Abstract

Rhythmical activity in trigeminal motoneurons (TMNs) was studied in an in vitro neonatal rat brainstem preparation that retains functionally active circuits for oral-motor behaviors. Whole-cell current-clamp recording from TMNs demonstrated rhythmical activities during both spontaneously generated respiratory activity and neurochemically induced rhythmical oral-motor activity. TMNs showed spontaneous rhythmical (0.08±0.04 Hz) activities of burst-firing pattern during inspiration synchronized with inspiratory activities recorded in hypoglossal nerves. During rhythmical oral-motor activity induced by bath application of N-methyl- d, l-aspartic acid and the GABA A receptor antagonist bicuculline methiodide, TMNs showed only a rhythmical (5.6±0.8 Hz) pattern of single-spike discharge. TMNs never showed a burst-firing pattern during rhythmical oral-motor activity even when membrane potentials were shifted either to depolarized or hyperpolarized levels. Rhythmical activity in TMNs exhibited different discharge patterns between rhythmical oral-motor activity and respiratory activity generated in vitro.

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