The Journal of Neuroscience, August 27, 2003, 23(21):7904-7916
Previous Article | Next Article 
Cerebellar Climbing Fibers Modulate Simple Spikes in Purkinje Cells
Neal H. Barmack and
Vadim Yakhnitsa
Neurological Sciences Institute, Oregon Health and Science University,
Beaverton, Oregon 97006
 |
Abstract
|
|---|
Purkinje cells have two action potentials: Climbing fiber responses (CFRs)
and simple spikes (SSs). CFRs reflect the discharge of a single climbing fiber
at multiple synaptic sites on the proximal dendrite of the Purkinje cell. SSs
reflect the summed action of a subset of parallel fiber synapses on Purkinje
cell dendritic spines. Because mossy fiber afferents terminate on granule
cells, the ascending axons of which bifurcate, giving rise to parallel fibers,
the modulation of SSs has been attributed to mossy fiber afferent signals.
This inference has never been tested. Conversely, the low discharge frequency
of CFRs has led many to conclude that they have a unique and intermittent role
in cerebellar signal processing. We examine the relative potency of
vestibularly modulated mossy fiber and climbing fiber signals in evoking CFRs
and SSs in Purkinje cells of the uvula-nodulus in
chloralose-urethane-anesthetized rabbits. Vestibular primary afferents were
blocked by unilateral labyrinthectomy (UL). A UL destroys the vestibular
primary afferent signal to the ipsilateral uvula-nodulus, while leaving intact
the vestibular climbing fiber signal from the contralateral inferior olive.
After UL, vestibular stimulation modulated CFRs and SSs in ipsilateral
uvula-nodular Purkinje cells, demonstrating that the primary vestibular
afferent mossy fiber input to the ipsilateral uvula-nodulus was not necessary
for SS modulation. Unilateral microlesions of the caudal half of the
-nucleus of the inferior olive reduced a modulated climbing fiber signal
to the contralateral uvula-nodulus, causing loss of both vestibularly
modulated CFRs and SSs in contralateral Purkinje cells. Vestibular climbing
fibers not only evoke low-frequency CFRs, but also indirectly modulate
higher-frequency SSs. This modulation must be attributed to cerebellar
interneurons. Golgi cell inhibition of granule cells may provide the
interneuronal mechanism for CFR-induced SS modulation.
Key words: cerebellum; nodulus; uvula; vestibular primary afferents; parallel fiber; climbing fiber response; Golgi cell
 |
Introduction
|
|---|
Cerebellar Purkinje cells have two action potentials: Climbing fiber
responses (CFRs) and simple spikes (SSs). CFRs are long-duration (2-5 msec),
multipeaked action potentials that discharge at 1-5 impulses (imp)/sec. They
are evoked by the multi-synaptic contacts of a single climbing fiber on the
proximal dendrite of a Purkinje cell
(Granit and Phillips, 1956
;
Eccles et al., 1966a
). SSs
have short-duration (0.75-1.25 msec), single-peaked action potentials that
discharge at 20 - 60 imp/sec.
Whereas modulation of CFRs reflects the direct action of a single climbing
fiber, modulation of SSs is less well understood. Several synaptic inputs,
parallel fibers being the most numerous, converge on Purkinje cells. The net
excitability evoked by these inputs modulates SSs. The activity of parallel
fibers reflects the excitability of mossy fiber synaptic terminals at
glomerular synapses on granule cell dendrites. The other presynaptic component
of the glomerular synapse, the Golgi cell inhibitory axon terminal, also
modulates the activity of granule cells
(Eccles et al., 1966b
).
The activity of Purkinje cells of the cerebellar-nodulus is strongly
influenced by vestibularly driven climbing fiber inputs. Vestibularly evoked
increases in CFRs are associated with decreases in SSs
(Barmack and Shojaku, 1995
;
Fushiki and Barmack, 1997
).
Even during spontaneously occurring CFRs, the duration of this climbing
fiber-induced pause lasted 15-300 msec
(Granit and Phillips, 1956
;
Bell and Grimm, 1969
). The
question arises, could the antiphasic activity of CFRs and SSs be attributed
to independent mossy and climbing fiber pathways? Afferent signals in these
separate pathways could themselves be antiphasic, resulting in the observed
antiphasic behavior of CFRs and SSs. Alternatively, vestibular signals
conveyed by climbing fibers could modulate the discharge of SSs indirectly
through the action of cerebellar interneurons.
If it were possible to manipulate independently the signals conveyed by
climbing and mossy fibers, then their separate and joint contributions to the
modulation of SSs could be resolved. Vestibular pathways to the uvula-nodulus
offer the possibility for such an experiment. More than 70% of primary
vestibular afferents project to folia 9d and 10 in the ipsilateral
uvula-nodulus as mossy fibers (Carpenter
et al., 1972
; Korte,
1979
; Kevetter and Perachio,
1986
; Barmack et al.,
1993a
). Vestibular climbing fibers originate from two subnuclei of
the inferior olive, the
-nucleus and dorsomedial cell column (dmcc).
They cross the midline to synapse on Purkinje neurons in the contralateral
uvula-nodulus (Barmack et al.,
1993b
; Barmack,
1996
; Kaufman et al.,
1996
) (Fig. 1). The
-nucleus and dmcc receive secondary vestibular projections from the
ipsilateral parasolitary nucleus, a small GABAergic nucleus that receives a
primary vestibular afferent projection
(Barmack et al., 1998
;
Barmack and Yakhnitsa,
2000
).

View larger version (66K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1. Vestibular primary afferent mossy fiber and climbing fiber projections to
uvula-nodulus. Sequences in activation are indicated by solid lines for
excitatory pathways and dashed lines for inhibitory pathways, listed
numerically. 1, Roll-tilt onto the left side increases primary afferent
discharge; 2, primary afferent mossy fibers project to ipsilateral Psol,
Y-group, and granule cell layer of nodulus; 3, Psol projects to ipsilateral
-nucleus and dmcc; 4, climbing fibers from -nucleus and dmcc
project to contralateral nodulus; 5, vestibular nuclei project bilaterally to
Y-group; 6, Y-group projects to contralateral dorsal cap, -nucleus, and
dmcc; Amb, nucleus ambiguus; , -nucleus; cf, climbing fiber; Cu,
cuneate nucleus; dc, dorsal cap; DVN, LVN, MVN and SVN, descending, lateral,
medial, and superior vestibular nucleus, respectively; Fl, flocculus; Gc,
granule cell; icp, inferior cerebellar peduncle; LRN, lateral reticular
nucleus; mf, mossy fiber; LCN, MCN and IntP, lateral, medial and interpositus
cerebellar nucleus, respectively; NPH, nucleus prepositus hypoglossi; Nsol,
nucleus solitarius; Pc, Purkinje neuron; pf, parallel fiber; PFl,
paraflocculus; PO, principal olive; Psol, parasolitary nucleus; sol, tractus
solitarius; SpV, spinal trigeminal nucleus; spV, spinal trigeminal tract; X,
dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus; XII, hypoglossal nucleus; VI, abducens
nucleus; Y, Y-group: 8n, auditory-vestibular nerve.
|
|
Vestibular primary afferent signals to the ipsilateral uvula-nodulus can be
blocked by a unilateral labyrinthectomy (UL), without disrupting vestibular
climbing fibers that originate from the contralateral inferior olive.
