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Publication : Cortex commands the performance of skilled movement.

First Author  Guo JZ Year  2015
Journal  Elife Volume  4
Pages  e10774 PubMed ID  26633811
Mgi Jnum  J:269465 Mgi Id  MGI:6204454
Doi  10.7554/eLife.10774 Citation  Guo JZ, et al. (2015) Cortex commands the performance of skilled movement. Elife 4:e10774
abstractText  Mammalian cerebral cortex is accepted as being critical for voluntary motor control, but what functions depend on cortex is still unclear. Here we used rapid, reversible optogenetic inhibition to test the role of cortex during a head-fixed task in which mice reach, grab, and eat a food pellet. Sudden cortical inhibition blocked initiation or froze execution of this skilled prehension behavior, but left untrained forelimb movements unaffected. Unexpectedly, kinematically normal prehension occurred immediately after cortical inhibition, even during rest periods lacking cue and pellet. This 'rebound' prehension was only evoked in trained and food-deprived animals, suggesting that a motivation-gated motor engram sufficient to evoke prehension is activated at inhibition's end. These results demonstrate the necessity and sufficiency of cortical activity for enacting a learned skill.
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