Literature DB >> 26467515

Information processing in the hemisphere of the cerebellar cortex for control of wrist movement.

Saeka Tomatsu1, Takahiro Ishikawa2, Yoshiaki Tsunoda3, Jongho Lee2, Donna S Hoffman4, Shinji Kakei5.   

Abstract

A region of cerebellar lobules V and VI makes strong loop connections with the primary motor (M1) and premotor (PM) cortical areas and is assumed to play essential roles in limb motor control. To examine its functional role, we compared the activities of its input, intermediate, and output elements, i.e., mossy fibers (MFs), Golgi cells (GoCs), and Purkinje cells (PCs), in three monkeys performing wrist movements in two different forearm postures. The results revealed distinct steps of information processing. First, MF activities displayed temporal and directional properties that were remarkably similar to those of M1/PM neurons, suggesting that MFs relay near copies of outputs from these motor areas. Second, all GoCs had a stereotyped pattern of activity independent of movement direction or forearm posture. Instead, GoC activity resembled an average of all MF activities. Therefore, inhibitory GoCs appear to provide a filtering function that passes only prominently modulated MF inputs to granule cells. Third, PCs displayed highly complex spatiotemporal patterns of activity, with coordinate frames distinct from those of MF inputs and directional tuning that changed abruptly before movement onset. The complexity of PC activities may reflect rapidly changing properties of the peripheral motor apparatus during movement. Overall, the cerebellar cortex appears to transform a representation of outputs from M1/PM into different movement representations in a posture-dependent manner and could work as part of a forward model that predicts the state of the peripheral motor apparatus.
Copyright © 2016 the American Physiological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Golgi cell; Purkinje cell; cerebellar cortex; monkey; mossy fiber; motor control

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26467515      PMCID: PMC4760480          DOI: 10.1152/jn.00530.2015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


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