Conversely, vestibular climbing fiber signals can be blocked by unilateral
microlesions of the contralateral
-nucleus, leaving intact signals from
ipsilateral vestibular primary afferents. We have blocked separately
vestibular primary afferent mossy fiber and climbing fiber pathways to the
uvula-nodulus. We have recorded extracellularly from Purkinje cells to assess
the contributions of these pathways to the modulation of SSs.
 |
Materials and Methods
|
|---|
Anesthesia and surgery. Fifteen pigmented rabbits (weight, 0.8
-1.7 kg) were anesthetized intravenously with
-chloralose (50 mg/kg)
and urethane (500 mg/kg) or anesthetized intramuscularly with ketamine
hydrochloride (50 mg/kg), xylazine (6 mg/kg), and acepromazine maleate (1.2
mg/kg). Rectal temperature was monitored and maintained at 37°C. The
adequacy of anesthesia was evaluated using the corneal reflex as an
indicator.
In a preparatory operation, a dental acrylic plug was formed to the
calvarium of each rabbit. This plug held two inverted stainless steel screws
(8-32) to the dorsal surface of the calvarium. Five smaller stainless steel
screws (2-56) were screwed into the calvarium and helped to anchor the acrylic
plug. The larger inverted screws mated with a metal rod that maintained the
head rigidly in the center of a three-axis vestibular rate table.
Unilateral labyrinthectomy. The left labyrinth was destroyed
surgically in eight rabbits. A retroauricular 5 mm incision was made to gain
access to the middle ear through the tympanic membrane. The stapes was
disinserted from the oval window. A fine dental drill was used to open the
bony cochlea-labyrinth. The pigmented membranous labyrinth was visualized and
removed with a fine forceps. To make certain that the entire vestibular
apparatus was damaged, the dental drill was used to excavate the remaining
bony labyrinth. Approximately 60 min after the UL, electrical recording was
begun.
Microelectrode recording. The uvula-nodulus was approached by
reflecting the muscles overlying the cisterna magna and enlarging the dorsal
aspect of the foramen magnum. The outer layers of the dura mater were peeled
away exposing folia 9b and 9c through the remaining layer. A microdrive,
attached to the head restraint bar, advanced tungsten micro-electrodes through
folia 9b and 9c toward folia 9d and 10. The microelectrodes had an extended
taper so that the diameter of the final 4 mm, the length necessary for a
complete penetration of the uvula-nodulus, was <50 µm. The tip impedance
was
4 M
.
Action potentials were discriminated with a window-slope-Schmitt trigger.
Action potentials were analyzed using Spike 2 software (Cambridge Electronic
Design) and displayed in peristimulus histograms. CFR-associated pauses in SS
activity were analyzed with peri-CFR-triggered SS histograms, in which SSs,
time locked to CFRs, were averaged.
Histological verification of recording sites. The location of each
recorded neuron was marked electrolytically (8 µA, 30 sec; electrode
negative). At the end of the experiment, rabbits were perfused transcardially
with 0.9% saline, followed by 10% paraformaldehyde. The brain was removed and
cryoprotected with 10, 20, and 30% sucrose in 0.1 M PBS, pH 7.2.
The posterior cerebellum was blocked sagittally, mounted onto cork with
optimal cutting temperature compound (OCT; Tissue-Tek), and frozen in
isopentane cooled with dry ice. Sagittal frozen sections were cut at 35
µm.
Vestibular stimulation. The rate table sinusoidally oscillated the
prone rabbit about its vertical axis (yaw), longitudinal axis (roll), and
interaural axis (pitch) (±10°; 0.005-0.800 Hz). During vestibular
stimulation, form vision of the rabbit was occluded by hemispherical ping pong
balls.
The peripheral origins of vestibularly modulated signals were characterized
using a "null technique." While the rabbit was roll-tilted
sinusoidally, the angle of the rabbit's head-body was varied continuously from
roll-to-pitch, until a minimal modulated Purkinje cell discharge was observed.
On either side of this null plane, the phase of modulated activity shifted by
180° with respect to the sinusoidal vestibular stimulus. The optimal
plane, the plane of maximal modulated discharge, was assumed to be orthogonal
to the null plane (Fushiki and Barmack,
1997
).
The otolithic origin of vestibularly modulated discharges was tested by
static roll-tilt. The rabbit was statically roll-tilted 5-10° about a
previously defined optimal axis. After an adaptation period of 20 -30 sec, the
average discharge frequency was measured for the next 20 -30 sec. The rabbit
was then roll-tilted in the opposite direction. A difference in mean discharge
frequency of >40%, evoked for static tilts in the two opposite directions,
indicated static responsiveness to linear acceleration.
Optokinetic stimulation. The vestibular rate table was located
within a sphere having a diameter of 135 cm. A 20 W halogen light bulb with a
rectangular filament was mounted at the center of a perforated aluminum globe,
4.4 cm in diameter. The globe was attached to the shaft of a gimbal-mounted
galvanometer directly above the head of the rabbit
(Leonard et al., 1988
). The
globe projected rectangular images (3 x 8°)of the filament on the
interior surface of the large sphere. These images were spaced 15° apart,
with the long axis orthogonal to the plane of rotation. The maximal intensity
(IMax) of the image was measured with a spot photometer
that had a 0.5 mm slit opening. The minimal intensity
(IMin) was measured from the space in between the
projected rectangular images. The contrast (K) of the projected images was: K
= (IMax -
IMin)/(IMax +
IMin) = 0.48. For horizontal optokinetic stimulation
(OKS), the rotational axis of the gimbal-mounted globe was aligned with the
vertical axis. For vertical OKS, it was aligned with the longitudinal axis or
one of the axes of the vertical semicircular canals. Sinusoidal, monocular OKS
had a constant amplitude (±10°) over a frequency range of
0.005-0.200 Hz.
 |
Results
|
|---|
Vestibularly evoked CFRs and SSs within uvula-nodular zones
The CFRs of >90% of the Purkinje cells recorded in folia 9c,d and 10
were modulated by sinusoidal and static roll-tilt. Ipsilateral roll increased
CFRs and decreased SSs (Fig.
2A-C). The rotational angle of the head with respect to
the vertical axis was changed systematically to determine the angle at which
roll-pitch stimulation caused no modulation of CFRs or SSs; the null plane
(Fig.
2B1,2). The optimal plane was
orthogonal to the null plane (Fig.
2A1,2). Optimal planes of most
Purkinje cells were aligned with bilateral pairs of vertical semicircular
canals, ipsilateral posterior-contralateral anterior or ipsilateral
anterior-contralateral posterior semicircular canals. Optimal CFR planes
aligned with the ipsilateral posterior-contralateral anterior semicircular
canals were distributed in a medial sagittal zone extending from the midline
to
1.2 mm lateral to the midline. Optimal CFR planes aligned with the
ipsilateral anterior-contralateral posterior semi-circular canals were
distributed in a more lateral sagittal zone starting at
1 mm and
extending to 2.2 mm lateral of the midline
(Fig. 2D). Although
modulation of CFRs was observed in folia 9a,b, the distinction between zonal
alignments was obscured. In 10% of the cells within the two zones, CFRs and
SSs were unresponsive to vestibular stimulation. The alignment of CFR zones
corresponding to the orientation of vertical semicircular canals was not
altered by a UL.

View larger version (47K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2. Topographic distribution of CFR optimal planes within uvula-nodulus.
