor deletions
in the D3-end preparation was 10.3%, and the corresponding percentage
for hip extensor omissions was 4.5%; the corresponding percentage for
the variation in which hip extensor activation occurred during
low-amplitude hip flexor activation was 1.1% (197 episodes in 12 turtles).
Stimulation in the rostral scratch receptive field also activated
contralateral motor output
There was also rhythmic contralateral hip flexor and contralateral
hip extensor activity in response to stimulation in the rostral scratch
receptive field (Fig. 2A, right nerve responses to
left stimulation; 2C, left nerve responses to right
stimulation; see also Berkowitz and Stein, 1994a ; Stein et al., 1995b ;
Currie and Lee, 1997 ). All 12 turtles in this study showed
contralateral hip motor neuron activity in response to stimulation of a
site in the rostral scratch receptive field in the D3-end preparation. In the 11 turtles of this study with bilateral recordings, activation of left hip motor nerves alternated with activation of their mirror image right hip motor nerves (see also Stein et al., 1995b ; Currie and
Lee, 1997 ).
Two-site stimulation, one site in the left and the other site in
the right rostral scratch receptive field, in the D3-end
preparation
Bilateral rostral scratching with rhythmic flexor and
extensor alternation
Simultaneous two-site stimulation, one site in the left and its
mirror image site in the right rostral scratch receptive field, in the
D3-end preparation elicited bilateral rostral scratching in eight of
nine turtles tested (Fig. 2B; see also Stein et al., 1995b , their Fig. 2B; Currie and Lee, 1997 ).
Activation of left motor nerves alternated with activation of their
mirror image motor nerves on the right side in these eight turtles (see
also Stein et al., 1995b , their Fig. 4).
One-site stimulation in the rostral scratch receptive field in the
D6-D7 transverse hemisection preparation
After scratch responses were obtained in the D3-end preparation,
a transverse hemisection was performed at the border of the D6 and D7
segments, forming the D6-D7 hemisection preparation with both a D2-D3
transection and a D6-D7 transverse hemisection (Fig.
1A). In six preparations, the hemisection was
performed on the left side (e.g., see Figs. 2H,
5A, 6A, 7A); in six other preparations, the hemisection was performed on the right side (e.g.,
see Figs. 3A, 4A).
Lesion-side motor output in response to lesion-side one-site
rostral scratch stimulation
In all 11 turtles in this study with bilateral recordings,
stimulation of a lesion-side site in the rostral scratch receptive field ipsilateral and anterior to the D6-D7 hemisection evoked very
weak or no motor output in lesion-side motor nerves posterior to the
level of the hemisection. The left nerve response to left rostral
scratch stimulation in a left D6-D7 transverse hemisection preparation
(Fig. 2H) is shown in Figure 2E.
There was no activity in left hindlimb motor nerves. This lack of
response in lesion-side nerves in response to lesion-side rostral
scratch stimulation occurred in 3 of 11 turtles in this study. In 8 of
11 turtles, there was very weak motor output with no rhythmicity in
lesion-side hindlimb nerves in response to lesion-side one-site rostral
scratch stimulation. Thus, it is likely that descending spinal cord
pathways ipsilateral to the rostral scratch stimulation site play a key role in the activation of rostral scratching rhythms in ipsilateral hindlimb motor nerves. For a caution about this conclusion, see the
discussion of the Sprague effect by Berkowitz (1996) .
Intact-side motor output in response to lesion-side one-site
rostral scratch stimulation
There was weak rhythmic activity in right hindlimb motor nerves in
response to left rostral scratch receptive field stimulation in the
preparation with a left D6-D7 hemisection (Fig. 2E).
This type of response in intact-side nerves in response to lesion-side rostral scratch stimulation was seen in 5 of 11 turtles; no response was seen in 5 of 11 turtles. In 1 of 11 turtles, there was robust rhythmic motor output in the intact-side hip extensor motor nerve in
response to lesion-side rostral scratch receptive field stimulation. This robust response was similar to the response reported in three of
seven turtles by Stein et al. (1995b , their Fig. 8) in their study of
rostral scratching in a hemi-enlargement preparation. Thus, spinal cord
pathways that cross the midline in segments anterior to the hemisection
activated intact-side hindlimb motor output in some, but not all,
preparations.
Lesion-side motor output in response to intact-side one-site
rostral scratch stimulation
After a left D6-D7 hemisection, stimulation of sites in the right
rostral scratch receptive field elicited little or no motor output in
left hindlimb nerves (Fig. 2G). This type of response in
lesion-side nerves in response to intact-side one-site rostral scratch
receptive field stimulation was typical of 9 of 11 turtles in this
study. In 2 of 11 turtles, there was robust rhythmic activation of
lesion-side hip extensor motor nerves in response to stimulation of the
intact-side rostral scratch site. Thus, spinal cord pathways that cross
the midline in segments posterior to the hemisection activated
lesion-side hindlimb motor output in some, but not all, preparations.
