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Publication : Behavioral correlates of complex spike synchrony in cerebellar microzones.

First Author  De Gruijl JR Year  2014
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  34
Issue  27 Pages  8937-47
PubMed ID  24990915 Mgi Jnum  J:212539
Mgi Id  MGI:5581748 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5064-13.2014
Citation  De Gruijl JR, et al. (2014) Behavioral correlates of complex spike synchrony in cerebellar microzones. J Neurosci 34(27):8937-47
abstractText  The olivo-cerebellar system is crucial for smooth and well timed execution of movements based on sensory and proprioceptive cues. The inferior olive (IO) plays a pivotal role in this process by synchronizing its activity across neurons internally through connexin36 gap junctions and providing a timing and/or learning signal to the cerebellum. Even though synchrony achieved through electrical coupling in IO cells is generally thought to be important in timing motor output, a direct relation between timing of movement and synchrony of olivary discharges has never been demonstrated within functional microcomplexes using transgenics. Here we combined in vivo, two-photon calcium imaging of complex spikes in microcomplexes of Purkinje cell (PC) dendrites with high-speed filming of tail, trunk, and limb movements in awake wild-type and connexin36-deficient mice. In wild types at rest, functional clusters of PCs were poorly defined with synchrony correlations that were relatively small and spatially limited to mediolateral distances of approximately 50 mum, whereas during locomotion synchrony of the same PCs increased in strength and extended over distances spanning multiple microzones that could be correlated to specific components of sharp and well bounded movements. Instead, connexin36-deficient mice exhibited prolonged and desynchronized complex spike activity within PC microcomplexes both at rest and during behavior. Importantly, the mutants also showed concomitant abnormalities in the execution of spinocerebellar reflexes, which were significantly slower and more gradual than in wild-type littermates, particularly following sensory perturbations. Our results highlight the importance of modulation of synchronous activity within and between cerebellar microcomplexes in on-line temporal processing of motor output.
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