Sinusoidal vestibular stimulation was used to classify optimal response planes
of CFRs. A, B, Figurines illustrate optimal
(A1) and null (B1)
CFR response planes of a Purkinje cell recorded in the left uvula. Stimulation
in the optimal plane (A2) evoked increased CFRs
and decreased SSs when the rabbit was rotated onto its left side. When
stimulated in the null plane (B2), neither CFRs
nor SSs were modulated. C, Sagittal view of the rabbit cerebellum.
The shaded area (folia 9d and 10) indicates the region of the uvula-nodulus
receiving vestibular primary afferent projection. D, Folia 9-10 are
represented as a two-dimensional topographic sheet. Optimal planes for CFRs
recorded from 205 Purkinje cells are represented on this surface. Cells with
optimal planes corresponding to stimulation in the plane of the ipsilateral
posterior semicircular canal (LPC) are illustrated as circles.
Cells with optimal planes corresponding to stimulation in the plane of the
ipsilateral anterior semicircular canal (LAC) are illustrated as
squares. Open symbols indicate cells in which the optimal plane was determined
only for sinusoidal stimulation. Filled symbols indicate cells that were
tested for static sensitivity and were positive. Black diamonds indicate cells
that responded only to horizontal optokinetic stimulation (LHOK) of
the ipsilateral eye in the posterior-anterior direction. The more lateral
aspects of folia 9-10 were unexplored.
|
|
Modulated SSs persist in the ipsilateral uvula-nodulus after UL
If modulation of SSs were dependent on intact ipsilateral vestibular
primary afferents, then it should be abolished by the destruction of these
afferents. After a UL, modulation of SSs and CFRs in ipsilateral Purkinje
cells persisted (Fig. 3). CFRs
increased and SSs decreased when the rabbit was rolled onto the side
ipsilateral to the UL.

View larger version (53K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3. CFRs and SSs are modulated in a Purkinje cell ipsilateral to UL.
A, Purkinje cell was located 1.7 mm lateral to the midline and
ipsilateral to the UL. The optimal plane for modulating CFRs was orthogonal to
the longitudinal axis. B, CFRs and SSs, modulated by sinusoidal
stimulation at 0.2 Hz, are displayed as vertical lines (CFRs) and
instantaneous frequency dot displays (SSs). C, Action potentials are
illustrated at a faster time base. D, Peristimulus histograms reveal
antiphasic modulation of CFRs (black bars) and SSs (gray bars). E, F,
Peri-CFR-triggered SS histograms were constructed using two different methods.
In E, Mean rate = 1/( interspike intervals in bin)/(spike count
in bin). In F, Mean rate = (spike count in bin)/(bin width)(total
CFR-triggered sweeps). Both methods sorted the SSs into 180 bins. The
histograms in E and F show different totals of CFR-triggered
sweeps, 15 and 150. Bin width, 2.78 msec.
|
|
The antiphasic interaction of CFRs and SSs was evident in peristimulus
histograms (Fig.
3B-D). Each cycle of vestibular stimulation was divided
into 180 bins. Two separate sets of bins were kept for SSs and CFRs.
Interspike intervals were summed in each bin and divided by the number of
spikes, yielding a mean interspike interval. The reciprocal of this mean
interval, frequency, was plotted for each bin in the cycle.
Peri-CFR-triggered histograms were used to examine whether the modulation
of SSs was time locked to the occurrence of CFRs. Two methods of constructing
peri-CFR-triggered SS histograms were used. The first calculated mean
frequency using the reciprocal of the mean SS interspike interval, as
described above (Fig.
3E). The second used the total spike count in each bin
divided by the total number of CFR-triggered sweeps multiplied by bin width
(Fig. 3F). The first
method preserved information about interspike intervals and provided a lower
variability of SS frequency, especially with reduced numbers of CFR-triggered
sweeps. Both methods showed that the discharge frequency of SSs was reduced
for 50 - 80 msec after the occurrence of a CFR. Using the first method, the
CFR-associated SS pause was measured from the end of the CFR until two
successive SS bins had a frequency that was at least 90% of the pre-CFR
frequency (Barmack and Shojaku,
1995
). Using this method, the SS pauses evoked in
Figure 3E were 78 msec
(n = 15) and 75 msec (n = 150).
The effect of stimulus frequency on CFR-associated antiphasic modulation of
SSs was examined in nodular Purkinje cells, ipsilateral to a UL. We asked
whether the duration of the SS pause was related to the depth of modulation
(Dm) of CFRs during sinusoidal stimulation.
Dm was determined by an iterative search in which the
difference in mean CFR frequency in two 90° quadrants of the sinusoid,
separated by 180°, was maximized. Accordingly:
Dm = 100%, when modulated discharge is restricted to one
quadrant. Dm = 0%, when CFR frequency is equal in all
quadrants.
In a population of 15 Purkinje cells, CFRs and SSs were recorded over a
range of stimulus frequencies. We used a
2 statistic to
compare Dm of CFRs and SSs at stimulus frequencies of
0.05, 0.20, and 0.50 Hz. Dm was independent of stimulus
frequency (
2; p > 0.08 for CFRs; p >
0.38 for SSs). Whereas lower stimulus frequencies evoked greater modulation
than did higher stimulus frequencies, the modulation was distributed over a
wider segment of each stimulus cycle (Fig.
4D-F). The CFR-associated pause in SSs remained
relatively constant. It was 95 msec at 0.05 Hz, 103 msec at 0.20 Hz, and 116
msec at 0.50 Hz (Fig.
4G-I). It is possible Dm of
vestibularly modulated SSs simply reflected the magnitude of a CFR-associated
SS pause.

View larger version (38K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4. Modulation of CFRs and SSs ipsilateral to UL and frequency-independent
CFR-associated SS pause. A, Antiphasically modulated CFRs and SSs
were recorded from a nodular Purkinje cell, 1.35 to the left of the midline.
B, CFRs and SSs were modulated optimally during sinusoidal
stimulation in the plane of the intact contralateral posterior semicircular
canal. C, Modulation of CFRs and SSs was antiphasic.
D-F, Peristimulus histograms were constructed at three
different stimulus frequencies (0.05, 0.20, and 0.5 Hz). CFRs are depicted as
black, and SSs as gray. G-I, Peri-CFR-triggered SS histograms for
each stimulus frequency show that the duration of the CFR-associated pause in
SSs was independent of stimulus frequency.
|
|
In some Purkinje cells, the duration of the CFR-associated SS pause was
short, but the antiphasic modulation of SSs was large
(Fig. 5). Ipsilateral roll-tilt
evoked increased discharge of CFRs and decreased discharge of SSs over a range
of stimulus frequencies (0.01-0.20 Hz)
(Fig. 5C-F). The
peri-CFR-triggered pause lasted <10 msec, suggesting that the
CFR-associated SS pause was not directly coupled to Dm of
SSs evoked by vestibular stimulation in this particular Purkinje cell
(Fig. 5G-I).

View larger version (42K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5. Vestibular modulation of CFRs and SSs in Purkinje cell ipsilateral to UL.
A, Vestibularly modulated CFRs and SSs were recorded from a Purkinje
cell in folia 9d, 0.75 mm to the left of the midline after a left UL. B,
C, CFRs and SSs were modulated antiphasically during stimulation in an
optimal plane, corresponding to the intact right anterior semicircular canal.
D-F, Peristimulus histograms for three stimulus frequencies (0.01,
0.10, and 0.20 Hz), show the antiphasic occurrences of CFRs and SSs.