Intact-side motor output in response to intact-side one-site
rostral scratch stimulation
After a left D6-D7 hemisection, stimulation of sites in the right
rostral scratch receptive field elicited mainly right hip flexor
rhythmic activity with no activation of right hip extensors (Fig.
2G). The right knee extensor was active during the latter portion of each right hip flexor burst. This motor pattern was the hip
extensor deletion variation of rostral scratching. In all 12 turtles of
this study with D6-D7 hemisection, this variation was observed in
intact-side nerves in response to intact-side one-site rostral scratch
receptive field stimulation. The average percentage of cycles in each
episode that showed hip extensor deletions was 70.2% (336 episodes in
12 turtles). Some of the responses were hip extensor omissions; the
average percentage of cycles in each episode that showed hip extensor
omissions was 17.1%. The corresponding percentage for the variation in
which hip extensor activity occurred during low-amplitude hip flexor activation was 0.3%. Other responses displayed the normal rostral scratching motor pattern of rhythmic alternation between hip flexors and hip extensors; the average percentage of cycles in each episode that showed normal rostral scratching was 12.5%.
The Mann-Whitney U test was used with the percentage data
from individual episodes to compare the percentage of cycles in each
episode that showed intact-side normal rostral scratching in the D6-D7
hemisection preparation in response to intact-side one-site rostral
scratch stimulation with comparable data in response to one-site
stimulation in the D3-end preparation for the same stimulation site in
the same turtle. The percentage of normal rostral scratching in the
D6-D7 hemisection preparation was significantly lower
(p < 0.05) than was the corresponding
percentage in the D3-end preparation for 33 of the 35 stimulation
sites in 12 turtles.
Therefore, in the preparation with a D6-D7 hemisection, the loss of
lesion-side descending pathways from midbody segments the dermatomes of
which comprise the rostral scratch receptive field resulted in a change
in the intact-side rostral scratching motor pattern in response to
stimulation in the intact-side rostral scratch receptive field from a
pattern of mostly rhythmic alternation between hip flexor and hip
extensor activity to a pattern of mostly hip flexor rhythmic activity
with no hip extensor activity. This implies that during
one-site stimulation in the rostral scratch receptive field:
(1) ipsilateral descending pathways are sufficient for
the production of ipsilateral hip flexor rhythms during variations of
rostral scratching, and (2) contralateral descending pathways are not
necessary for the production of ipsilateral rostral scratching hip
flexor rhythms.
Two-site stimulation, one site in the left and the other site in
the right rostral scratch receptive field, in the D6-D7 hemisection
preparation
Simultaneous stimulation of the left and the right rostral scratch
receptive fields activated reconstructed rostral scratching with
rhythmic flexor and extensor alternation
Simultaneous stimulation of one site in the left and its mirror
image site in the right rostral scratch receptive field, in the left
D6-D7 hemisection preparation, elicited cycles of normal rostral
scratching with rhythmic right hip flexor and extensor alternation
(Fig. 2F). The right knee extensor was activated
during the latter portion of each right hip flexor burst. We use the term "reconstructed" to describe normal rostral scratching
responses to two-site stimulation in the contralateral D6-D7
hemisection preparation (Fig. 2F, right nerves)
because one-site stimulation in this preparation usually activated only
hip flexor rhythms during rostral scratching (Fig. 2G, right
nerves).
We performed simultaneous bilateral (one site and its mirror image)
rostral stimulation in the D6-D7 hemisection preparation in all 12 turtles of this study. We analyzed intact-side motor output. In
response to bilateral rostral stimulation in this preparation, the
average percentage of cycles in each episode that displayed normal
rostral scratching was 59.6% (118 episodes in 12 turtles). In these
episodes, the average percentage of cycles that displayed hip extensor
deletion rostral scratching was 23.1%; the corresponding percentage
for hip extensor omission rostral scratching was 15.1%. The
corresponding percentage for the variation in which hip extensor activity occurred during low-amplitude hip flexor activation was 2.2%.
