Literature DB >> 33446518

Premotor Ramping of Thalamic Neuronal Activity Is Modulated by Nigral Inputs and Contributes to Control the Timing of Action Release.

Julien Catanese1, Dieter Jaeger1.   

Abstract

The ventromedial (VM)/ventro-anterior-lateral (VAL) motor thalamus is a key junction within the brain circuits sustaining normal and pathologic motor control functions and decision-making. In this area of thalamus, on one hand, the inhibitory nigro-thalamic pathway provides a main output from the basal ganglia, and, on the other hand, motor thalamo-cortical loops are involved in the maintenance of ramping preparatory activity before goal-directed movements. To better understand the nigral impact on thalamic activity, we recorded electrophysiological responses from VM/VAL neurons while male and female mice were performing a delayed right/left decision licking task. Analysis of correct (corr) and error trials revealed that thalamic ramping activity was stronger for premature licks (impulsive action) and weaker for trials with no licks [omission (omi)] compared with correct trials. Suppressing ramping activity through optogenetic activation of nigral terminals in the motor thalamus during the delay epoch of the task led to a reduced probability of impulsive action and an increased amount of omissions trials. We propose a parsimonious model explaining our data and conclude that a thalamic ramping mechanism contributes to the control of proper timing of action release and that inhibitory nigral inputs are sufficient to interrupt this mechanism and modulate the amount of motor impulsivity in this task.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Coordinated neural activity in motor circuits is essential for correct movement preparation and execution, and even slight imbalances in neural processing can lead to failure in behavioral tasks or motor disorders. Here we focused on how failure to regulate the control of activity balance in the motor thalamus can be implicated in impulsive action release or omissions to act, through an activity ramping mechanism that is required for proper action release. Using optogenetic activation of inhibitory basal ganglia terminals in motor thalamus we show that basal ganglia input is well positioned to control this ramping activity and determine the timing of action initiation.
Copyright © 2021 the authors.

Entities:  

Keywords:  VM thalamus; basal ganglia; behavior; electrophysiology; mouse; optogenetics

Year:  2021        PMID: 33446518      PMCID: PMC7939094          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1204-20.2020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  56 in total

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