G-I, Peri-CFR SS histograms indicate a CFR-associated pause of 10
msec.
|
|
The variable relationship between Dm for SSs and the
duration of CFR-associated SS pause may reflect the action of several rather
than one climbing fiber acting on cerebellar interneurons organized in a
sagittal climbing fiber zone (Fushiki and
Barmack, 1997
). Modulation of SSs is only indirectly linked to the
occurrence of a CFR in the same Purkinje cell. A linear regression analysis of
the CFR-associated SS pause and Dm for SSs shows that
these two variables are not correlated (r = 0.16; p >
0.38; n = 28).
Antiphasic discharge of CFRs and SSs in the contralateral
uvula-nodulus after UL
If the left labyrinth were the only source of vestibular primary afferents
to the left parasolitary nucleus (Psol) and if the left Psol were the only
source of descending vestibular signals to the ipsilateral inferior olive,
then a left UL should eliminate descending inputs to the ipsilateral (left)
-nucleus and dmcc and abolish vestibular climbing fiber signals to the
contralateral (right) uvula-nodulus. After a UL, we recorded CFRs in 42
Purkinje cells in the contralateral uvula-nodulus. CFRs were sensitive to both
sinusoidal and static roll-tilt in 34 of 42 Purkinje cells. CFRs were not
modulated by vestibular stimulation in only 8 of 42 Purkinje cells. In 21 of
42 Purkinje cells, both CFRs and SSs were well isolated. In 16 of 21 of these
Purkinje cells, CFRs were modulated by vestibular stimulation
(Fig. 6). Peri-CFR SS
histograms showed SS pauses time locked to the occurrence of CFRs. Although
the antiphasic discharge of CFRs and SSs was preserved in contralateral as
well as ipsilateral Purkinje cells, the duration of the relative SS pause was
reduced contralaterally compared with the ipsilateral pause. In a population
of 49 Purkinje cells, the duration of the SS pause was greater in Purkinje
cells ipsilateral to the UL (ipsi, n = 28, mean pause = 64 msec; vs
contra, n = 21, mean pause = 46 msec; two-tailed t test;
p < 0.05) (Fig.
6E,H). Again, the CFR-associated SS pause was not
correlated with Dm (r = 0.13; p >
0.55; n = 21).

View larger version (41K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6. Vestibular modulation of CFRs and SSs in Purkinje cell contralateral to UL.
A,CFRs and SSs were recorded from a Purkinje cell in the right
nodulus after a left UL. B, The optimal plane of vestibular
stimulation corresponded to the intact right anterior semicircular canal. CFRs
increased and SSs decreased when the rabbit was rotated onto its right side
during sinusoidal (C, D) or static (F, G) roll-tilt.
Peri-CFR-triggered SS histograms recorded during sinusoidal (E) and
static roll-tilt (H) vestibular stimulation show a SS pause, lasting
125 and 111 msec, respectively.
|
|
The persistence of contralateral CFRs implies that the circuit drawn in
Figure 1 is incomplete. The
ipsilateral vestibular projection through the Psol is not the only source of
vestibular signaling to the ipsilateral inferior olive. Modification of this
circuitry is considered in Discussion.
Bilateral labyrinthectomy prevents modulation of both CFRs and
SSs
One of the possibilities suggested by the persistence of contralateral CFRs
after UL is that extra-vestibular inputs to the inferior olive modulate
olivary neurons in the absence of vestibular primary afferents. We tested this
possibility by recording from 16 Purkinje cells in the uvula-nodulus of an
acutely, bilaterally, labyrinthectomized rabbit. None of the CFRs or SSs was
modulated by dynamic or static roll-pitch.
Quantitative differences in CFRs-SSs in ipsilateral and contralateral
uvula-nodulus after UL
Dm and phase angle were plotted in polar coordinates
for CFRs and SSs ipsilateral and contralateral to the UL
(Fig.
7A1,2).
Dm decreased with increasing spontaneous activity. Phase
was measured as the peak increase in discharge relative to head position. A
response with a phase = 0° indicates a maximum Dm at
ipsilateral side-down position.

View larger version (32K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7. UL reduces the depth of modulation of SSs associated with CFRs in the
contralateral uvula-nodulus. The phase and Dm of CFRs and
SSs are plotted in polar coordinates for 28 Purkinje cells in the ipsilateral
(A1) and 21 Purkinje cells in the contralateral
(A2) uvula-nodulus after a left UL. Phase was
measured relative to ipsilateral side-down head position. Vestibular
stimulation was in the optimal plane (0.1-0.2 Hz).
B1,2, Peak SS modulation was plotted against peak
CFR modulation. The slope of this function was reduced in Purkinje cells
recorded in the contralateral (right) uvula-nodulus. The dotted lines indicate
the 95% confidence intervals for each fitted regression line. The slope of the
regression line fitting the data for Purkinje cells ipsilateral to the UL was
statistically greater than that for data from contralateral Purkinje
cells.
|
|
The resultant vectors for CFRs in the ipsilateral and contralateral
uvula-nodulus were 55% at 1° and 69% at 350°, respectively. The
resultant Dm and phase for SSs were 8% at 181° and 6%
at 141° (Fig.
7A1,2). Differences between CFRs and
SSs for the two sides were tested for statistical significance using
Batschelet's parametric two-sample second-order analysis of angles
(Zar, 1984
). The resultant
vectors for CFRs and SSs recorded from Purkinje cells ipsilateral to the UL
were not different than those recorded contralaterally (two-tailed F
test: CFRs, p > 0.50; SSs, p > 0.40; n =
49).
Although the resultant vectors for CFRs and SSs did not differ, a different
picture emerged when the absolute modulation depth,
m =
Max90 - Min90, of CFRs and SSs was
compared for the two sides (Fig.
7B1,2).
m for CFRs was associated
with greater
m in SSs in
ipsilateral Purkinje cells compared with contralateral Purkinje cells. The
reduced slope of
m for
CFRs plotted against
m for
SSs for contralateral Purkinje cells was significant (analysis of covariance;
p < 0.04; n = 21). In summary, vigorous modulation of SSs
persisted ipsilateral to the UL despite the removal of all ipsilateral
vestibular primary afferent mossy fibers. The reduced slope of
m for CFRs versus
m for SSs occurred in the
contralateral UL, where the vestibular primary afferent projection remained
intact. The slope of
m for
CFRs versus
m for SSs in
Purkinje cells ipsilateral to the UL was not statistically different from that
derived from Purkinje cells recorded from rabbits with intact labyrinths
(analysis of covariance; p > 0.90; n = 29).
Microlesions of
-nucleus reduce modulated CFRs and SSs in
contralateral uvula-nodulus
Although UL failed to eliminate vestibularly modulated CFRs in the
contralateral uvula-nodulus, it reduced the CFR-associated modulation of SSs.
This suggests two possibilities: (1) the descending vestibular pathway from
the parasolitary nucleus to the
-nucleus and dmcc conveys bilateral
vestibular information, or (2) an additional descending vestibular pathway
influences the discharge of inferior olivary neurons. If either of these
possibilities were correct, vestibular information would still converge on the
-nucleus and dmcc before being relayed to the contralateral
uvula-nodulus. Therefore, we attempted to disrupt descending vestibular
afferents at their site of termination in the caudal
-nucleus rather
than at their origin (Barmack et al.,
1998
).