The Mann-Whitney U test was used on the percentage data
from individual episodes to compare, in each D6-D7 hemisection
preparation, the percentage of cycles in each episode that showed
intact-side normal rostral scratching in response to bilateral rostral
stimulation with similar data, in the same D6-D7 hemisection
preparation, in response to intact-side one-site rostral stimulation
for the same stimulation site. In 8 of 12 turtles, there was sufficient data (three episodes with at least four cycles each) to use the Mann-Whitney U Test for at least one set of sites in each
turtle. For 10 of 17 stimulation sites tested, the percentage of normal rostral scratching in response to bilateral rostral scratch stimulation in the contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation was significantly higher (p < 0.05) than was the corresponding
percentage in response to ipsilateral rostral scratch stimulation in
the same preparation.
These observations provide additional support for the hypothesis that,
in the contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation, stimulation in the
contralateral rostral scratch receptive field activated ipsilateral hip
extensor interneuronal circuitry that was part of the circuitry for
generating ipsilateral rostral scratching, i.e., these interneuronal
circuits were "shared" for both left- and right-side rostral
scratching. Previous evidence in support of this hypothesis has been
presented elsewhere (Berkowitz and Stein, 1994a ,b ; Stein et al.,
1995a ,b ; Currie, 1997 ; Currie and Lee, 1997 ; Field and Stein,
1997a ,b ).
Other stimulation regimens
The major experimental focus in this study of bilateral
stimulation of left and right rostral scratch receptive fields in the
D6-D7 hemisection preparation was simultaneous stimulation that
demonstrated reconstructed intact-side rostral scratching. In two
turtles, we had the opportunity to explore other stimulation paradigms
that revealed the time course of reconstruction. Previous work had
demonstrated multisecond excitability changes in scratch motor
circuitry (Currie and Stein, 1988 , 1990 ; Currie and Lee, 1996 ). In the
present study, we examined multisecond changes in the excitability of
hip extensor circuitry during reconstruction in preparations with
contralateral D6-D7 hemisection. We used two stimulation regimens,
brief contralateral stimulation during long maintained ipsilateral
stimulation and contralateral stimulation followed by ipsilateral
stimulation. Both regimens were successful in generating reconstruction
with a multisecond decrement in excitability of hip extensor
circuitry.
Brief contralateral stimulation during long maintained
ipsilateral stimulation. In one turtle with a right D6-D7
hemisection (Fig. 3A), we used
a brief train of electrical pulses to activate a site in the right
rostral scratch receptive field. When presented alone, this stimulus
either produced no left motor output (three of four episodes; Fig.
3C) or a brief burst of left hip extensor activity (one of
four episodes). When maintained mechanical stimulation of the left
rostral scratch receptive field was delivered, this preparation
responded with mostly rhythmic bursts of left hip flexor activity, the
hip extensor deletion variation of rostral scratching (Fig.
3B). When the brief right-side stimulation was presented
during maintained mechanical stimulation of the left rostral scratch
receptive field, at least one cycle of normal rostral scratching was
observed with left hip extensor activity and left hip flexor quiescence
in between successive bursts of left hip flexor activity (11 of 12 episodes; Fig. 3D). In six of these episodes, several cycles
of left hip extensor bursts were produced; in each of these episodes,
there was a gradual decline in the amplitude of the successive left hip
extensor bursts and in the duration of successive periods of left hip
flexor quiescence (Fig. 3D).

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Figure 3.
Recordings of left-side ENGs in response to
mechanical stimulation of SP2.3 in the left rostral scratch receptive
field (B, D) and to electrical
stimulation of SP3 in the right rostral scratch receptive field
(C, D) in a D6-D7 hemisection
preparation with a transection on the right side. A, A
sketch illustrating the hemisection (arrow) is shown.
B, Maintained mechanical stimulation in the left rostral
scratch receptive field evoked rhythmic hip flexor bursts, the hip
extensor deletion variation of rostral scratching. C,
Brief electrical stimulation [six pulses with a 100 msec interpulse
interval (arrow)] in the right rostral scratch receptive field evoked no left motor output. D, Right
electrical stimulation [six pulses with a 100 msec interpulse interval
(arrow)] applied during maintained left mechanical
stimulation evoked three hip extensor bursts. The first two hip
extensor bursts occurred during periods of hip flexor quiescence; these
two cycles are examples of reconstruction of the normal pattern of
rostral scratching. The third hip extensor burst
(triangle) is an example of a variation of rostral
scratching in which hip extensor activation occurred during low-level
hip flexor activity. Note that each successive hip extensor burst was
of lower amplitude than the previous hip extensor burst. MECH
STIM, Mechanical stimulation; ELEC STIM, electrical stimulation.
