P. Andre et al., ROLE OF MUSCARINIC RECEPTORS IN THE CEREBELLAR CONTROL OF THE VESTIBULOSPINAL REFLEX GAIN - CELLULAR MECHANISMS, Acta oto-laryngologica, 1995, pp. 87-91
Most of the inhibitory Purkinje (P-) cells of the cerebellar anterior
vermis fire out-of-phase with respect to the excitatory vestibulospina
l neurons during roll tilt of the animal, thus exerting a positive inf
luence on the gain of the vestibulospinal reflex (VSR). The responses
of these P-cells depend on activation of glutamatergic excitatory mess
y fibers-granule cells, but they are likely to be shaped by GABAergic
inhibitory interneurons. The cerebellar cortex contains cholinergic fi
bers and both muscarinic and nicotinic receptors. In decerebrate cats
intravermal injection of the muscarinic agonist bethanechol increased
the VSR gain. The cellular mechanisms underlying these gain changes we
re studied in anesthetized Sprague-Dawley rats by microiontophoresis.
Application of bethanechol (10-60 nA, 300 s) increased the response of
vermal P-cells to pulses of glutamate (22/33 cells) or GABA (23/25 ce
lls). These effects, which were blocked by the muscarinic antagonist s
copolamine, lasted up to 15-40 min and occurred regardless of whether
bethanecol altered the basal firing rate of the cells. We propose that
the increase of P-cell responses to both excitatory and inhibitory ne
urotransmitters following activation of muscarinic receptors enhances
the amplitude of modulation of these neurons to animal tilt, thus incr
easing the gain of the VSR.