Abstract
Motoneurons innervating peroneal muscles in the cat leg (PB, PT and PL, respectively, for peroneus brevis, tertius and longus) were examined for their connections with afferents from these and other leg muscles and with cutaneous afferents. The aim was to investigate (1) whether inputs from nearby muscles and cutaneous areas are likely to assist or oppose the excitation elicited in peroneal motoneurons by PB contractions, and (2) whether reflex connectivity might allow distinction of α (i.e. motoneurons innervating skeletal muscle fibres) and β (i.e. motoneurons innervating both skeletal and intrafusal muscle fibres) subgroups among PB and PT motoneurons. In the three peroneal pools, every motoneuron had excitatory monosynaptic connections with Ia afferents from each of the three peroneal muscles, and nearly every motoneuron received di- or trisynaptic excitation from low-threshold cutaneous afferents in sural or superficial peroneal nerves. Inputs from these sources might facilitate the contraction-induced positive feedback. In contrast, the patterns of short-latency synaptic connections with group I afferents from pretibial flexor and post-tibial extensor muscles were heterogeneous among peroneal motoneurons but did not point to any specific β pattern.
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