Abstract

Renshaw cells are widely distributed in all segments of the spinal cord, but detailed morphological studies of these cells and their axonal branching patterns have only been made for lumbosacral segments. For these, a characteristic distribution of terminals was reported, including extensive collateralization within 1–2 mm of the soma, but then more restricted collaterals given off at intervals from the funicular axon. Previous authors have suggested that the projections close to the soma serve inhibition of motoneurons (known to be greatest for the motor nuclei providing the Renshaw cell excitation) but that the distant projections serve mainly the inhibition of other neurons. However, in thoracic segments, inhibition of motoneurons is known to occur over two to three segments (20–40 mm) from the presumed somatic locations of the Renshaw cells. Here, we report the first detailed morphological study of Renshaw cell axons outside the lumbosacral segments, which investigated whether this different distribution of motoneuron inhibition is reflected in a different pattern of Renshaw cell terminations. Four Renshaw cells in T7 or T8 segments were intracellularly labeled with neurobiotin in anesthetized cats and their axons traced for distances ≥6 mm from the somata. The only morphological difference detected within this distance in comparison with Renshaw cells in the lumbosacral cord was a minimal taper in the funicular axons, where in the lumbosacral cord this is pronounced. Patterns of termination were virtually identical to those in the lumbosacral segments, so we conclude that these patterns are unrelated to the pattern of motoneuronal inhibition.

Highlights

  • The Renshaw cell has been an object of fascination for spinal cord investigators since 1941, when their defining action, recurrent inhibition of motoneurons, was first demonstrated in the lumbosacral cord (Renshaw 1941, 1946; Eccles et al 1954)

  • Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of the American Physiological Society and The Physiological Society

  • The firing properties of the Renshaw cells in this study were similar to those previously reported for the thoracic spinal cord (Kirkwood et al 1981, 1988; Hilaire et al 1986)

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Summary

Introduction

The Renshaw cell has been an object of fascination for spinal cord investigators since 1941, when their defining action, recurrent inhibition of motoneurons, was first demonstrated in the lumbosacral cord (Renshaw 1941, 1946; Eccles et al 1954). Thoracic Renshaw Cell Projections located toward the tip of the ventral horn (Jankowska and Lindstro€m 1971; Van Keulen 1979; Lagerb€ack and Kellerth 1985b; Fyffe 1990) and have a multipolar or fusiform morphology (Fyffe 1990), with few sparsely branched dendrites that project for relatively short distances Their axons have been followed in the ventral funiculus up to 3 mm from the soma, with dense collaterals being given off close to the soma and the extent of the collateralization decreasing with distance from the soma (Van Keulen 1979; Lagerb€ack and Kellerth 1985a). A preliminary report has appeared (Saywell et al 1998)

Methods
Histological procedures
Results
Discussion
Conflict of Interest
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