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Publication : Purkinje cell misfiring generates high-amplitude action tremors that are corrected by cerebellar deep brain stimulation.

First Author  Brown AM Year  2020
Journal  Elife Volume  9
PubMed ID  32180549 Mgi Jnum  J:292552
Mgi Id  MGI:6442431 Doi  10.7554/eLife.51928
Citation  Brown AM, et al. (2020) Purkinje cell misfiring generates high-amplitude action tremors that are corrected by cerebellar deep brain stimulation. Elife 9:e51928
abstractText  Tremor is currently ranked as the most common movement disorder. The brain regions and neural signals that initiate the debilitating shakiness of different body parts remain unclear. Here, we found that genetically silencing cerebellar Purkinje cell output blocked tremor in mice that were given the tremorgenic drug harmaline. We show in awake behaving mice that the onset of tremor is coincident with rhythmic Purkinje cell firing, which alters the activity of their target cerebellar nuclei cells. We mimic the tremorgenic action of the drug with optogenetics and present evidence that highly patterned Purkinje cell activity drives a powerful tremor in otherwise normal mice. Modulating the altered activity with deep brain stimulation directed to the Purkinje cell output in the cerebellar nuclei reduced tremor in freely moving mice. Together, the data implicate Purkinje cell connectivity as a neural substrate for tremor and a gateway for signals that mediate the disease.
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