The uvula-nodulus is divided into sagittal zones defined by the optimal
planes of CFRs (Fig. 2). This
functional division between CFRs driven by vestibular stimulation in the plane
of the ipsilateral posterior and anterior semicircular canals is also
represented in the rostral-caudal axis of the
-nucleus. Olivary neurons
in the rostral
-nucleus have optimal planes corresponding to the plane
of the ipsilateral posterior semicircular canal. Neurons in the caudal
-nucleus have optimal planes corresponding to the plane of the
ipsilateral anterior semicircular canal
(Fig. 8B, open
circles) (Barmack et al.,
1993b
). Caudal
-nucleus neurons project to a medial zone in
the contralateral uvula-nodulus. Rostral
-nucleus neurons project to a
lateral zone in the contralateral uvula-nodulus
(Fig. 8B, filled
circles) (Sato and Barmack,
1985
). In five rabbits, we identified the caudal half of the
-nucleus by recording from single olivary neurons during vestibular
stimulation (Fig. 8A).
Microlesions (10 -25 µA, 30 sec; electrode negative) were made at
physiologically identified locations. These microlesions destroyed 30 -70% of
the caudal
-nucleus. With one exception, R271, the microlesions
minimally invaded the rostral
-nucleus
(Fig. 8B,C).

View larger version (64K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 8. Localization of microlesions of caudal -nucleus of inferior olive.
Electrolytic microlesions, made in the caudal right -nucleus caused
reduced modulation of CFRs and SSs recorded in the contralateral
uvula-nodulus. A, Vestibularly modulated responses of a neuron
recorded in the right caudal -nucleus were used to guide the placement
of the microlesion. The optimal plane corresponded to the right anterior
semicircular canal. B, Microlesions for five rabbits are illustrated
in six transverse sections listed in rostral to caudal order. The distance
from the caudal pole of the inferior olive to each section is indicated by the
number in upper right corner. The size and location of microlesions in the
caudal -nucleus are indicated with different colors. Each of five
rabbits is identified by number at the level of the transverse section for
which its microlesion was largest: R239, blue; R248, green; R269, gray; R270,
yellow; R271, red. The locations of 18 -nucleus neurons, characterized
by their optimal planes, are also indicated. Ten of these neurons (filled
circles) had optimal planes aligned with the ipsilateral posterior
semicircular canal. Eight neurons (open circles) had optimal planes aligned
with the ipsilateral anterior semicircular canal. Neurons with optimal planes
aligned with the ipsilateral posterior semicircular canal were located rostral
to the section at 925 µm. Those with optimal planes aligned with the
ipsilateral anterior semicircular canal were located caudal to the section at
1200 µm. C1, Photomicrograph of a transverse
section, stained with neutral red, shows the maximal extent of the microlesion
(R248) made in the right caudal -nucleus.
C2, The, microlesion is illustrated schematically
at a level 925 µm rostral to the caudal pole of the inferior olive. ,
-Nucleus; Cu, external cuneate nucleus; DAO, dorsal accessory olive;
DVN, descending vestibular nucleus; dc, dorsal cap of Kooy; icp, inferior
cerebellar peduncle; MAO, medial accessory olive; MVN, medial vestibular
nucleus; Nsol, nucleus solitarius; Psol, parasolitary nucleus; Pyr, pyramidal
tract; sol, tractus solitarius; SpV, spinal trigeminal nucleus; spV, spinal
trigeminal tract; vlo, ventrolateral outgrowth; X, dorsal motor nucleus of the
vagus; XII, hypoglossal nucleus; XII n, hypoglossal nerve.
|
|
By restricting the microlesions to the caudal half of the
-nucleus,
the region containing cells responsive to vestibular stimulation in the plane
of the ipsilateral anterior semicircular canal, we could use activity in the
ipsilateral lateral and contralateral medial zones as experimental controls.
After the microlesion, four recording tracks were made alternately in the
ipsilateral and contralateral uvula-nodulus. At the conclusion of each
penetration, several marking lesions (8 µA, 30 sec; electrode negative)
were made at depths corresponding to recorded Purkinje cells. These were
recovered histologically and plotted on a two-dimensional map of the
uvula-nodulus (Fig.
9A). The left half of each symbol characterizes the
discharge of the CFR. The right half characterizes the SS.
The modulation of CFRs and SSs in the medial zone of the contralateral
(left) uvula-nodulus was reduced after a microlesion of the right caudal
-nucleus. In a sample of 38 Purkinje cells, 6 of 38 had modulated CFRs,
8 of 38 had unmodulated CFRs, and 24 of 38 had no detectable CFRs. Of the 14
Purkinje cells with CFRs, 4 of 14 had weakly driven SSs. Of the 24 Purkinje
cells without CFRs, 3 of 24 had SSs modulated in phase with right side-down
rotation. Two of 24 had SSs modulated in phase with left side-down
rotation.
The Dm of CFRs and SSs in the medial zone of the
ipsilateral (right) uvula-nodulus was normal in all respects. In a sample of
19 Purkinje cells, 17 of 19 had modulated CFRs and 2 of 19 had no detectable
SSs.
A quantitative comparison of the CFRs and SSs from the contralateral and
ipsilateral medial zones was made by a vectorial representation of the data
(Fig. 9B). The mean
ipsilateral CFR vector exceeded the contralateral CFR vector
(Ipsi-Dm = 43.9%, phase = 47.6° vs
Contra-Dm = 7.8%, phase = 20.3°). Differences between
CFRs and SSs for the two sides were tested for statistical significance using
Batschelet's parametric two-sample second-order analysis of angles
(Zar, 1984
). The resultant
vector for ipsilateral CFRs exceeded the resultant vector for contralateral
CFRs (one-tailed F test; p < 0.0005). The resultant
vector for ipsilateral SSs exceeded the resultant vector for contralateral SSs
(Ipsi-Dm = 14.4%, phase = 200.9° vs
Contra-Dm = 0.9%, phase = 244°; one-tailed F
test; p < 0.005) (Fig.
9B).
Differences between CFR and SS resultant vectors were reduced when a
comparison was made for all ipsilateral versus all contralateral Purkinje
cells. Nonetheless, ipsilateral CFR and SS resultant vectors exceeded the
contralateral resultant vectors. For CFRs, Ipsi-Dm =
37.3%, phase = 44.8° versus Contra-Dm = 16.6%, phase =
27.5°; one-tailed F test, p < 0.002. For SSs,
Ipsi-Dm = 12.6%, phase = 206.3° versus
Contra-Dm = 2.86%, phase = 202.6°; one-tailed
F test, p <0.02 (Fig.
9C).
Differences between CFR and SS resultant vectors were also compared for the
lateral zones of the ipsilateral and contralateral uvula-nodulus. Although we
attempted to restrict the microlesion to the caudal half of the
-nucleus, the microlesions encroached on the rostral
-nucleus,
where cells have optimal planes corresponding to the ipsilateral posterior and
contralateral anterior semicircular canals. There were no significant
differences between CFR and SS resultant vectors when the lateral zones were
compared. For CFRs, Ipsi-Dm = 25.2%, phase = 56.2°
versus Contra-Dm = 29.6%, phase = 30.2°; one-tailed
F test, p > 0.2. For SSs, Ipsi-Dm =
10.5%, phase = 220.5° versus Contra-Dm = 6.2%, phase =
194.6°; one-tailed F test, p > 0.2.
