Activity-dependent plasticity occurs throughout the CNS. However, investigations of skill acquisition usually focus on cortex. To expand the focus, we analyzed in humans the development of operantly conditioned H-reflex change, a simple motor skill that develops gradually and involves plasticity in both the brain and the spinal cord. Each person completed 6 baseline and 24 conditioning sessions over 10 weeks. In each conditioning session, the soleus H-reflex was measured while the subject was or was not asked to increase (HRup subjects) or decrease (HRdown subjects) it. When the subject was asked to change H-reflex size, immediate visual feedback indicated whether a size criterion had been satisfied. Over the 24 conditioning sessions, H-reflex size gradually increased in six of eight HRup subjects and decreased in eight of nine HRdown subjects, resulting in final sizes of 140 Ϯ 12 and 69 Ϯ 6% of baseline size, respectively. The final H-reflex change was the sum of within-session (i.e., task-dependent) adaptation and across-session (i.e., long-term) change. Taskdependent adaptation appeared within four to six sessions and persisted thereafter, averaging ϩ13% in HRup subjects and Ϫ15% in HRdown subjects. In contrast, long-term change began after 10 sessions and increased gradually thereafter, reaching ϩ27% in HRup subjects and Ϫ16% in HRdown subjects. Thus, the acquisition of H-reflex conditioning consists of two phenomena, task-dependent adaptation and long-term change, that together constitute the new motor skill. In combination with previous data, this new finding further elucidates the interaction of plasticity in brain and spinal cord that underlies the acquisition and maintenance of motor skills.
1. Primates can increase or decrease the spinal stretch reflex and its electrical analogue, the H-reflex (HR), in response to an operant conditioning task. This conditioning changes the spinal cord itself and thereby provides an experimental model for defining the processes and substrates of a learned change in behavior. Because the phenomenon has been demonstrated only in primates, its generality and theoretical implications remain unclear, and its experimental use is restricted by the difficulties of primate research. In response to these issues, the present study explored operant conditioning of the H-reflex in the rat. 2. Seventeen Sprague-Dawley rats implanted with chronic electromyographic (EMG) recording electrodes in one soleus muscle and nerve cuff stimulating electrodes on the posterior tibial nerve were rewarded (either with medial forebrain bundle stimulation or food) for increasing (HRup conditioning mode) or decreasing (HRdown conditioning mode) soleus H-reflex amplitude without change in background EMG or M response (direct muscle response) amplitude. 3. H-reflex amplitude changed appropriately over 3-4 wk. Under the HRup mode, it rose to an average of 158 +/- 54% (mean +/- SD) of initial value, whereas under the HRdown mode it fell to an average of 67 +/- 11% of initial value. Background EMG and M response amplitude did not change. 4. Operant conditioning of the H-reflex in the rat appears similar in rate and final magnitude of change to that observed in the monkey.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Ricin A-chain (RTA) catalyzes the depurination of a single adenine at position 4324 of 28S rRNA in a N-ribohydrolase reaction. The mechanism and specificity for RTA are examined using RNA stem-loop structures of 10-18 nucleotides which contain the required substrate motif, a GAGA tetraloop. At the optimal pH near 4.0, the preferred substrate is a 14-base stem-loop RNA which is hydrolyzed at 219 min-1 with a kcat/Km of 4.5 x 10(5) M-1 s-1 under conditions of steady-state catalysis. Smaller or larger stem-loop RNAs have lower kcat values, but all have Km values of approximately 5 microM. Both the 10- and 18-base substrates have kcat/Km near 10(4) M-1 s-1. Covalent cross-linking of the stem has a small effect on the kinetic parameters. Stem-loop DNA (10 bases) of the same sequence is also a substrate with a kcat/Km of 0.1 that for RNA. Chemical mechanisms for enzymatic RNA depurination reactions include leaving group activation, stabilization of a ribooxocarbenium transition state, a covalent enzyme-ribosyl intermediate, and ionization of the 2'-hydroxyl. A stem-loop RNA with p-nitrophenyl O-riboside at the depurination site is not a substrate, but binds tightly to the enzyme (Ki = 0.34 microM), consistent with a catalytic mechanism of leaving group activation. The substrate activity of stem-loop DNA eliminates ionization of the 2'-hydroxyl as a mechanism. Incorporation of the C-riboside formycin A at the depurination site provides an increased pKa of the adenine analogue at N7. Binding of this analogue (Ki = 9.4 microM) is weaker than substrate which indicates that the altered pKa at this position is not an important feature of transition state recognition. Stem-loop RNA with phenyliminoribitol at the depurination site increases the affinity substantially (Ki = 0.18 microM). The results are consistent with catalysis occurring by leaving group protonation at ring position(s) other than N7 leading to a ribooxocarbenium ion transition state. Small stem-loop RNAs have been identified with substrate activity within an order of magnitude of that reported for intact ribosomes.
This study asked whether operant conditioning of the H-reflex can modify locomotion in spinal cord-injured rats. Midthoracic transection of the right lateral column of the spinal cord produced a persistent asymmetry in the muscle activity underlying treadmill locomotion. The rats were then either exposed or not exposed to an H-reflex up-conditioning protocol that greatly increased right soleus motoneuron response to primary afferent input, and locomotion was reevaluated. H-reflex up-conditioning increased the right soleus burst and corrected the locomotor asymmetry. In contrast, the locomotor asymmetry persisted in the control rats. These results suggest that appropriately selected reflex conditioning protocols might improve function in people with partial spinal cord injuries. Such protocols might be especially useful when significant regeneration becomes possible and precise methods for reeducating the regenerated spinal cord neurons and synapses are needed for restoring effective function.
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