fbpx
Wikipedia

Motor neuron

A motor neuron (or motoneuron or efferent neuron[1]) is a neuron whose cell body is located in the motor cortex, brainstem or the spinal cord, and whose axon (fiber) projects to the spinal cord or outside of the spinal cord to directly or indirectly control effector organs, mainly muscles and glands.[2] There are two types of motor neuron – upper motor neurons and lower motor neurons. Axons from upper motor neurons synapse onto interneurons in the spinal cord and occasionally directly onto lower motor neurons.[3] The axons from the lower motor neurons are efferent nerve fibers that carry signals from the spinal cord to the effectors.[4] Types of lower motor neurons are alpha motor neurons, beta motor neurons, and gamma motor neurons.

Motor neurons
Micrograph of the hypoglossal nucleus showing motor neurons with their characteristic coarse Nissl substance ("tigroid" cytoplasm). H&E-LFB stain.
Details
LocationVentral horn of the spinal cord, some cranial nerve nuclei
ShapeProjection neuron
FunctionExcitatory projection (to NMJ)
NeurotransmitterUMN to LMN: glutamate; LMN to NMJ: ACh
Presynaptic connectionsPrimary motor cortex via the Corticospinal tract
Postsynaptic connectionsMuscle fibers and other neurons
Identifiers
MeSHD009046
NeuroLex IDnifext_103
TA98A14.2.00.021
TA26131
FMA83617
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy
[edit on Wikidata]

A single motor neuron may innervate many muscle fibres and a muscle fibre can undergo many action potentials in the time taken for a single muscle twitch. Innervation takes place at a neuromuscular junction and twitches can become superimposed as a result of summation or a tetanic contraction. Individual twitches can become indistinguishable, and tension rises smoothly eventually reaching a plateau.[5]

Development Edit

Motor neurons begin to develop early in embryonic development, and motor function continues to develop well into childhood.[6] In the neural tube cells are specified to either the rostral-caudal axis or ventral-dorsal axis. The axons of motor neurons begin to appear in the fourth week of development from the ventral region of the ventral-dorsal axis (the basal plate).[7] This homeodomain is known as the motor neural progenitor domain (pMN). Transcription factors here include Pax6, OLIG2, Nkx-6.1, and Nkx-6.2, which are regulated by sonic hedgehog (Shh). The OLIG2 gene being the most important due to its role in promoting Ngn2 expression, a gene that causes cell cycle exiting as well as promoting further transcription factors associated with motor neuron development.[8]

Further specification of motor neurons occurs when retinoic acid, fibroblast growth factor, Wnts, and TGFb, are integrated into the various Hox transcription factors. There are 13 Hox transcription factors and along with the signals, determine whether a motor neuron will be more rostral or caudal in character. In the spinal column, Hox 4-11 sort motor neurons to one of the five motor columns.[8]

Motor columns of spinal cord [9]
Motor column Location in spinal cord Target
Median motor column Present entire length Axial muscles
Hypaxial motor column Thoracic region Body wall muscles
Preganglionic motor column Thoracic region Sympathetic ganglion
Lateral motor column Brachial and lumbar region (both regions are further divided into medial and lateral domains) Muscles of the limbs
Phrenic motor column Cervical region Diaphragm[10]

Anatomy and physiology Edit

 
Spinal cord tracts
 
Location of lower motor neurons in spinal cord

Upper motor neurons Edit

Upper motor neurons originate in the motor cortex located in the precentral gyrus. The cells that make up the primary motor cortex are Betz cells, which are giant pyramidal cells. The axons of these cells descend from the cortex to form the corticospinal tract.[11] Corticomotorneurons project from the primary cortex directly onto motor neurons in the ventral horn of the spinal cord.[12][13] Their axons synapse on the spinal motor neurons of multiple muscles as well as on spinal interneurons.[12][13] They are unique to primates and it has been suggested that their function is the adaptive control of the hands including the relatively independent control of individual fingers.[13][14] Corticomotorneurons have so far only been found in the primary motor cortex and not in secondary motor areas.[13]

Nerve tracts Edit

Nerve tracts are bundles of axons as white matter, that carry action potentials to their effectors. In the spinal cord these descending tracts carry impulses from different regions. These tracts also serve as the place of origin for lower motor neurons. There are seven major descending motor tracts to be found in the spinal cord:[15]

Lower motor neurons Edit

Lower motor neurons are those that originate in the spinal cord and directly or indirectly innervate effector targets. The target of these neurons varies, but in the somatic nervous system the target will be some sort of muscle fiber. There are three primary categories of lower motor neurons, which can be further divided in sub-categories.[16]

According to their targets, motor neurons are classified into three broad categories:[17]

  • Somatic motor neurons
  • Special visceral motor neurons
  • General visceral motor neurons

Somatic motor neurons Edit

Somatic motor neurons originate in the central nervous system, project their axons to skeletal muscles[18] (such as the muscles of the limbs, abdominal, and intercostal muscles), which are involved in locomotion. The three types of these neurons are the alpha efferent neurons, beta efferent neurons, and gamma efferent neurons. They are called efferent to indicate the flow of information from the central nervous system (CNS) to the periphery.

