4.6 Article

Temporal dynamics of the cerebello-cortical convergence in ventro-lateral motor thalamus

期刊

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
卷 599, 期 7, 页码 2055-2073

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP280455

关键词

cerebellum; cerebral cortex; dual‐ optical stimulation; motor thalamus

资金

  1. Dutch organization for life sciences (NWO-ALW
  2. VIDI grant) [016.121.346]
  3. Dutch organization for Medical Sciences (TOP-GO) [91210067]
  4. Dutch organization for life sciences (NWO-ALM
  5. VENI grant) [863.14.001]
  6. Dutch organization for life sciences (NWO-CAS grant) [012.200.14]
  7. Erasmus MC fellowship
  8. Dutch Organization for Medical Sciences (Zon-MW
  9. TOP-GO) [91210067]
  10. Dutch Organization for Life Sciences (ALW) [854.10.004]
  11. ERC-adv [294775]
  12. ERC-POC [768914]
  13. LISTEN of the EU [6]
  14. Medical NeuroDelta [7]
  15. Dutch Organization for Medical Sciences (ZonMw)
  16. Dutch Organization for Life Sciences (ALW-ENW-Klein)
  17. European Research Council
  18. EU LISTEN Innovative Training Network programme
  19. Medical NeuroDelta programme
  20. LSH-NWO(Crossover, INTENSE)
  21. Albinism Vriendenfonds NIN
  22. van Raamsdonk fonds
  23. Trustfonds of Erasmus University, Rotterdam
  24. European Research Council (ERC) [768914] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that the firing of ventrolateral thalamus (VL) neurons is influenced by the thalamic membrane potential, cerebellar input frequency, and duration of pauses after high frequency stimulation. Inputs from motor cortical layer VI can shift the VL membrane potential and modulate the spike output in response to cerebellar stimulation. Additionally, when cerebellar nuclei and motor cortical layer VI pathways are co-activated, the motor cortical inputs increase thalamic spike output in response to cerebellar stimulation.
Key points Ventrolateral thalamus (VL) integrates information from cerebellar nuclei and motor cortical layer VI. Inputs from the cerebellar nuclei evoke large-amplitude responses that depress upon repetitive stimulation while layer VI inputs from motor cortex induce small-amplitude facilitating responses. We report that the spiking of VL neurons can be determined by the thalamic membrane potential, the frequency of cerebellar inputs and the duration of pauses after cerebellar high frequency stimulation. Inputs from motor cortical layer VI shift the VL membrane potential and modulate the VL spike output in response to cerebellar stimulation. These results help us to decipher how the cerebellar output is integrated in VL and modulated by motor cortical input. Orchestrating complex movements requires well-timed interaction of cerebellar, thalamic and cerebral structures, but the mechanisms underlying the integration of cerebro-cerebellar information in motor thalamus remain largely unknown. Here we investigated how excitatory inputs from cerebellar nuclei (CN) and primary motor cortex layer VI (M1-L6) neurons may regulate the activity of neurons in the mouse ventrolateral (VL) thalamus. Using dual-optical stimulation of the CN and M1-L6 axons and in vitro whole-cell recordings of the responses in VL neurons, we studied the individual responses as well as the effects of combined CN and M1-L6 stimulation. Whereas CN inputs evoked large-amplitude responses that were depressed upon repetitive stimulation, M1-L6 inputs elicited small-amplitude responses that were facilitated upon repetitive stimulation. Moreover, pauses in CN stimuli could directly affect VL spiking probability, an effect that was modulated by VL membrane potential. When CN and M1-L6 pathways were co-activated, motor cortical afferents increased the thalamic spike output in response to cerebellar stimulation, indicating that CN and M1 synergistically, yet differentially, control the membrane potential and spiking pattern of VL neurons.

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