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We measured the latency of the onset of the last hip extensor burst
from the offset of the right-side electrical stimulation for 9 of 12 episodes in which the last hip extensor burst began after stimulus
offset. These latencies varied from 1.8 to 12.2 sec. These observations
are consistent with the hypothesis that there was a multisecond
afterexcitability in the activation of the left-side hip extensor
circuitry by the right-side stimulation.
The cycle that included the last hip extensor burst (Fig.
3D, triangle) was an example of the variation of
rostral scratching in which there was no hip flexor quiescence and in
which hip extensor activity was coactive with low-level hip flexor
activity (see Analyses of rostral scratching motor patterns in
Materials and Methods).
Contralateral stimulation that preceded ipsilateral
stimulation. In another turtle with a right D6-D7 hemisection
(Fig. 4A), we used ~5
sec of maintained mechanical stimulation in the right rostral scratch
receptive field followed by ~10 sec of maintained stimulation in the
left rostral scratch receptive field to demonstrate reconstructed
rostral scratching in left hindlimb nerves. In 8 of 11 episodes, the
onset of left stimulation followed the offset of right stimulation by
0.0-5.4 sec; in the remaining three episodes, the onset of left
stimulation preceded the offset of right stimulation by 0.1-0.3 sec.
Right stimulation alone in this turtle activated repetitive firing of
only a single motoneuron in the left hip extensor nerve (see left hip
extensor response to right stimulation in Fig. 4C). Left
rostral scratch receptive field stimulation alone in this turtle
activated only rhythmic left hip flexor activity (Fig.
4B). When the offset of right-side stimulation
preceded the onset of left-side stimulation by 5.4 sec or less, the
preparation responded near the onset of left-side stimulation with at
least one reconstructed cycle of normal rostral scratching with
rhythmic alternation between left hip flexor and left hip extensor
activity (11 of 11 episodes; Fig. 4C). In 4 of 11 episodes,
two cycles of left hip extensor bursts were produced; in each of these
episodes, both the amplitude of the second left hip extensor burst and
the duration of the second left hip flexor quiescence were less than that of the first (Fig. 4C). In two other episodes, the
onset of left stimulation followed the offset of right stimulation by 9.8 and 10.0 sec; no hip extensor activity was observed during left
stimulation in these episodes.

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Figure 4.
Recordings of left-side ENGs in response to
mechanical stimulation of SP3 in the left rostral scratch receptive
field (B, C) and of SP3 in the right
rostral scratch receptive field (C) in a D6-D7
hemisection preparation with a transection on the right side.
A, A sketch illustrating the hemisection
(arrow) is shown. B, Mechanical
stimulation in the left rostral scratch receptive field alone evoked
rhythmic left hip flexor bursts, the hip extensor deletion variation of
rostral scratching. C, Mechanical stimulation in the
right rostral scratch receptive field followed by mechanical stimulation in the left rostral scratch receptive field evoked two left
hip extensor bursts after the onset of left rostral scratch stimulation. These two hip extensor bursts occurred during hip flexor
quiescence; these two cycles are examples of reconstruction of the
normal pattern of rostral scratching. In this episode, the onset of
right stimulation preceded the offset of left stimulation by <100
msec.
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We measured the latency of the onset of the last left hip extensor
burst from the offset of the right rostral scratch receptive field
stimulation in the 11 episodes that demonstrated reconstruction. The
latency varied from 1.1 to 7.2 sec. This provides further evidence of
multisecond afterexcitability in hip extensor circuitry activated by
stimulation of the contralateral rostral scratch receptive field.
Two-site stimulation, one site in the ipsilateral rostral and the
other site in the receptive field of another scratch form, in the
contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation activated reconstructed
rostral scratching with rhythmic ipsilateral flexor and extensor
alternation
In the previous section in a preparation with a
contralateral D6-D7 hemisection, we elicited reconstructed normal
rostral scratching with bilateral stimulation in rostral scratch
receptive fields. We combined stimulation of a site in the
contralateral rostral scratch receptive field (to activate ipsilateral
hip extensor circuitry) with stimulation of a site in the ipsilateral
rostral scratch receptive field (to activate ipsilateral hip flexor
circuitry). In this section, we describe three other strategies to
activate ipsilateral hip extensor circuitry in the contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation (Figs.
5A,
6A,
7A): (1) stimulation in the
contralateral pocket scratch receptive field (Fig. 5D;
Currie and Stein, 1989 ; Berkowitz and Stein, 1994a ), (2) stimulation in
the contralateral caudal scratch receptive field (Fig.
