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Title: Disparity of motoneurone and muscle differentiation following spinal transection in the kitten. Author: Gallego R, Huizar P, Kudo N, Kuno M. Journal: J Physiol; 1978 Aug; 281():253-65. PubMed ID: 279669. Abstract: 1. The spinal cord of kittens, 3--5 days of age, was transected at the lower thoracic level. Isometric contractions of the medial gastrocnemius and soleus muscles as well as intracellular potentials of their motoneurones were recorded after varying post-operative periods of up to 110 days. Similar observations were made 52--59 days after cord transection in adult cats. 2. In cord-transected kittens, contraction time of the gastrocnemius muscle showed normal development, whereas the soleus muscle failed to maintain slow contraction. In adult cats, cord transection increased the speed of contraction in the soleus muscle without significant changes in contraction times of the gastrocnemius muscle. 3. Soleus motoneurones showed a normal post-natal increase in the duration of afterhyperpolarization (a.h.p.) up to a certain stage (61--71 days in age) following cord transection. However, the subsequent increase in the duration of a.h.p. of soleus motoneurones observed in normal kittens was lacking in cord-transected kittens. It is suggested that soleus motoneurones show two stages of differentiation in terms of the duration of a.h.p. 4. In adult cats, cord transection caused a decrease in the duration of a.h.p. of soleus motoneurones approximately to the value observed at the end of the first stage of differentiation in kittens. 5. The duration of a.h.p. of gastrocnemius motoneurones remained virtually unchanged follwoing cord transection in both kittens and adult cats. 6. The positive correlation between the duration of a.h.p. of soleus motoneurones and contraction time of the innervated muscle fibres normally observed in kittens and adult cats was absent following cord transection. 7. It was assumed that alteration s in contraction time of the muscle following cord transection are due to virtual elimination of motoneurone discharge and that the duration of a.h.p. reflects the discharge pattern of motoneurones under normal conditions. Based on these assumptions, a possible process for normal post-natal differentiation of motoneurone and muscle is proposed.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]