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20. Primary motor cortex and premotor cortex Primary motor cortex: BA 4 Premotor: BA 6 and others Size of BA 4 (proportion of body wt) is constant across species, but BA 6 is 6x larger in humans than macaque monkeys. Lesions to premotor area can cause apraxia: loss of the ability to plan and execute complex voluntary motor tasks. 21. Motor Homunculus Primary motor cortex M1 Brodmann’s area 4 22. Corticospinal and corticobulbar tracts 23. LCST and VCST Lateral Corticospinal Tract (LCST) 3/4 of the CST axons decussates in the medulla limbs (arms, legs), especially distal muscles (feet, hands, fingers) Ventral Corticospinal Tract (VCST) 1/4 of the CST axons does not decussate in the medulla terminates bilaterally in the medial part of the ventral horn axial/proximal muscle movement (neck, shoulder, trunk, hip) 24. Lateral Corticospinal Tract Topography 25. Ventral Horn Topography Lateral white matter (LCST) LCST LCST VCST distal muscles proximal muscles VCST proximal muscles distal muscles 26. Directional tuning of an M1 neuron -- The experimental setup 27. Directional tuning of an M1 neuron -- Tuning curve 28. Directional tuning of M1 neurons -- Population Vector 29. Motor Neuron Pool and Motor Unit Motor Neuron Pool Motor Unit 30. Motor Neuron Pools ! (alpha) motor neurons ventral horn of spinal cord 31. Motor Unit Number of muscle fibers per motor unit: large leg muscles: 1000 fingers: 10 extraocular muscles: 3 32. Motor Unit The fibers innervated by a single alpha motor neuron are distributed throughout the muscle. This makes the firing of each motor neuron cause a distributed contraction (smoother muscle dynamics) 33. Neuromuscular Junction Transmitter: Acetylcholine (ACh) Excitation-Contraction Coupling www.shelfieldpeonline.co.uk/assets/images/neuromuscular_junction.jpg 34. Neuromuscular Junction (Fig. 6.2) Each synaptic vesicle of the alpha motor neuron contains about 10,000 ACh molecules. One acetylcholinesterase (AChE) enzyme can break down 5,000 molecules of ACh per second! 35. Lower Motor Disorders Lower Motor Disorders Amyotropic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) death of lower and upper motor neurons flaccid paralysis, areflexia, muscle atrophy aka Lou Gehrig’s disease Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy death of skeletal muscle x-linked recessive genetic mutation gene for a muscle cytoskeletal protein (dystrophin) Myasthenia Gravis autoimmune destruction of skeletal muscle ACh receptors alpha motor neurons and muscle not damaged normal life expectancy with treatment 36. Myasthenia Gravis myasthenia gravis causing ptosis 1-min after i.v. injection of acetylcholinesterase inhibitor Images from Kandel, Jessel, and Schwartz, p. 299 (Fig. 16.1) 37. Proprioceptive (Ia and Ib) axons Ia, Ib Proprioception Muscle Spindle Touch Merkel, Meissner, Pacinian, Ruffini A! 6-12 !m 35-75 m/s Pain/Temp Free nerve endings A" 1-5 !m 5-30 m/s 0.2-1.5 !m 0.5-2 m/s Pain/Temp/Itch Free nerve endings C 13-20 !m 80-120 m/s 38. Muscle Proprioceptors: The Muscle Spindle Muscle Spindle Golgi Tendon Organ (green) a (blue) 39. Muscle spindles compared to Golgi tendon organs 40. Muscle spindles compared to Golgi tendon organs 41. gamma (!) motor neuron activity regulates muscle spindle responses ! motor neuron activation without " ! motor neuron activation with " 42. The knee-jerk (stretch) reflex Ia monosynaptic excitation reciprocal disynaptic inhibition 43. Stretch reflex circuitry 44. Stretch reflex circuitry Descending command Glutamate Increased Ia discharge Ia 45. Autogenic inhibition reflex circuitry (GABAergic) disynaptic autogenic inhibition disynaptic excitation of antagonist 46. Autogenic inhibition reflex circuitry Descending command Force to lift glass GABAergic inhibitory interneuron Increased Ib discharge Ib Golgi Tedon Organ Too much force 47. Flexion-crossed extension reflex