6D; Field and Stein, 1997a ), and (3) stimulation in
the ipsilateral caudal scratch receptive field (Fig. 7D;
Robertson et al., 1985 ; Stein et al., 1986 ). When each of these
stimulation sites was combined with stimulation in the ipsilateral
rostral scratch receptive field, reconstructed normal rostral scratch
motor patterns were elicited (Figs. 5C, 6C,
7C). For each reconstructed rostral scratch cycle, the
ipsilateral knee extensor was activated during the latter portion of
each ipsilateral hip flexor burst, as is characteristic of rostral
scratch but not of pocket or caudal scratch motor patterns.

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Figure 5.
Recordings of right-side ENGs in response to
mechanical stimulation of SP1.5 in the right rostral scratch receptive
field (B, C) and of femoral 5 in the left
pocket scratch receptive field (C, D) in
a D6-D7 hemisection preparation with a transection on the left side.
A, A sketch illustrating the hemisection
(arrow) is shown. B, Right rostral
scratch receptive field stimulation alone evoked rhythmic right hip
flexor bursts, the hip extensor deletion variation of rostral
scratching. C, Simultaneous stimulation of these sites
in the right rostral and the left pocket scratch receptive fields
evoked reconstructed normal patterns of rostral scratching in the
right-side nerves. D, Left pocket scratch receptive field stimulation alone evoked rhythmic activity in right-side nerves,
including the right hip extensor nerve.
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Figure 6.
Recordings of right-side ENGs in response to
mechanical stimulation of SP3 in the right rostral scratch receptive
field (B, C) and of anal 8 in the left
caudal scratch receptive field (C, D) in
a D6-D7 hemisection preparation with a transection on the left side.
A, A sketch illustrating the hemisection
(arrow) is shown. B, Right rostral
scratch receptive field stimulation alone evoked rhythmic right hip
flexor bursts. C, Simultaneous stimulation of these
sites in the right rostral and the left caudal scratch receptive fields
evoked reconstructed normal patterns of rostral scratching in the
right-side nerves. D, Left caudal scratch receptive field stimulation alone evoked rhythmic activity in right-side nerves,
including the right hip extensor nerve.
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Figure 7.
Recordings of right-side ENGs in response to
mechanical stimulation of SP2 in the right rostral scratch receptive
field (B, C) and of anal 5 in the right
caudal scratch receptive field (C, D) in
a D6-D7 hemisection preparation with a transection on the left side.
A, A sketch illustrating the hemisection
(arrow) is shown. B, Right rostral
scratch receptive field stimulation alone evoked rhythmic right hip
flexor bursts. The triangle indicates hip flexor
quiescence after the third hip flexor burst; this cycle is an example
of the hip extensor omission variation of rostral scratching.
C, Simultaneous stimulation of these sites in the right
rostral and the right caudal scratch receptive fields evoked reconstructed normal patterns of rostral scratching in the right-side nerves. D, Right caudal scratch receptive field
stimulation alone evoked caudal scratching with rhythmic activity in
right hip extensor and right hip flexor nerves. This is an example of a
knee-extensor deletion variation of caudal scratching (Robertson et
al., 1985 ).
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Two-site stimulation, one site in the ipsilateral rostral and the
other site in the contralateral pocket scratch receptive field, in the
contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation
Simultaneous stimulation of one site in the right rostral scratch
receptive field and another site in the left pocket scratch receptive
field, in the left D6-D7 hemisection preparation, elicited cycles of
reconstructed normal rostral scratching with rhythmic right hip flexor
and extensor alternation (Fig. 5C).
In seven turtles with contralateral D6-D7 hemisection, we used
simultaneous stimulation of a site in the contralateral pocket scratch
receptive field and a site in the ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive
field. In six of these turtles, we observed reconstructed rostral
scratch cycles. In these turtles, the average percentage of normal
rostral cycles was 70.4% (38 episodes). In five of these turtles, we
had sufficient data to apply the Mann-Whitney U test. In
all five turtles, the percentage of normal rostral scratching in
response to this regimen of two-site stimulation was significantly
higher than was the corresponding percentage obtained in response to
one-site ipsilateral rostral stimulation in this preparation
(p < 0.05 for six of seven sites).
Two-site stimulation, one site in the ipsilateral rostral and the
other site in the contralateral caudal scratch receptive field, in the
contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation
Simultaneous stimulation of one site in the right rostral scratch
receptive field and another site in the left caudal scratch receptive
field, in the left D6-D7 hemisection preparation, elicited cycles of
reconstructed normal rostral scratching with rhythmic right hip flexor
and extensor alternation (Fig. 6C).