  • Alpha motor neurons innervate extrafusal muscle fibers, which are the main force-generating component of a muscle. Their cell bodies are in the ventral horn of the spinal cord and they are sometimes called ventral horn cells. A single motor neuron may synapse with 150 muscle fibers on average.[19] The motor neuron and all of the muscle fibers to which it connects is a motor unit. Motor units are split up into 3 categories:[20]
    • Slow (S) motor units stimulate small muscle fibers, which contract very slowly and provide small amounts of energy but are very resistant to fatigue, so they are used to sustain muscular contraction, such as keeping the body upright. They gain their energy via oxidative means and hence require oxygen. They are also called red fibers.[20]
    • Fast fatiguing (FF) motor units stimulate larger muscle groups, which apply large amounts of force but fatigue very quickly. They are used for tasks that require large brief bursts of energy, such as jumping or running. They gain their energy via glycolytic means and hence do not require oxygen. They are called white fibers.[20]
    • Fast fatigue-resistant motor units stimulate moderate-sized muscles groups that do not react as fast as the FF motor units, but can be sustained much longer (as implied by the name) and provide more force than S motor units. These use both oxidative and glycolytic means to gain energy.[20]

In addition to voluntary skeletal muscle contraction, alpha motor neurons also contribute to muscle tone, the continuous force generated by noncontracting muscle to oppose stretching. When a muscle is stretched, sensory neurons within the muscle spindle detect the degree of stretch and send a signal to the CNS. The CNS activates alpha motor neurons in the spinal cord, which cause extrafusal muscle fibers to contract and thereby resist further stretching. This process is also called the stretch reflex.

  • Beta motor neurons innervate intrafusal muscle fibers of muscle spindles, with collaterals to extrafusal fibres. There are two types of beta motor neurons: Slow Contracting- These innervate extrafusal fibers. Fast Contracting- These innervate intrafusal fibers.[21]
  • Gamma motor neurons innervate intrafusal muscle fibers found within the muscle spindle. They regulate the sensitivity of the spindle to muscle stretching. With activation of gamma neurons, intrafusal muscle fibers contract so that only a small stretch is required to activate spindle sensory neurons and the stretch reflex. There are two types of gamma motor neurons: Dynamic- These focus on Bag1 fibers and enhance dynamic sensitivity. Static- These focus on Bag2 fibers and enhance stretch sensitivity.[21]
  • Regulatory factors of lower motor neurons
    • Size Principle – this relates to the soma of the motor neuron. This restricts larger neurons to receive a larger excitatory signal in order to stimulate the muscle fibers it innervates. By reducing unnecessary muscle fiber recruitment, the body is able to optimize energy consumption.[21]
    • Persistent Inward Current (PIC) – recent animal study research has shown that constant flow of ions such as calcium and sodium through channels in the soma and dendrites influence the synaptic input. An alternate way to think of this is that the post-synaptic neuron is being primed before receiving an impulse.[21]
    • After Hyper-polarization (AHP) – A trend has been identified that shows slow motor neurons to have more intense AHPs for a longer duration. One way to remember this is that slow muscle fibers can contract for longer, so it makes sense that their corresponding motor neurons fire at a slower rate.[21]

Special visceral motor neurons Edit

These are also known as branchial motor neurons, which are involved in facial expression, mastication, phonation, and swallowing. Associated cranial nerves are the oculomotor, abducens, trochlear, and hypoglossal nerves.[17]

Branch of NS Position Neurotransmitter
Somatic n/a Acetylcholine
Parasympathetic Preganglionic Acetylcholine
Parasympathetic Ganglionic Acetylcholine
Sympathetic Preganglionic Acetylcholine
Sympathetic Ganglionic Norepinephrine*
*Except fibers to sweat glands and certain blood vessels
Motor neuron neurotransmitters

General visceral motor neurons Edit

These motor neurons indirectly innervate cardiac muscle and smooth muscles of the viscera ( the muscles of the arteries): they synapse onto neurons located in ganglia of the autonomic nervous system (sympathetic and parasympathetic), located in the peripheral nervous system (PNS), which themselves directly innervate visceral muscles (and also some gland cells).

In consequence, the motor command of skeletal and branchial muscles is monosynaptic involving only one motor neuron, either somatic or branchial, which synapses onto the muscle. Comparatively, the command of visceral muscles is disynaptic involving two neurons: the general visceral motor neuron, located in the CNS, synapses onto a ganglionic neuron, located in the PNS, which synapses onto the muscle.

