Literature DB >> 23812590

Dual-mode operation of neuronal networks involved in left-right alternation.

Adolfo E Talpalar1, Julien Bouvier, Lotta Borgius, Gilles Fortin, Alessandra Pierani, Ole Kiehn.   

Abstract

All forms of locomotion are repetitive motor activities that require coordinated bilateral activation of muscles. The executive elements of locomotor control are networks of spinal neurons that determine gait pattern through the sequential activation of motor-neuron pools on either side of the body axis. However, little is known about the constraints that link left-right coordination to locomotor speed. Recent advances have indicated that both excitatory and inhibitory commissural neurons may be involved in left-right coordination. But the neural underpinnings of this, and a possible causal link between these different groups of commissural neurons and left-right alternation, are lacking. Here we show, using intersectional mouse genetics, that ablation of a group of transcriptionally defined commissural neurons--the V0 population--leads to a quadrupedal hopping at all frequencies of locomotion. The selective ablation of inhibitory V0 neurons leads to a lack of left-right pattern at low frequencies, mixed coordination at medium frequencies, and alternation at high locomotor frequencies. When ablation is targeted to excitatory V0 neurons, left-right alternation is present at low frequencies, and hopping is restricted to medium and high locomotor frequencies. Therefore, the intrinsic logic of the central control of locomotion incorporates a modular organization, with two subgroups of V0 neurons required for the existence of left-right alternating modes at different speeds of locomotion. The two molecularly distinct sets of commissural neurons may constrain species-related naturally occurring frequency-dependent coordination and be involved in the evolution of different gaits.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23812590     DOI: 10.1038/nature12286

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  36 in total

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4.  Decoding the rules of recruitment of excitatory interneurons in the adult zebrafish locomotor network.

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Review 9.  Circuits controlling vertebrate locomotion: moving in a new direction.

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  132 in total

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Review 4.  Facing the challenge of mammalian neural microcircuits: taking a few breaths may help.

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Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2015-01-01       Impact factor: 5.182

5.  Organization of left-right coordination of neuronal activity in the mammalian spinal cord: Insights from computational modelling.

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6.  Differential Contribution of V0 Interneurons to Execution of Rhythmic and Nonrhythmic Motor Behaviors.

Authors:  Pavel V Zelenin; Manideep G Vemula; Vladimir F Lyalka; Ole Kiehn; Adolfo E Talpalar; Tatiana G Deliagina
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7.  Nervous mechanisms of locomotion in different directions.

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8.  Atoh1-dependent rhombic lip neurons are required for temporal delay between independent respiratory oscillators in embryonic mice.

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9.  Brainstem Steering of Locomotor Activity in the Newborn Rat.

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Review 10.  Diversity of molecularly defined spinal interneurons engaged in mammalian locomotor pattern generation.

Authors:  Lea Ziskind-Conhaim; Shawn Hochman
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