In six turtles with contralateral D6-D7 hemisection, we used
simultaneous stimulation of a site in the contralateral caudal scratch
receptive field and a site in the ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive
field. In four of these turtles, we observed reconstructed rostral
scratch cycles. In these turtles, the average percentage of normal
rostral cycles was 56.7% (12 episodes). In two of these turtles, we
had sufficient data to apply the Mann-Whitney U test. In
both turtles, the percentage of normal rostral scratching in response
to this regimen of two-site stimulation was significantly higher than
was the corresponding percentage obtained in response to one-site
ipsilateral rostral stimulation in this preparation (p < 0.01 for two of two sites).
Two-site stimulation, one site in the ipsilateral rostral and the
other site in the ipsilateral caudal scratch receptive field, in the
contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation
Simultaneous stimulation of one site in the right rostral scratch
receptive field and another site in the right caudal scratch receptive
field, in the left D6-D7 hemisection preparation, elicited cycles of
reconstructed normal rostral scratching with rhythmic right hip flexor
and extensor alternation (Fig. 7C).
In five turtles with contralateral D6-D7 hemisection, we used
simultaneous stimulation of a site in the ipsilateral caudal scratch
receptive field and a site in the ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive
field. In three of these turtles, we observed reconstructed rostral
scratch cycles. In these turtles, the average percentage of normal
rostral cycles was 51.0% (20 episodes). In two of these turtles, we
had sufficient data to apply the Mann-Whitney U test. In
both turtles, the percentage of normal rostral scratching in response
to this regimen of two-site stimulation was significantly higher than
was the corresponding percentage obtained in response to one-site
ipsilateral rostral stimulation in this preparation (p < 0.001 for three of four sites).
An issue critical to two-site stimulation in the ipsilateral rostral
and the ipsilateral caudal scratch receptive field was first described
by Stein et al. (1986) in a spinal preparation with D2-D3 transection.
This regimen of simultaneous stimulation can elicit either pure rostral
scratching, pure caudal scratching, or blends of rostral and caudal
scratching. In the present experiments with the contralateral D6-D7
hemisection preparation, we observed these types of responses when
stimulation of a site in the ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive
field was combined with stimulation of a site in either the ipsilateral
or the contralateral caudal scratch receptive field. In the present
paper, we analyzed only those episodes that displayed the rostral
scratching motor pattern with knee extensor activity during the latter
portion of each hip flexor burst.
Two-site stimulation, one site in the ipsilateral rostral and the
other site in the scratch receptive field for another form, in the
contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation
The observations in the last three sections provide additional
support for the hypothesis that stimulation in either the contralateral pocket, the contralateral caudal, or the ipsilateral caudal scratch receptive field activated hip extensor circuitry that was also a part
of the ipsilateral circuitry for generating ipsilateral rostral
scratching. This supports the concept that some of the neural circuitry
for rostral scratching is shared with neural circuitry for pocket
scratching as well as with neural circuitry for caudal scratching.
Previous support for this concept is found in other work (Berkowitz and
Stein, 1994a ,b ; Currie, 1997 ; Currie and Lee, 1997 ; Field and Stein,
1997a ,b ).
"Bilateral shared-core" hypothesis was initially used to describe
the possible shared circuitry for left- and right-side rostral scratching (Stein et al., 1995b ). The results of the last three sections, as well as results of other work cited in the previous paragraph, support an "extended bilateral shared-core" hypothesis that describes the shared circuitry among spinal neurons activated not
only during left- and right-side rostral scratching but also during
left- and right-side pocket and caudal scratching.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Hip flexor rhythms during rostral scratching can be produced in the
absence of hip extensor activity
A major result of this paper is the demonstration that unilateral
rostral scratch stimulation generated rhythmic ipsilateral hip flexor
rhythms, the hip extensor deletion variation of rostral scratching with
no ipsilateral hip extensor activity, in the contralateral D6-D7
hemisection preparation (Fig. 2G). In the D6-D7 hemisection preparation, the hindlimb enlargement (D8-D10 and S1-S2; Ruigrok and
Crowe, 1984 ) was intact; only contralateral pre-enlargement pathways
were transected. Previous turtle preparations that generated a high
percentage of hip extensor deletion rostral scratching included
transections within the hindlimb enlargement (Mortin and Stein, 1989 )
and removal of the left hemi-enlargement (Stein et al., 1995b ).