All vertebrate motor neurons are cholinergic, that is, they release the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Parasympathetic ganglionic neurons are also cholinergic, whereas most sympathetic ganglionic neurons are noradrenergic, that is, they release the neurotransmitter noradrenaline. (see Table)

Neuromuscular junctions Edit

A single motor neuron may innervate many muscle fibres and a muscle fibre can undergo many action potentials in the time taken for a single muscle twitch. As a result, if an action potential arrives before a twitch has completed, the twitches can superimpose on one another, either through summation or a tetanic contraction. In summation, the muscle is stimulated repetitively such that additional action potentials coming from the somatic nervous system arrive before the end of the twitch. The twitches thus superimpose on one another, leading to a force greater than that of a single twitch. A tetanic contraction is caused by constant, very high frequency stimulation - the action potentials come at such a rapid rate that individual twitches are indistinguishable, and tension rises smoothly eventually reaching a plateau.[5]

The interface between a motor neuron and muscle fiber is a specialized synapse called the neuromuscular junction. Upon adequate stimulation, the motor neuron releases a flood of acetylcholine (Ach) neurotransmitters from the axon terminals from synaptic vesicles bind with the plasma membrane. The acetylcholine molecules bind to postsynaptic receptors found within the motor end plate. Once two acetylcholine receptors have been bound, an ion channel is opened and sodium ions are allowed to flow into the cell. The influx of sodium into the cell causes depolarization and triggers a muscle action potential. T tubules of the sarcolemma are then stimulated to elicit calcium ion release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. It is this chemical release that causes the target muscle fiber to contract.[19]

In invertebrates, depending on the neurotransmitter released and the type of receptor it binds, the response in the muscle fiber could be either excitatory or inhibitory. For vertebrates, however, the response of a muscle fiber to a neurotransmitter can only be excitatory, in other words, contractile. Muscle relaxation and inhibition of muscle contraction in vertebrates is obtained only by inhibition of the motor neuron itself. This is how muscle relaxants work by acting on the motor neurons that innervate muscles (by decreasing their electrophysiological activity) or on cholinergic neuromuscular junctions, rather than on the muscles themselves.

