Abstract

Conditions required for re-excitation of lumbosacral motoneurones, i.e. for double impulses in the motor axons associated with a single soma-dendritic action potential, were examined in cats anaesthetized with pentobarbitone and paralysed with gallamine triethiodide. Simultaneous recording from a motoneurone (intracellular, and in some experiments also extracellular), and from its axon in a ventral root, was used to assess the relations between the soma and the double axonal action potentials. Action potentials (greater than 70 mV) evoked by brief depolarizing current pulses applied intracellularly were never observed to cause re-excitation. Re-excitation could, however, be regularly induced by procedures which increased the delay between the initial segment and soma-dendritic components of these potentials. Re-excitation could be evoked (i) when brief hyperpolarizing pulses were applied before the onset of the soma-dendritic spikes, (ii) when the depolarizing pulses were applied on a background of long hyperpolarizing pulses or (iii) when two action potentials were evoked in a quick succession (by two brief depolarizing pulses). No relationship was found between the presence of re-excitation of motor axons and the presence of the delayed depolarization which follows the soma-dendritic spikes. Neither re-excitation nor delayed depolarization were found to be dependent upon re-excitation of the initial segment. These observations are thus at variance with previous suggestions that the initial segment spikes induce the re-excitation of motor axons and that the initial segment spikes cause the delayed depolarization following soma-dendritic spikes. Since re-excitation of a motor axon occurred without any signs of a second initial segment spike, it is concluded that it is initiated at the level of the axon, most likely at the first node of Ranvier. Re-excitation of motor axons was also observed during repetitive firing induced by intracellular current injection. However, it occurred then only occasionally, and only under strong depolarizing drive. It is thus not expected to be a common phenomenon under natural conditions of repetitive firing.

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