Unequivocal identification of Purkinje cells depends on the detection of
CFRs. However, microlesions in the
-nucleus caused a loss of CFRs in
most of the cells recorded in the medial zone of the contralateral
uvula-nodulus. Cells without CFRs were classified as Purkinje cells if two
conditions were fulfilled: (1) the marking microlesions of these putative
Purkinje cells were localized to the Purkinje cell layer, and (2) their
recorded depth corresponded to a region of high background activity,
characteristic of the Purkinje cell layer.
Microlesions of
-nucleus have nominal effect on spontaneous SSs
in contralateral uvula-nodulus
Large lesions of the inferior olive raise the spontaneous discharge of SSs
in Purkinje neurons (Benedetti et al.,
1983
). If the spontaneous SS discharge rate were raised to
saturation, then it could obscure signal processing normally reflected in
modulated SS discharge. In the present experiment, microlesions of the
-nucleus evoked a modest increase in the spontaneous discharge of SSs in
Purkinje cells in the medial zone of the contralateral uvula-nodulus.
Contralateral, medial zone Purkinje cells had a spontaneous SS discharge rate
= 33.4 imp/sec. Purkinje cells in the ipsilateral medial zone had a
spontaneous SS discharge rate = 30.6 imp/sec. This slight elevation in SS
frequency in Purkinje cells in the contralateral medial zone was not
significant (one-tailed t test; p > 0.60). Therefore, the
loss of SS modulation after olivary microlesions cannot be attributed to an
abnormally elevated discharge rate.
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
Vestibular primary afferent mossy fibers do not modulate SSs in
nodular Purkinje cells
Modulation of vestibular primary afferent mossy fibers cannot account for
the observed modulated discharge of SSs in rabbits with either intact or
damaged labyrinths. In normal rabbits, primary vestibular afferent mossy fiber
terminals discharge in phase with ipsilateral side-down rotation
(Barmack and Shojaku, 1995
).
However, SSs discharge out of phase with ipsilateral side-down rotation. If
this out of phase modulation of SSs were caused by the action of ipsilateral
vestibular primary afferent mossy fibers, a sign inversion would be required.
This raises the possibility that either primary vestibular afferents are
themselves inhibitory or an inhibitory synapse is interposed between the mossy
fiber glomerular synapse on granule cells or between the parallel fiber
synapse on Purkinje cells.
The possibility of such a sign inversion at the level of vestibular primary
afferents is consistent with the observation that 12% of vestibular primary
afferents express both glutamate and glycine
(Reichenberger and Dieringer,
1994
). If these glycinergic-containing primary afferents were
inhibitory, they could account for the observed antiphasic modulation of CFRs
and SSs in normal rabbits. However, this explanation would ignore the
influence of the 88% of vestibular primary afferents that release glutamate
exclusively at the glomerular synapse. Glutamatergic mossy fibers activate
kainate and metabotropic glutamate receptors
(Raymond et al., 1984
;
Wisden and Seeburg, 1993
;
Yamanaka et al., 1997
;
Smith et al., 1999
). Even if
glycine-containing vestibular primary afferents were inhibitory, resulting in
antiphasic modulation of CFRs and SSs in normal rabbits, they could not
account for the persistence of the antiphasic modulation after a UL.
GABA is released by Golgi cell axon terminals at the glomerulus
(Hámori and Takács,
1989
). It binds to GABAA receptors on the granule cell
dendrite (Rossi and Hamann,
1998
; Hamann et al.,
2002
).
Glutamate is released by parallel fibers at synapses on Purkinje cell
dendrites, where it stimulates AMPA/kainate and metabotropic glutamate
receptors (Somogyi et al.,
1986
; Kingsbury et al.,
1988
; Hirano and Hagiwara,
1988
; Ottersen et al.,
1992
; Glaum et al.,
1992
; Barbour et al.,
1994
).
The assertion that glutamatergic vestibular primary afferent mossy fibers
are not the principal modulatory influence on Purkinje cell SSs rests on two
observations. First, modulated SSs are out of phase with the afferent signal
of vestibular primary afferents. Second, when vestibular primary afferents are
severed, the modulation of SSs persists.
Do secondary vestibular afferents modulate SSs?
Secondary vestibular afferents could modulate SSs even in the absence of
primary vestibular afferents. Unlike vestibular primary afferents, secondary
afferents project bilaterally to folia 9d and 10
(Brodal and Hoivik, 1964
;
Magras and Voogd, 1985
;
Thunnissen et al., 1989
;
Epema et al., 1990
;
Barmack et al., 1992
). A UL
would not exclude the possibility of modulated vestibular secondary afferents
from the contralateral vestibular complex. However, a UL not only acutely
depresses activity in the ipsilateral vestibular complex for at least 10 hr,
it also depresses activity in the contralateral vestibular complex
(Precht et al., 1966
;
Smith and Curthoys, 1988
;
Ris et al., 1997
;
Ris and Godaux, 1998
). Our
experiments typically lasted 6 hr after the UL. It is possible, but unlikely,
that residual secondary afferent signals from either the ipsilateral or
contralateral vestibular complex contributed to modulated SSs after UL.
Antiphasically modulated CFRs and SSs were observed in cerebellar folia 9a
and 9b in both normal and UL rabbits. This modulation occurred even though the
projection of vestibular primary and secondary afferent mossy fiber afferents
is severely reduced compared with the projections to folia 9c, 9d, and 10
(Korte and Mugnaini, 1979
;
Barmack et al., 1993a
;
Fushiki and Barmack,
1997
).
Vestibular secondary afferents could have a nonlabyrinthine origin, perhaps
from visceral receptors. Such afferents might sustain modulated SSs even after
a bilateral labyrinthectomy. However, we observed no vestibular modulation of
either CFRs or SSs in acutely, bilaterally labyrinthectomized rabbits.
Similarly, modulated activity in vestibular secondary neurons is absent in
acutely, bilaterally labyrinthectomized cats. In chronically, bilaterally
labyrinthectomized cats, secondary vestibular neurons can be weakly modulated
by vestibular stimulation (static pitch). This modulated activity is only
observed several weeks after the operation and in only 27% of the recorded
neurons (Yates et al.,
2000
).
Specificity of granule cell function
Posterior, anterior, and horizontal semicircular canal mossy fiber
afferents project to the granule cell layer of the ipsilateral nodulus,
whereas a majority of saccular afferents project to the ipsilateral uvula
(Purcell and Perachio,
2001
;Maklad and Fritzsch,
2003
). The utricular macula projects to both nodulus and uvula.
Interestingly, whereas horizontal semicircular canal primary afferent mossy
fibers project to the nodulus, we recorded no horizontal vestibular modulation
of SSs, or CFRs, in nodular Purkinje cells in this experiment or in previous
experiments (Barmack and Shojaku,
1995
; Fushiki and Barmack,
1997
). The horizontal semicircular canals are not represented in
either the Psol projection to the inferior olive
(Barmack et al., 1993b
;
Fushiki and Barmack, 1997
;
Barmack and Yakhnitsa, 2000
),
or in the olivary projection to the uvula-nodulus
(Barmack and Shojaku, 1995
;
Fushiki and Barmack,
1997
).
The possible influences of vestibular primary mossy fiber afferents are not
restricted to regions of mossy fiber afferent termination. Vestibular primary
afferent signals are dispersed bilaterally by parallel fibers (4 -7 mm long)
across the entire width of a folium (Brand
et al., 1976
; Mugnaini,
1983
; Pichitpornchai et al.,
1994
). In contrast, climbing fiber projections are arrayed on the
surface of the uvula-nodulus in a coordinate system defined by sagittal
transfolial zones in which reciprocal pairs of vertical semicircular canals
are represented. The polarization vectors of both CFRs and SSs conform to
these climbing fiber sagittal zones. Consequently, vestibular primary mossy
fiber afferent projections do not account for the topographic specificity of
modulated SSs.
