| Literature DB >> 18498740 |
Ruben S Van Der Giessen1, Sebastiaan K Koekkoek, Stijn van Dorp, Jornt R De Gruijl, Alexander Cupido, Sara Khosrovani, Bjorn Dortland, Kerstin Wellershaus, Joachim Degen, Jim Deuchars, Elke C Fuchs, Hannah Monyer, Klaus Willecke, Marcel T G De Jeu, Chris I De Zeeuw.
Abstract
The level of electrotonic coupling in the inferior olive is extremely high, but its functional role in cerebellar motor control remains elusive. Here, we subjected mice that lack olivary coupling to paradigms that require learning-dependent timing. Cx36-deficient mice showed impaired timing of both locomotion and eye-blink responses that were conditioned to a tone. The latencies of their olivary spike activities in response to the unconditioned stimulus were significantly more variable than those in wild-types. Whole-cell recordings of olivary neurons in vivo showed that these differences in spike timing result at least in part from altered interactions with their subthreshold oscillations. These results, combined with analyses of olivary activities in computer simulations at both the cellular and systems level, suggest that electrotonic coupling among olivary neurons by gap junctions is essential for proper timing of their action potentials and thereby for learning-dependent timing in cerebellar motor control.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18498740 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2008.03.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 17.173