Synaptic input to motor neurons Edit

Motor neurons receive synaptic input from premotor neurons. Premotor neurons can be 1) spinal interneurons that have cell bodies in the spinal cord, 2) sensory neurons that convey information from the periphery and synapse directly onto motoneurons, 3) descending neurons that convey information from the brain and brainstem. The synapses can be excitatory, inhibitory, electrical, or neuromodulatory. For any given motor neuron, determining the relative contribution of different input sources is difficult, but advances in connectomics have made it possible for fruit fly motor neurons. In the fly, motor neurons controlling the legs and wings are found in the ventral nerve cord, homologous to the spinal cord. Fly motor neurons vary by over 100X in the total number of input synapses. However, each motor neuron gets similar fractions of its synapses from each premotor source: ~70% from neurons within the VNC, ~10% from descending neurons, ~3% from sensory neurons, and ~6% from VNC neurons that also send a process up to the brain. The remaining 10% of synapses come from neuronal fragments that are unidentified by current image segmentation algorithms and require additional manual segmentation to measure.[22]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Afferent vs. Efferent: AP® Psych Crash Course Review | Albert.io". Albert Resources. 2019-12-02. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  2. ^ Tortora, Gerard; Derrickson, Bryan (2014). Principles of Anatomy & Physiology (14th ed.). New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 406, 502, 541. ISBN 978-1-118-34500-9.
  3. ^ Pocock, Gillian; Richards, Christopher D. (2006). Human physiology : the basis of medicine (3rd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 151–153. ISBN 978-0-19-856878-0.
  4. ^ Schacter D.L., Gilbert D.T., and Wegner D.M. (2011) Psychology second edition. New York, NY: Worth
  5. ^ a b Russell, Peter (2013). Biology - Exploring the Diversity of Life. Toronto: Nelson Education. p. 946. ISBN 978-0-17-665133-6.
  6. ^ Tortora, Gerard; Derrickson, Bryan (2011). Principles of Anatomy Physiology (14th ed.). New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 1090–1099. ISBN 978-1-118-34500-9.
  7. ^ Sadler, T. (2010). Langman's medical embryology (11th ed.). Philadelphia: Lippincott William & Wilkins. pp. 299–301. ISBN 978-0-7817-9069-7.
  8. ^ a b Davis-Dusenbery, BN; Williams, LA; Klim, JR; Eggan, K (February 2014). "How to make spinal motor neurons". Development. 141 (3): 491–501. doi:10.1242/dev.097410. PMID 24449832.
  9. ^ Edgar R, Mazor Y, Rinon A, Blumenthal J, Golan Y, Buzhor E, Livnat I, Ben-Ari S, Lieder I, Shitrit A, Gilboa Y, Ben-Yehudah A, Edri O, Shraga N, Bogoch Y, Leshansky L, Aharoni S, West MD, Warshawsky D, Shtrichman R (2013). "LifeMap Discovery™: The Embryonic Development, Stem Cells, and Regenerative Medicine Research Portal". PLOS ONE. 8 (7): e66629. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...866629E. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0066629. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 3714290. PMID 23874394.
  10. ^ Philippidou, Polyxeni; Walsh, Carolyn; Aubin, Josée; Jeannotte, Lucie; Dasen, Jeremy S. (2012). "Sustained Hox5 Gene Activity is Required for Respiratory Motor Neuron Development". Nature Neuroscience. 15 (12): 1636–1644. doi:10.1038/nn.3242. ISSN 1097-6256. PMC 3676175. PMID 23103965.
  11. ^ Fitzpatrick, D. (2001) The Primary Motor Cortex: Upper Motor Neurons That Initiate Complex Voluntary Movements. In D. Purves, G.J. Augustine, D. Fitzpatrick, et al. (Ed.), Neuroscience. Retrieved from "The Primary Motor Cortex: Upper Motor Neurons That Initiate Complex Voluntary Movements - Neuroscience - NCBI Bookshelf". from the original on 2018-06-05. Retrieved 2017-11-30.
  12. ^ a b Mack, Sarah; Kandel, Eric R.; Jessell, Thomas M.; Schwartz, James H.; Siegelbaum, Steven A.; Hudspeth, A. J. (2013). Principles of neural science. Kandel, Eric R. (5th ed.). New York. ISBN 9780071390118. OCLC 795553723.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ a b c d Lemon, Roger N. (April 4, 2008). "Descending Pathways in Motor Control". Annual Review of Neuroscience. 31 (1): 195–218. doi:10.1146/annurev.neuro.31.060407.125547. ISSN 0147-006X. PMID 18558853. S2CID 16139768.
  14. ^ Isa, T (April 2007). "Direct and indirect cortico-motoneuronal pathways and control of hand/arm movements". Physiology. 22 (2): 145–152. doi:10.1152/physiol.00045.2006. PMID 17420305.
  15. ^ Tortora, G. J., Derrickson, B. (2011). The Spinal Cord and Spinal Nerves. In B. Roesch, L. Elfers, K. Trost, et al. (Ed.), Principles of Anatomy and Physiology (pp. 443-468). New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
  16. ^ Fitzpatrick, D. (2001) Lower Motor Neuron Circuits and Motor Control: Overview. In D. Purves, G.J. Augustine, D. Fitzpatrick, et al. (Ed.), Neuroscience. Retrieved from "Lower Motor Neuron Circuits and Motor Control - Neuroscience - NCBI Bookshelf". from the original on 2018-06-05. Retrieved 2017-11-30.
  17. ^ a b "CHAPTER NINE". www.unc.edu. from the original on 2017-11-05. Retrieved 2017-12-08.
  18. ^ Silverthorn, Dee Unglaub (2010). Human Physiology: An Integrated Approach. Pearson. p. 398. ISBN 978-0-321-55980-7.
  19. ^ a b Tortora, G. J., Derrickson, B. (2011). Muscular Tissue. In B. Roesch, L. Elfers, K. Trost, et al. (Ed.), Principles of Anatomy and Physiology (pp. 305-307, 311). New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
  20. ^ a b c d Purves D, Augustine GJ, Fitzpatrick D, et al., editors: Neuroscience. 2nd edition, 2001 "The Motor Unit - Neuroscience - NCBI Bookshelf". from the original on 2018-06-05. Retrieved 2017-09-05.
  21. ^ a b c d e Manuel, Marin; Zytnicki, Daniel (2011). "Alpha, Beta, and Gamma Motoneurons: Functional Diversity in the Motor System's Final Pathway". Journal of Integrative Neuroscience. 10 (3): 243–276. doi:10.1142/S0219635211002786. ISSN 0219-6352. PMID 21960303. S2CID 21582283.
  22. ^ Azevedo, Anthony; Lesser, Ellen; Mark, Brandon; Phelps, Jasper; Elabbady, Leila; Kuroda, Sumiya; Sustar, Anne; Moussa, Anthony; Kandelwal, Avinash; Dallmann, Chris J.; Agrawal, Sweta; Lee, Su-Yee J.; Pratt, Brandon; Cook, Andrew; Skutt-Kakaria, Kyobi (2022-12-15). "Tools for comprehensive reconstruction and analysis of Drosophila motor circuits": 2022.12.15.520299. doi:10.1101/2022.12.15.520299. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Sources Edit