The extended length of parallel fibers makes it improbable that the
topographic specificity of mossy fiber afferents and granule cell
"patches" is preserved in the overlying Purkinje cell layer. This
apparent puzzle has prompted a suggestion that topographic specificity is
preserved by means of multisynaptic contacts of ascending granule cell axons
(Jaeger and Bower, 1994
;
Gundappa-Sulur et al., 1999
).
Regardless of the merits of this conjecture, the observed modulation of SSs in
the present experiment was 180° out of phase with the expected discharge
evoked by either ascending axons or parallel fibers contacted by ipsilateral
vestibular primary afferents.
Each Purkinje cell in a transfolial beam receives a spatially discrete
climbing fiber signal representing a single plane of head movement. In
contrast, because of the extended length of parallel fibers, each Purkinje
cell receives spatially heterogeneous parallel fiber signals representing all
possible planes of head movement, encoded by both ipsilateral and
contralateral vestibular end organs.
Cerebellar circuitry and SS modulation
We suggest that the antiphasic modulation of CFRs and SSs can be ascribed
the action of cerebellar interneurons in response to climbing fiber
modulation. Here, we consider whether there are a priori reasons for
supposing that one of the several cerebellar interneurons is more likely to
account for the observed antiphasic modulation of CFRs and SSs.
Golgi cells
Three observations suggest that Golgi cells may be responsible for the SS
modulation. First, cerebellar glomeruli are the principal sites of termination
of mossy fibers. Each glomerulus consists of as many as 40 granule cell
dendrites, a mossy fiber rosette, and an axon terminal from a Golgi inhibitory
interneuron (Hámori and
Szentágothai, 1966
;
Eccles et al., 1966b
;
Fox et al., 1967
). Either of
the excitatory mossy fiber terminal or the inhibitory Golgi cell axon terminal
could, in principle, modulate the activity of granule cells and, in turn,
modulate SSs. Second, Golgi cell axonal terminals have extensive ramifications
in the granule cell layer. This allows a spatially restricted climbing fiber
signal to influence the activity of large numbers of granule cells. Third,
Golgi cells are the only cerebellar interneurons onto which climbing fibers
synapse (Hámori and
Szentágothai,
1966
;Desclin,
1976
; Hámori and
Szentágothai, 1980
;
Sugihara et al., 1999
). This
raises the possibility that climbing fiber-evoked Golgi cell activity could
influence SS discharge in Purkinje cells by modulating granule cell
discharge.
Vestibularly modulated primary afferent signals, conveyed through granule
cell-parallel fibers to Golgi cell dendrites, offer an alternative mechanism
for antiphasic modulation of CFRs and SSs. If this circuitry were operative,
UL-induced loss of vestibular primary afferent signaling would reduce its
efficacy. No such change in the antiphasic discharge of CFRs and SSs was
observed in the ipsilateral uvula-nodulus after a UL.
Unipolar brush cells
Other interneurons also could influence the discharge of SSs, including
unipolar brush cells (UBCs). UBCs are found in abundance in the uvula-nodulus
(Diño et al., 2000
).
They receive vestibular primary afferent projections and appear to amplify
this vestibular signal through synaptic feed-forward excitation of granule
cells. Therefore, UBCs should enhance, not reduce, vestibular mossy fiber
synaptic signals at granule cells.
Basket cells
The dendrites of basket cells, like those of Golgi cells, are contacted by
parallel fibers. Basket cells could influence the activity of Purkinje cells
through their inhibitory action on Purkinje cell bodies. However, basket cells
receive no direct synaptic contacts from climbing fibers
(Desclin, 1976
;
Hámori and Szentágothai,
1980
).
Stellate cells
The dendrites of stellate cells, like those of basket and Golgi cells,
receive synaptic contacts from parallel fibers. Stellate cell axon terminals
end on Purkinje cell dendrites (Eccles et
al., 1967
). Like basket cells, stellate cells receive no direct
synaptic contacts from climbing fibers.
Lugaro cells
Located in the upper granule cell layer, Lugaro cells could, in principle,
contribute to the antiphasic modulation of CFRs and SSs. Lugaro cells receive
projections from Purkinje cells and feed back on basket cells in the molecular
layer and Golgi cells in the granule cell layer
(Palay and Chan-Palay, 1974
;
Lainé and Axelrad,
1996
). Although lacking a climbing fiber input, these cells
nevertheless could provide antiphasically modulated signals from one group of
Purkinje cells to an adjacent group.
The general hypothesis that an interneuronal substrate causes antiphasic
modulation of CFRs and SSs and the specific hypothesis that the Golgi cell is
the interneuron most likely to implement this function, remain plausible.
Experiments directed at the analysis of specific signal processing of
identified cerebellar interneurons should improve our understanding of the
contributions of cerebellar interneurons to the genesis of antiphasic behavior
of CFRs and SSs.
Alternative vestibular projections to inferior olive
Vestibularly modulated CFRs persist in the contralateral uvula-nodulus
after a UL. This observation suggests that the vestibular projection through
the parasolitary nucleus (Psol) to the ipsilateral inferior olive is not the
only pathway by which vestibular information reaches the
-nucleus and
dmcc (Fig. 1, #2,#3).
Using retrograde and orthograde traces, we have shown that the Y-group, a
collection of small, spindle-shaped cells ventral to the interpositus nucleus,
projects to the contralateral
-nucleus, dmcc, and dorsal cap
(Fig. 1, #6) (our
unpublished observations). Y-group neurons receive primary and secondary
vestibular afferents (Kevetter and
Perachio, 1986
; Blazquez et
al., 2000
) and project to the ipsilateral flocculus-nodulus as
well as the contralateral oculomotor complex and inferior olive
(De Zeeuw et al., 1994
;
Wentzel et al., 1995
).
Y-group neurons are labeled immunohistochemically by an antibody to
aspartate, rather than to GABA (Kumoi et
al., 1987
). The projection from the Y-group to the inferior olive
implies that olivary projection conveys bilateral vestibular information to
the cerebellum. UL causes a loss of the descending input to the inferior olive
from the ipsilateral Psol. Residual signals from the intact contralateral
labyrinth, relayed through the Y-group, are sufficient to modulate CFRs and
SSs. Possibly, the projection from the Y-group to the contralateral
-nucleus is excitatory and acts reciprocally with the inhibitory
projection mediated by the ipsilateral Psol.
Modulation of SSs without modulation of CFRs
Although it is tempting to assume that high-frequency SSs are
"caused" by activity conveyed over the mossy fiber-granule
cell-parallel fiber pathway, this overstates the synaptic weight of mossy
fiber afferents, understates the influence of the climbing fiber pathway, and
misrepresents the rich varieties of interactions that emerge from the two
afferent systems.
