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Publication : In mice lacking V2a interneurons, gait depends on speed of locomotion.

First Author  Crone SA Year  2009
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  29
Issue  21 Pages  7098-109
PubMed ID  19474336 Mgi Jnum  J:149514
Mgi Id  MGI:3848628 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1206-09.2009
Citation  Crone SA, et al. (2009) In mice lacking V2a interneurons, gait depends on speed of locomotion. J Neurosci 29(21):7098-109
abstractText  Many animals are capable of changing gait with speed of locomotion. The neural basis of gait control and its dependence on speed are not fully understood. Mice normally use a single 'trotting' gait while running at all speeds, either over ground or on a treadmill. Transgenic mouse mutants in which the trotting is replaced by hopping also lack a speed-dependent change in gait. Here we describe a transgenic mouse model in which the V2a interneurons have been ablated by targeted expression of diphtheria toxin A chain (DTA) under the control of the Chx10 gene promoter (Chx10::DTA mice). Chx10::DTA mice show normal trotting gait at slow speeds but transition to a galloping gait as speed increases. Although left-right limb coordination is altered in Chx10::DTA mice at fast speed, alternation of forelegs and hindlegs and the relative duration of swing and stance phases for individual limbs is unchanged compared with wild-type mice. The speed-dependent loss of left-right alternation is recapitulated during drug-induced fictive locomotion in spinal cords isolated from neonatal Chx10::DTA mice, and high-speed fictive locomotion evoked by caudal spinal cord stimulation also shows synchronous left-right bursting. These results show that spinal V2a interneurons are required for maintaining left-right alternation at high speeds. Whether animals that generate galloping or hopping gaits, characterized by synchronous movement of left and right forelegs and hindlegs, have lost or modified the function of V2a interneurons is an intriguing question.
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