  • Sherwood, L. (2001). Human Physiology: From Cells to Systems (4th ed.). Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks-Cole. ISBN 0-534-37254-6.
  • Marieb, E. N.; Mallatt, J. (1997). Human Anatomy (2nd ed.). Menlo Park, CA: Benjamin/Cummings. ISBN 0-8053-4068-8.

motor, neuron, motor, neuron, motoneuron, efferent, neuron, neuron, whose, cell, body, located, motor, cortex, brainstem, spinal, cord, whose, axon, fiber, projects, spinal, cord, outside, spinal, cord, directly, indirectly, control, effector, organs, mainly, . A motor neuron or motoneuron or efferent neuron 1 is a neuron whose cell body is located in the motor cortex brainstem or the spinal cord and whose axon fiber projects to the spinal cord or outside of the spinal cord to directly or indirectly control effector organs mainly muscles and glands 2 There are two types of motor neuron upper motor neurons and lower motor neurons Axons from upper motor neurons synapse onto interneurons in the spinal cord and occasionally directly onto lower motor neurons 3 The axons from the lower motor neurons are efferent nerve fibers that carry signals from the spinal cord to the effectors 4 Types of lower motor neurons are alpha motor neurons beta motor neurons and gamma motor neurons Motor neuronsMicrograph of the hypoglossal nucleus showing motor neurons with their characteristic coarse Nissl substance tigroid cytoplasm H amp E LFB stain DetailsLocationVentral horn of the spinal cord some cranial nerve nucleiShapeProjection neuronFunctionExcitatory projection to NMJ NeurotransmitterUMN to LMN glutamate LMN to NMJ AChPresynaptic connectionsPrimary motor cortex via the Corticospinal tractPostsynaptic connectionsMuscle fibers and other neuronsIdentifiersMeSHD009046NeuroLex IDnifext 103TA98A14 2 00 021TA26131FMA83617Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy edit on Wikidata A single motor neuron may innervate many muscle fibres and a muscle fibre can undergo many action potentials in the time taken for a single muscle twitch Innervation takes place at a neuromuscular junction and twitches can become superimposed as a result of summation or a tetanic contraction Individual twitches can become indistinguishable and tension rises smoothly eventually reaching a plateau 5 Contents 1 Development 2 Anatomy and physiology 2 1 Upper motor neurons 2 2 Nerve tracts 2 3 Lower motor neurons 2 3 1 Somatic motor neurons 2 3 2 Special visceral motor neurons 2 3 3 General visceral motor neurons 2 4 Neuromuscular junctions 2 5 Synaptic input to motor neurons 3 See also 4 References 5 SourcesDevelopment EditMotor neurons begin to develop early in embryonic development and motor function continues to develop well into childhood 6 In the neural tube cells are specified to either the rostral caudal axis or ventral dorsal axis The axons of motor neurons begin to appear in the fourth week of development from the ventral region of the ventral dorsal axis the basal plate 7 This homeodomain is known as the motor neural progenitor domain pMN Transcription factors here include Pax6 OLIG2 Nkx 6 1 and Nkx 6 2 which are regulated by sonic hedgehog Shh The OLIG2 gene being the most important due to its role in promoting Ngn2 expression a gene that causes cell cycle exiting as well as promoting further transcription factors associated with motor neuron development 8 Further specification of motor neurons occurs when retinoic acid fibroblast growth factor Wnts and TGFb are integrated into the various Hox transcription factors There are 13 Hox transcription factors and along with the signals determine whether a motor neuron will be more rostral or caudal in character In the spinal column Hox 4 11 sort motor neurons to one of the five motor columns 8 Motor columns of spinal cord 9 Motor column Location in spinal cord TargetMedian motor column Present entire length Axial musclesHypaxial motor column Thoracic region Body wall musclesPreganglionic motor column Thoracic region Sympathetic ganglionLateral motor column Brachial and lumbar region both regions are further divided into medial and lateral domains Muscles of the limbsPhrenic motor column Cervical region Diaphragm 10 Anatomy and physiology Edit nbsp Spinal cord tracts nbsp Location of lower motor neurons in spinal cordUpper motor neurons Edit Upper motor neurons originate in the motor cortex located in the precentral gyrus The cells that make up the primary motor cortex are Betz cells which are giant pyramidal cells The axons of these cells descend from the cortex to form the corticospinal tract 11 Corticomotorneurons project from the primary cortex directly onto motor neurons in the ventral horn of the spinal cord 12 13 Their axons synapse on the spinal motor neurons of multiple muscles as well as on spinal interneurons 12 13 They are unique to primates and it has been suggested that their function is the adaptive control of the hands including the relatively independent control of individual fingers 13 14 Corticomotorneurons have so far only been found in the primary motor cortex and not in secondary motor areas 13 Nerve