Intracellular recordings during normal rostral scratching demonstrate
EPSPs in hip extensor motoneurons and IPSPs in hip flexor motoneurons
that occur during ipsilateral hip extensor ENG activity (Robertson and
Stein, 1988 , their Fig. 1). Robertson and Stein (1988, their Fig. 2)
present examples of intracellular recordings during hip extensor
deletion rostral scratching that reveal the absence of EPSPs in hip
extensor motoneurons and the absence of corresponding IPSPs in hip
flexor motoneurons. Based on these examples, we hypothesize that the
interneurons of the ipsilateral hip extensor module are quiescent
during hip extensor deletion rostral scratching. The members of the hip
extensor module are hip extensor motor neurons, hip extensor inhibitory
interneurons that inhibit members of antagonist modules, and hip
extensor excitatory interneurons that excite all neuronal types in the
hip extensor module and members of agonist modules (Stein et al.,
1995b , Stein and Smith, 1997 ). We plan additional recordings to test
this hypothesis.
If this hypothesis is correct, it follows that, during hip
extensor deletion rostral scratching, the hip flexor module is rhythmogenic even in the absence of activity in neurons of the hip
extensor module (Robertson and Stein, 1988 ; Mortin and Stein, 1989 ;
Stein et al., 1995b ). The members of the hip flexor module are hip
flexor motor neurons, hip flexor inhibitory interneurons that inhibit
members of antagonist modules, and hip flexor excitatory interneurons
that excite all neuronal types in the hip flexor module and members of
agonist modules (Stein et al., 1995b ; Stein and Smith, 1997 ). It also
follows that reciprocal inhibitory interactions between the hip flexor
module and the hip extensor module are not required for hip flexor
rhythmogenesis. Support for this concept in mammalian preparations has
been obtained with the observation of hindlimb motor rhythms after
blockade of spinal inhibitory pathways (Cowley and Schmidt, 1995 , 1997 ;
Cazalets et al., 1996 ; Ozaki et al., 1996 ; Kremer and Lev-Tov, 1997 ;
for review, see Kiehn et al., 1997 ). Note, however, that reciprocal
inhibitory interactions can also contribute to rhythmogenesis
(Calabrese and Feldman, 1997 ; Currie and Gonsalves, 1997 ) (S. N. Currie and G. G. Gonsalves, personal communication).
Contralateral pathways contribute to the production of
normal rostral scratching
Hip extensor deletion rostral scratching occurred most of
the time in response to ipsilateral rostral stimulation in the
contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation. This result suggests
that, in the D3-end preparation, descending propriospinal neurons
which have axons that cross into the contralateral spinal cord
contribute to the production of the normal ipsilateral rostral
scratching motor pattern of rhythmic alternation between hip flexor and
hip extensor activity. Cutaneous afferents from the rostral scratch receptive field enter the spinal cord via the D3-D6 segmental nerves
(Mortin and Stein, 1990 ). Axons of turtle primary afferents have a
central branch that may descend in the ipsilateral spinal cord
posterior to the segment of origin; there are no known central branches
of turtle primary afferents that descend in the contralateral spinal
cord (Kusuma and ten Donkelaar, 1980 ; Kunzle and Woodson, 1983 ; Ruigrok
et al., 1985 ). In the present experiments, sites innervated by
cutaneous afferents that enter the spinal cord via the D3-D5 segmental
nerves were stimulated in the ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive
field. Cutaneous afferents from the ipsilateral rostral scratch
receptive field activate both ipsilateral and contralateral axons of
descending propriospinal neurons (Currie and Stein, 1990 ; Berkowitz and
Stein, 1994a ,b ,c ) that, in turn, activate rostral scratch pattern
generating circuitry in hindlimb enlargement segments and in the D7
segment just anterior to the hindlimb enlargement (Mortin and Stein,
1989 ). A large minority of propriospinal neurons that descend into the
hindlimb enlargement have an axon contralateral to their cell body
(Berkowitz and Stein, 1994c ); many of these axons were cut in the
D6-D7 hemisection preparation. Our results therefore suggest that, in
the D3-end preparation, the outputs of descending propriospinal axons
that traverse the contralateral D6-D7 segmental border contribute to the activation of ipsilateral hip extensor activity during rostral scratching in response to ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive field
stimulation.
Reconstructed normal rostral scratching patterns of rhythmic
alternation between hip flexors and hip extensors can be produced in
the D6-D7 hemisection preparation in response to stimulation of one
site in the ipsilateral rostral and the other site in a different
scratch receptive field
Another major result of this paper is the demonstration of
reconstructed rostral scratching motor patterns in response to two-site
stimulation in the contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation. We
introduce the term reconstruction based on the following:
First, one-site stimulation in the ipsilateral rostral scratch
receptive field in the D3-end preparation activated normal alternation
between hip flexors and extensors (Fig.
2A,C); thus, in this preparation,
one-site stimulation is sufficient for excitation of both
hip flexor and hip extensor activity.
