| Literature DB >> 33357441 |
Shinichiro Tsutsumi1, Oscar Chadney2, Tin-Long Yiu2, Edgar Bäumler2, Lavinia Faraggiana2, Maxime Beau2, Michael Häusser3.
Abstract
Cerebellar neurons can signal sensory and motor events, but their role in active sensorimotor processing remains unclear. We record and manipulate Purkinje cell activity during a task that requires mice to rapidly discriminate between multisensory and unisensory stimuli before motor initiation. Neuropixels recordings show that both sensory stimuli and motor initiation are represented by short-latency simple spikes. Optogenetic manipulation of short-latency simple spikes abolishes or delays motor initiation in a rate-dependent manner, indicating a role in motor initiation and its timing. Two-photon calcium imaging reveals task-related coherence of complex spikes organized into conserved alternating parasagittal stripes. The coherence of sensory-evoked complex spikes increases with learning and correlates with enhanced temporal precision of motor initiation. These results suggest that both simple spikes and complex spikes govern sensory-driven motor initiation: simple spikes modulate its latency, and complex spikes refine its temporal precision, providing specific cellular substrates for cerebellar sensorimotor control.Entities:
Keywords: purkinje cells, simple spikes, complex spikestwo-photon imaging, optogenetics, neuropixels, cerebellum, multisensory, timing, motor initiation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33357441 PMCID: PMC7773552 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.108537
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423