tracts Edit Nerve tracts are bundles of axons as white matter that carry action potentials to their effectors In the spinal cord these descending tracts carry impulses from different regions These tracts also serve as the place of origin for lower motor neurons There are seven major descending motor tracts to be found in the spinal cord 15 Lateral corticospinal tract Rubrospinal tract Lateral reticulospinal tract Vestibulospinal tract Medial reticulospinal tract Tectospinal tract Anterior corticospinal tractLower motor neurons Edit Lower motor neurons are those that originate in the spinal cord and directly or indirectly innervate effector targets The target of these neurons varies but in the somatic nervous system the target will be some sort of muscle fiber There are three primary categories of lower motor neurons which can be further divided in sub categories 16 According to their targets motor neurons are classified into three broad categories 17 Somatic motor neurons Special visceral motor neurons General visceral motor neuronsSomatic motor neurons Edit Somatic motor neurons originate in the central nervous system project their axons to skeletal muscles 18 such as the muscles of the limbs abdominal and intercostal muscles which are involved in locomotion The three types of these neurons are the alpha efferent neurons beta efferent neurons and gamma efferent neurons They are called efferent to indicate the flow of information from the central nervous system CNS to the periphery Alpha motor neurons innervate extrafusal muscle fibers which are the main force generating component of a muscle Their cell bodies are in the ventral horn of the spinal cord and they are sometimes called ventral horn cells A single motor neuron may synapse with 150 muscle fibers on average 19 The motor neuron and all of the muscle fibers to which it connects is a motor unit Motor units are split up into 3 categories 20 Slow S motor units stimulate small muscle fibers which contract very slowly and provide small amounts of energy but are very resistant to fatigue so they are used to sustain muscular contraction such as keeping the body upright They gain their energy via oxidative means and hence require oxygen They are also called red fibers 20 Fast fatiguing FF motor units stimulate larger muscle groups which apply large amounts of force but fatigue very quickly They are used for tasks that require large brief bursts of energy such as jumping or running They gain their energy via glycolytic means and hence do not require oxygen They are called white fibers 20 Fast fatigue resistant motor units stimulate moderate sized muscles groups that do not react as fast as the FF motor units but can be sustained much longer as implied by the name and provide more force than S motor units These use both oxidative and glycolytic means to gain energy 20 In addition to voluntary skeletal muscle contraction alpha motor neurons also contribute to muscle tone the continuous force generated by noncontracting muscle to oppose stretching When a muscle is stretched sensory neurons within the muscle spindle detect the degree of stretch and send a signal to the CNS The CNS activates alpha motor neurons in the spinal cord which cause extrafusal muscle fibers to contract and thereby resist further stretching This process is also called the stretch reflex Beta motor neurons innervate intrafusal muscle fibers of muscle spindles with collaterals to extrafusal fibres There are two types of beta motor neurons Slow Contracting These innervate extrafusal fibers Fast Contracting These innervate intrafusal fibers 21 Gamma motor neurons innervate intrafusal muscle fibers found within the muscle spindle They regulate the sensitivity of the spindle to muscle stretching With activation of gamma neurons intrafusal muscle fibers contract so that only a small stretch is required to activate spindle sensory neurons and the stretch reflex There are two types of gamma motor neurons Dynamic These focus on Bag1 fibers and enhance dynamic sensitivity Static These focus on Bag2 fibers and enhance stretch sensitivity 21 Regulatory factors of lower motor neurons Size Principle this relates to the soma of the motor neuron This restricts larger neurons to receive a larger excitatory signal in order to stimulate the muscle fibers it innervates By reducing unnecessary muscle fiber recruitment the body is able to optimize energy consumption 21 Persistent Inward Current PIC recent animal study research has shown that constant flow of ions such as calcium and sodium through channels in the soma and dendrites influence the synaptic input An alternate way to think of this is that the post synaptic neuron is being primed before receiving an impulse 21 After Hyper polarization AHP A trend has been identified that shows slow motor neurons to have more intense AHPs for a longer duration One way to remember this is that slow muscle fibers can contract for longer so it makes sense that their corresponding motor neurons fire at a slower rate 21 Special visceral motor neurons Edit These are also known as