Second, one-site stimulation in another scratch receptive field
(contralateral rostral, pocket, or caudal; ipsilateral caudal) activated ipsilateral hip extensors in the D3-end preparation (Fig.
2A,C; Currie and Stein, 1989 ;
Berkowitz and Stein, 1994a ; Field and Stein, 1997a ).
Third, one-site stimulation in the ipsilateral rostral scratch
receptive field in the contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation activated mainly hip flexor rhythms (Fig. 2G) and a low
percentage of cycles with hip flexor and extensor alternation; thus
when contralateral pre-enlargement pathways are transected, ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive field stimulation is
sufficient for activating hip flexor bursts but not for
activating hip extensor bursts.
Fourth, one-site stimulation in another scratch receptive field
(contralateral pocket or caudal; ipsilateral caudal) in the contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation activated ipsilateral hip
extensor motor output (Figs. 5D, 6D,
7D); this implies that interneurons that excite hip
extensors were also activated. In the present experiments with
contralateral D6-D7 hemisection, one-site stimulation of the
contralateral rostral scratch receptive field did not reliably activate
ipsilateral hip extensor motor output (Fig. 2E); for
the discussion below, we assume that this stimulation did activate
ipsilateral hip extensor interneuronal circuitry, however. We are
currently testing this assumption with direct interneuronal
recordings.
Fifth, two-site stimulation in the contralateral D6-D7 hemisection
preparation, with one site in the ipsilateral rostral and the other
site in a different scratch receptive field, activated normal
ipsilateral rostral scratching patterns of rhythmic alternation between
hip flexors and hip extensors (Figs. 2F,
5C, 6C, 7C). This result is consistent
with the hypothesis that the rhythmogenic hip flexor module was
activated by the ipsilateral rostral stimulation and elements of the
hip extensor module were activated by the other site stimulation. Such
dual activation could have produced flexor motor output that was not
coordinated with extensor motor output; we did not observe such a lack
of coordination. Instead, we observed that the normal rostral
scratching motor pattern was produced by the circuitry activated by
two-site stimulation in the D6-D7 hemisection preparation. We use the
term reconstruction for the rhythmic flexor and extensor alternating
response to two-site stimulation in the D6-D7 hemisection preparation
because this normal motor pattern was not activated by one-site
stimulation in this preparation. We assume that the reconstructed motor
patterns were generated, in part, by the postulated reciprocal
inhibitory connections between the hip flexor module and the hip
extensor module. Future experiments that measure the detailed
characteristics of these reciprocal inhibitory pathways are now
possible in this D6-D7 hemisection preparation.
Bilateral shared core hypothesis that includes shared circuitry
activated by the left and the right receptive fields for rostral,
pocket, and caudal scratching
Our present results of reconstruction of rostral scratching
in the contralateral D6-D7 hemisection preparation by two-site stimulation, one site in the ipsilateral rostral scratch receptive field and the other site in another scratch receptive field, provide support for the hypothesis that there is a bilateral shared core of
neurons that assist in the generation of left- and right-side scratching (rostral, pocket, and caudal) that is activated by stimulation of the left and the right scratch (rostral, pocket, and
caudal) receptive fields. Previous experiments provide support for this
hypothesis. Some descending propriospinal interneurons have a receptive
field that includes both the left and the right rostral as well as the
left and the right pocket scratch receptive fields (Berkowitz and
Stein, 1994a ). There is out-of-phase coordination of the left and the
right hips during bilateral scratching (same-form or mixed-form; Field
and Stein, 1997b ). Blends are generated in response to stimulation of a
site in a transition zone between scratch receptive fields (rostral and
pocket or pocket and caudal; Mortin et al., 1985 ; Robertson et al.,
1985 ) or in response to two-site stimulation of rostral and caudal
scratch receptive fields (Stein et al., 1986 ). Changes in the right
rostral scratching motor pattern occurred after removal of the left
halves of the segments of the hindlimb enlargement (Stein et al.,
1995b ). Taken together, the previous and the present experiments
support the suggestion that this bilateral shared core is critical for
the organization of hip flexor and hip extensor synergies during
scratching on both left and right sides. Future experiments are now
needed to test further this bilateral shared-core hypothesis and to
determine its possible application to locomotion.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 21, 1997; revised Oct. 7, 1997; accepted Oct. 9, 1997.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant NS30786
to P.S.G.S. and National Science Foundation Grant IBN93-08804 to
S.N.C. We thank Dr. Ari Berkowitz for editorial assistance, Dr. Gavin
Perry for software development, and Gammon Earhart for her
participation in several of the experiments and for editorial assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Paul S. G. Stein,
Department of Biology, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63130.
 |
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