If it were possible to sever completely the climbing fiber projection to
the cerebellum, then modulation of SSs could not be attributed directly or
indirectly to residual olivary activity. CFRs in floccular Purkinje cells have
been reversibly inactivated by microinjections (1-10 nl) of lidocaine into the
contralateral dorsal cap (Leonard and
Simpson, 1986
). After inactivation of a subset of dorsal cap
neurons, modulation of SSs persisted in a floccular Purkinje cell during
horizontal optokinetic and vestibular stimulation. However intriguing, this
experiment does not warrant the conclusion that SS modulation is independent
of CFR modulation. Rather, it shows that modulation of SSs in a particular
Purkinje cell may be independent of the modulation of the climbing fiber that
projects to that same Purkinje cell. Horizontal optokinetic and vestibular
modulation of SSs in a floccular Purkinje cell might be influenced by climbing
fibers that project to adjacent Purkinje cells and activate common
interneuronal circuitry. Such an interpretation is consistent with the classic
observation that SS pauses are induced by electrical stimulation of the
inferior olive, even when the electrical stimulus is sub-threshold for evoking
a CFR in the Purkinje cell from which SSs are recorded
(Bloedel and Roberts,
1971
).
Modulation of SSs in a nodular Purkinje cell depends on the location of the
Purkinje cell within a functional zone. The depth of SS modulation is greater
for Purkinje cells located in the center of a climbing fiber zone
(Fushiki and Barmack, 1997
).
Conversely, SS modulation is weaker in Purkinje cells located near a zonal
border.
Short-term and long-term functions of CFRs
The low frequency of discharge of CFRs has been rationalized theoretically
by ascribing to it "higher order" functions. CFRs have been
likened to "phasic motor generators"
(Berthoz and Llinás,
1974
), "threshold devices"
(Murphy et al., 1973
),
"event detectors" (Rushmer et
al., 1976
), "error detectors"
(Andersson and Armstrong,
1987
), "frequency synchronizers"
(Llinás and Yarom,
1986
), and "gain changers"
(Ebner and Bloedel, 1981
).
Implicit in these views is the assumption that discharge of CFRs is either too
low or too intermittent to encode faithfully cerebellar inputs. These
conjectures do not apply to CFRs modulated by vestibular and optokinetic
stimulation in the nodulus and flocculus. These modes of stimulation are
encoded parametrically by CFRs (Simpson
and Alley, 1974
; Barmack and
Hess, 1980
; Simpson et al.,
1981
; Fushiki and Barmack,
1997
).
The discharge of CFRs is associated with a reduction of SSs. As discussed
previously, this reduction may be caused by Golgi cell inhibition of granule
cells or by some other interneuronal mechanism. In the short term, the
antiphasic discharge of CFR-evoked antiphasic SS modulation could provide a
spatial filter through which CFRs with a high spatial resolution and low
bandwidth modulate SSs with a low spatial resolution and high bandwidth.
In the long term, climbing fibers could modulate SSs through the cellular
mechanism of long-term depression (LTD)
(Ito et al., 1982
;
Sakurai, 1987
;
Ito and Karachot, 1989
;
Crépel and Jaillard,
1991
). LTD is characterized by reduced synaptic efficacy of
parallel fibers after conjunctive stimulation of parallel and climbing fibers
(Narasimhan and Linden, 1996
).
LTD allows a single climbing fiber to decrease the synaptic influence of a
simultaneously active set of parallel fibers. Functionally, a single CFR could
change the synaptic weighting of as many as 150,000 granule cells distributed
across several functional zones within the cerebellum. LTD may use the
topography of CFRs to change the synaptic weighting of parallel fiber inputs
with which they are dynamically associated
(Ekerot and Jörntell,
2001
; Jörntell and
Ekerot, 2002
).
Climbing fibers not only evoke low-frequency CFRs, but also determine, in
part, the topography, polarity, and depth of modulation of higher-frequency
SSs. Parallel fibers provide bilateral vestibular information to each Purkinje
cell about the status of each end organ. This information is shaped by
conjunctive climbing fiber activity.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Dec 27, 2002;
revised June 18, 2003;
accepted July 8, 2003.
This work was supported by National Eye Institute Grant EY04778 to N.H.B.
We thank Mary Westcott for expert histological assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Neal H. Barmack, Neurological
Sciences Institute, Oregon Health and Science University, 505 Northwest 185th
Avenue, Beaverton, Oregon 97006. E-mail:
barmackn{at}ohsu.edu.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/237904-13$15.00/0
 |
References
|
|---|
Andersson G, Armstrong DM (1987) Complex spikes in
Purkinje cells in the lateral vermis of the cat cerebellum during locomotion.
J Physiol (Lond) 385:
107-134.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Barbour B, Keller BU, Llano I, Marty A (1994)
Prolonged presence of glutamate during excitatory synaptic transmission to
cerebellar Purkinje cells. Neuron 12:
1331-1343.[ISI][Medline]
Barmack NH (1996) GABAergic pathways convey vestibular
information to the
nucleus and dorsomedial cell column of the inferior
olive. In: New directions in vestibular research (Highstein SM,
Cohen B, Büttner-Ennever J, eds), pp 541-552.
New York: New York Academy of Science.
Barmack NH, Hess DT (1980) Multiple-unit activity
evoked in dorsal cap of inferior olive of the rabbit by visual stimulation.
J Neurophysiol 43:
151-164.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Barmack NH, Shojaku H (1995) Vestibular and visual
signals evoked in the uvula-nodulus of the rabbit cerebellum by natural
stimulation. J Neurophysiol 74:
2573-2589.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Barmack NH, Yakhnitsa V (2000) Vestibular signals in
the parasolitary nucleus. J Neurophysiol
83: 3559-3569.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Barmack NH, Baughman RW, Eckenstein FP, Shojaku H
(1992) Secondary vestibular cholinergic projection to the
cerebellum of rabbit and rat as revealed by choline acetyltransferase
immunohistochemistry, retrograde and orthograde tracers. J Comp
Neurol 317:
250-270.[ISI][Medline]
Barmack NH, Baughman RW, Errico P, Shojaku H (1993a)
Vestibular primary afferent projection to the cerebellum of the rabbit.
J Comp Neurol 327:
521-534.[ISI][Medline]
Barmack NH, Fagerson M, Fredette BJ, Mugnaini E, Shojaku H
(1993b) Activity of neurons in the beta nucleus of the inferior
olive of the rabbit evoked by natural vestibular stimulation. Exp Brain
Res 94:
203-215.[ISI][Medline]
Barmack NH, Fredette BJ, Mugnaini E (1998)
Parasolitary nucleus: a source of GABAergic vestibular information to the
inferior olive of rat and rabbit. J Comp Neurol
392: 352-372.[ISI][Medline]
Bell CC, Grimm RJ (1969) Discharge properties of
Purkinje cells recorded on single and double microelectrodes. J
Neurophysiol 32:
1044-1055.[Free Full Text]
Benedetti F, Montarolo PF, Strata P, Tempia F (1983)
Inferior olive inactivation decreases the excitability of the intracerebellar
and lateral vestibular nuclei in the rat. J Physiol (Lond)
340: 195-208.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Berthoz A, Llinás R (1974) Afferent neck
projection to the cat cerebellar cortex. Exp Brain Res
20: 385-401.[ISI][Medline]
Blazquez P, Partsalis A, Gerrits NM, Highstein SM
(2000) Input of anterior and posterior semicircular canal
interneurons encoding head-velocity to the dorsal Y group of the vestibular
nuclei. J Neurophysiol 83:
2891-2904.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Bloedel JR, Roberts WJ (1971) Action of climbing
fibers in cerebellar cortex of the cat. J Neurophysiol
34: 17-31.[Free Full Text]
Brand S, Dahl AL, Mugnaini E (1976) The length of
parallel fibers in the cat cerebellar cortex. An experimental light and
electron microscopic study. Exp Brain Res
26: 39