branchial motor neurons which are involved in facial expression mastication phonation and swallowing Associated cranial nerves are the oculomotor abducens trochlear and hypoglossal nerves 17 Branch of NS Position NeurotransmitterSomatic n a AcetylcholineParasympathetic Preganglionic AcetylcholineParasympathetic Ganglionic AcetylcholineSympathetic Preganglionic AcetylcholineSympathetic Ganglionic Norepinephrine Except fibers to sweat glands and certain blood vessels Motor neuron neurotransmittersGeneral visceral motor neurons Edit These motor neurons indirectly innervate cardiac muscle and smooth muscles of the viscera the muscles of the arteries they synapse onto neurons located in ganglia of the autonomic nervous system sympathetic and parasympathetic located in the peripheral nervous system PNS which themselves directly innervate visceral muscles and also some gland cells In consequence the motor command of skeletal and branchial muscles is monosynaptic involving only one motor neuron either somatic or branchial which synapses onto the muscle Comparatively the command of visceral muscles is disynaptic involving two neurons the general visceral motor neuron located in the CNS synapses onto a ganglionic neuron located in the PNS which synapses onto the muscle All vertebrate motor neurons are cholinergic that is they release the neurotransmitter acetylcholine Parasympathetic ganglionic neurons are also cholinergic whereas most sympathetic ganglionic neurons are noradrenergic that is they release the neurotransmitter noradrenaline see Table Neuromuscular junctions Edit A single motor neuron may innervate many muscle fibres and a muscle fibre can undergo many action potentials in the time taken for a single muscle twitch As a result if an action potential arrives before a twitch has completed the twitches can superimpose on one another either through summation or a tetanic contraction In summation the muscle is stimulated repetitively such that additional action potentials coming from the somatic nervous system arrive before the end of the twitch The twitches thus superimpose on one another leading to a force greater than that of a single twitch A tetanic contraction is caused by constant very high frequency stimulation the action potentials come at such a rapid rate that individual twitches are indistinguishable and tension rises smoothly eventually reaching a plateau 5 The interface between a motor neuron and muscle fiber is a specialized synapse called the neuromuscular junction Upon adequate stimulation the motor neuron releases a flood of acetylcholine Ach neurotransmitters from the axon terminals from synaptic vesicles bind with the plasma membrane The acetylcholine molecules bind to postsynaptic receptors found within the motor end plate Once two acetylcholine receptors have been bound an ion channel is opened and sodium ions are allowed to flow into the cell The influx of sodium into the cell causes depolarization and triggers a muscle action potential T tubules of the sarcolemma are then stimulated to elicit calcium ion release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum It is this chemical release that causes the target muscle fiber to contract 19 In invertebrates depending on the neurotransmitter released and the type of receptor it binds the response in the muscle fiber could be either excitatory or inhibitory For vertebrates however the response of a muscle fiber to a neurotransmitter can only be excitatory in other words contractile Muscle relaxation and inhibition of muscle contraction in vertebrates is obtained only by inhibition of the motor neuron itself This is how muscle relaxants work by acting on the motor neurons that innervate muscles by decreasing their electrophysiological activity or on cholinergic neuromuscular junctions rather than on the muscles themselves Synaptic input to motor neurons Edit Motor neurons receive synaptic input from premotor neurons Premotor neurons can be 1 spinal interneurons that have cell bodies in the spinal cord 2 sensory neurons that convey information from the periphery and synapse directly onto motoneurons 3 descending neurons that convey information from the brain and brainstem The synapses can be excitatory inhibitory electrical or neuromodulatory For any given motor neuron determining the relative contribution of different input sources is difficult but advances in connectomics have made it possible for fruit fly motor neurons In the fly motor neurons controlling the legs and wings are found in the ventral nerve cord homologous to the spinal cord Fly motor neurons vary by over 100X in the total number of input synapses However each motor neuron gets similar fractions of its synapses from each premotor source 70 from neurons within the VNC 10 from descending neurons 3 from sensory neurons and 6 from VNC neurons that also send a process up to the brain The remaining 10 of synapses come from neuronal fragments that are unidentified by current image segmentation algorithms and require additional manual segmentation to measure 22 See also EditBetz