Abstract

1. Monkeys can gradually increase or decrease the size of the triceps surae H-reflex in response to an operant conditioning task. This conditioning modifies the spinal cord. To determine the location and nature of the spinal cord plasticity and define its role in the behavioral change (i.e., H-reflex increase or decrease) we have recorded intracellularly from triceps surae motoneurons in conditioned animals and compared the results with data from naive (i.e., unconditioned) animals. 2. Eleven monkeys (Macaca nemestrina, male) were exposed to the HRdown conditioning mode, in which reward occurred when H-reflex size in one leg (i.e., the trained leg) was below a criterion value. In six animals (5.1-8.2 kg) H-reflex size in the trained leg fell to 24-58% of its initial value, whereas in the other five animals (4.0-5.5 kg) it remained at 92-114% of its initial value. This outcome, which was in accord with recent data indicating that success in HRdown conditioning is age dependent, allowed comparison of intracellular data from successful HRdown animals with data from unsuccessful animals as well as with data from naive (i.e., unconditioned) animals. 3. Intracellular recordings were obtained from 221 triceps surae motoneurons on trained and control sides of successful and unsuccessful HRdown animals. Measurements included axonal conduction velocity, input resistance, time constant, electrotonic length, rheobase, firing threshold, afterhyperpolarization duration and amplitude, and composite homonymous and heteronymous excitatory postsynaptic potentials to peripheral nerve stimulation. Results were compared with data from 109 triceps surae motoneurons in naive animals. 4. Motoneurons from the trained side of successful HRdown animals had a significantly more positive average firing threshold (-52 vs. -55 mV) and a significantly lower average conduction velocity (67 vs. 71 m/s) than those from naive animals. In contrast, motoneurons from the trained side of unsuccessful HRdown animals were not significantly different from naive motoneurons. 5. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that operantly conditioned decrease in H-reflex size is due to a positive shift in motoneuron firing threshold and a consequent increase in the depolarization needed to reach that threshold. 6. The more positive firing threshold, if present in the axon as well as in the soma, could also account for the decreased conduction velocity observed in motoneurons from the trained side of successful animals.

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