Control of LocomotionIn Vitro: I. Deafferentation

Abstract
We previously described the ability to induce adult-like, coordinated airstepping following electrical stimulation of the brainstem in the hindlimb-attached, in vitro brainstem-spinal cord preparation. These findings suggest the presence at birth of supraspinal systems capable of activating and modulating spinal locomotor mechanisms, which presumably also are present at birth. The current study employed the hindlimb-attached in vitro brainstem-spinal cord preparation from 0- to 4-day-old rats maintained in oxygenated artificial cerebrospinal fluid. After the control threshold-frequency relationship for eliciting airstepping was established, the dorsal roots to the attached limbs were severed and the procedure was repeated. No changes in electrical threshold or major differences in the elicited locomotor pattern were observed after deafferentation, although the amplitude of the electromyograms decreased. The mean frequency of alternation at threshold before deafferentation was similar to that after deafferentation. However, the maximum mean frequency induced by suprathreshold stimulation was significantly higher after deafferentation than that before deafferentation. These results suggest that (1) the supraspinal modulation of spinal locomotor mechanisms is not entirely dependent on afferent input; (2) intrinsic spinal locomotor mechanisms are present in the spinal cord at birth; and (3) afferent input may limit the maximum frequency of alternation of the limbs early in development.