cell Central chromatolysis Motor dysfunction Motor neuron disease Nerve Efferent nerve fiber Motor nerveReferences Edit Afferent vs Efferent AP Psych Crash Course Review Albert io Albert Resources 2019 12 02 Retrieved 2021 04 25 Tortora Gerard Derrickson Bryan 2014 Principles of Anatomy amp Physiology 14th ed New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 406 502 541 ISBN 978 1 118 34500 9 Pocock Gillian Richards Christopher D 2006 Human physiology the basis of medicine 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press pp 151 153 ISBN 978 0 19 856878 0 Schacter D L Gilbert D T and Wegner D M 2011 Psychology second edition New York NY Worth a b Russell Peter 2013 Biology Exploring the Diversity of Life Toronto Nelson Education p 946 ISBN 978 0 17 665133 6 Tortora Gerard Derrickson Bryan 2011 Principles of Anatomy Physiology 14th ed New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 1090 1099 ISBN 978 1 118 34500 9 Sadler T 2010 Langman s medical embryology 11th ed Philadelphia Lippincott William amp Wilkins pp 299 301 ISBN 978 0 7817 9069 7 a b Davis Dusenbery BN Williams LA Klim JR Eggan K February 2014 How to make spinal motor neurons Development 141 3 491 501 doi 10 1242 dev 097410 PMID 24449832 Edgar R Mazor Y Rinon A Blumenthal J Golan Y Buzhor E Livnat I Ben Ari S Lieder I Shitrit A Gilboa Y Ben Yehudah A Edri O Shraga N Bogoch Y Leshansky L Aharoni S West MD Warshawsky D Shtrichman R 2013 LifeMap Discovery The Embryonic Development Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine Research Portal PLOS ONE 8 7 e66629 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 866629E doi 10 1371 journal pone 0066629 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 3714290 PMID 23874394 Philippidou Polyxeni Walsh Carolyn Aubin Josee Jeannotte Lucie Dasen Jeremy S 2012 Sustained Hox5 Gene Activity is Required for Respiratory Motor Neuron Development Nature Neuroscience 15 12 1636 1644 doi 10 1038 nn 3242 ISSN 1097 6256 PMC 3676175 PMID 23103965 Fitzpatrick D 2001 The Primary Motor Cortex Upper Motor Neurons That Initiate Complex Voluntary Movements In D Purves G J Augustine D Fitzpatrick et al Ed Neuroscience Retrieved from The Primary Motor Cortex Upper Motor Neurons That Initiate Complex Voluntary Movements Neuroscience NCBI Bookshelf Archived from the original on 2018 06 05 Retrieved 2017 11 30 a b Mack Sarah Kandel Eric R Jessell Thomas M Schwartz James H Siegelbaum Steven A Hudspeth A J 2013 Principles of neural science Kandel Eric R 5th ed New York ISBN 9780071390118 OCLC 795553723 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d Lemon Roger N April 4 2008 Descending Pathways in Motor Control Annual Review of Neuroscience 31 1 195 218 doi 10 1146 annurev neuro 31 060407 125547 ISSN 0147 006X PMID 18558853 S2CID 16139768 Isa T April 2007 Direct and indirect cortico motoneuronal pathways and control of hand arm movements Physiology 22 2 145 152 doi 10 1152 physiol 00045 2006 PMID 17420305 Tortora G J Derrickson B 2011 The Spinal Cord and Spinal Nerves In B Roesch L Elfers K Trost et al Ed Principles of Anatomy and Physiology pp 443 468 New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons Inc Fitzpatrick D 2001 Lower Motor Neuron Circuits and Motor Control Overview In D Purves G J Augustine D Fitzpatrick et al Ed Neuroscience Retrieved from Lower Motor Neuron Circuits and Motor Control Neuroscience NCBI Bookshelf Archived from the original on 2018 06 05 Retrieved 2017 11 30 a b CHAPTER NINE www unc edu Archived from the original on 2017 11 05 Retrieved 2017 12 08 Silverthorn Dee Unglaub 2010 Human Physiology An Integrated Approach Pearson p 398 ISBN 978 0 321 55980 7 a b Tortora G J Derrickson B 2011 Muscular Tissue In B Roesch L Elfers K Trost et al Ed Principles of Anatomy and Physiology pp 305 307 311 New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons Inc a b c d Purves D Augustine GJ Fitzpatrick D et al editors Neuroscience 2nd edition 2001 The Motor Unit Neuroscience NCBI Bookshelf Archived from the original on 2018 06 05 Retrieved 2017 09 05 a b c d e Manuel Marin Zytnicki Daniel 2011 Alpha Beta and Gamma Motoneurons Functional Diversity in the Motor System s Final Pathway Journal of Integrative Neuroscience 10 3 243 276 doi 10 1142 S0219635211002786 ISSN 0219 6352 PMID 21960303 S2CID 21582283 Azevedo Anthony Lesser Ellen Mark Brandon Phelps Jasper Elabbady Leila Kuroda Sumiya Sustar Anne Moussa Anthony Kandelwal Avinash Dallmann Chris J Agrawal Sweta Lee Su Yee J Pratt Brandon Cook Andrew Skutt Kakaria Kyobi 2022 12 15 Tools for comprehensive reconstruction and analysis of Drosophila motor circuits 2022 12 15 520299 doi 10 1101 2022 12 15 520299 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Sources EditSherwood L 2001 Human Physiology From Cells to Systems 4th ed Pacific Grove CA Brooks Cole ISBN 0 534 37254 6 Marieb E N Mallatt J 1997 Human Anatomy 2nd ed Menlo Park CA Benjamin Cummings ISBN 0 8053 4068 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Motor neuron amp oldid 1157212565, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.