Tabata Hiromitsu, Yamamoto Kenji, Kawato Mitsuo
Kawato Dynamic Brain Project, ERATO, Japan Science and Technology Corporation, Kyoto 619-0288, Japan.
J Neurophysiol. 2002 Apr;87(4):2176-89. doi: 10.1152/jn.00168.2001.
Much controversy remains about the site of learning and memory for vestibuloocular reflex (VOR) adaptation in spite of numerous previous studies. One possible explanation for VOR adaptation is the flocculus hypothesis, which assumes that this adaptation is caused by synaptic plasticity in the cerebellar cortex. Another hypothesis is the model proposed by Lisberger that assumes that the learning that occurs in both the cerebellar cortex and the vestibular nucleus is necessary for VOR adaptation. Lisberger's model is characterized by a strong positive feedback loop carrying eye velocity information from the vestibular nucleus to the cerebellar cortex. This structure contributes to the maintenance of a smooth pursuit driving command with zero retinal slip during the steady-state phase of smooth pursuit with gain 1 or during the target blink condition. Here, we propose an alternative hypothesis that suggests that the pursuit driving command is maintained in the medial superior temporal (MST) area based on MST firing data during target blink and during ocular following blank, and as a consequence, we assume a much smaller gain for the positive feedback from the vestibular nucleus to the cerebellar cortex. This hypothesis is equivalent to assuming that there are two parallel neural pathways for controlling VOR and smooth pursuit: a main pathway of the semicircular canals to the vestibular nucleus for VOR, and a main pathway of the MST-dorsolateral pontine nuclei (DLPN)-flocculus/ventral paraflocculus to the vestibular nucleus for smooth pursuit. First, we theoretically demonstrate that this parallel control-pathway theory can reproduce the various firing patterns of horizontal gaze velocity Purkinje cells in the flocculus/ventral paraflocculus dependent on VOR in the dark, smooth pursuit, and VOR cancellation as reported in Miles et al. at least equally as well as the gaze velocity theory, which is the basic framework of Lisberger's model. Second, computer simulations based on our hypothesis can stably reproduce neural firing data as well as behavioral data obtained in smooth pursuit, VOR cancellation, and VOR adaptation, even if only plasticity in the cerebellar cortex is assumed. Furthermore, our computer simulation model can reproduce VOR adaptation automatically based on a heterosynaptic interaction model between parallel fiber inputs and climbing fiber inputs. Our results indicate that different assumptions about the site of pursuit driving command maintenance computationally lead to different conclusions about where the learning for VOR adaptation occurs. Finally, we propose behavioral and physiological experiments capable of discriminating between these two possibilities for the site of pursuit driving command maintenance and hence for the sites of learning and memory for VOR adaptation.
尽管此前已有大量研究,但关于前庭眼反射(VOR)适应性学习和记忆的位点仍存在诸多争议。VOR适应性的一种可能解释是绒球假说,该假说认为这种适应性是由小脑皮质中的突触可塑性引起的。另一种假说是利斯伯格提出的模型,该模型认为小脑皮质和前庭核中发生的学习对于VOR适应性是必要的。利斯伯格的模型的特点是有一个强大的正反馈回路,将眼速度信息从前庭核传递到小脑皮质。这种结构有助于在增益为1的平稳跟踪稳态阶段或目标眨眼条件下,维持零视网膜滑动的平稳跟踪驱动命令。在此,我们提出一种替代假说,该假说表明基于目标眨眼期间和眼跟踪空白期间的MST放电数据,跟踪驱动命令在前颞上内侧(MST)区域得以维持,因此,我们假设从前庭核到小脑皮质的正反馈增益要小得多。该假说等同于假设存在两条控制VOR和平稳跟踪的平行神经通路:一条是半规管到前庭核的主要通路用于VOR,另一条是MST - 背外侧脑桥核(DLPN) - 绒球/腹侧旁绒球到前庭核的主要通路用于平稳跟踪。首先,我们从理论上证明,这种平行控制通路理论能够至少与凝视速度理论(利斯伯格模型的基本框架)同样好地重现如迈尔斯等人所报道的在黑暗中、平稳跟踪和VOR抵消时,依赖于VOR的绒球/腹侧旁绒球中水平凝视速度浦肯野细胞的各种放电模式。其次,基于我们假说的计算机模拟能够稳定地重现平稳跟踪、VOR抵消和VOR适应性过程中获得的神经放电数据以及行为数据,即使仅假设小脑皮质存在可塑性。此外,我们的计算机模拟模型能够基于平行纤维输入和攀爬纤维输入之间的异突触相互作用模型自动重现VOR适应性。我们的结果表明,关于跟踪驱动命令维持位点的不同假设在计算上会导致关于VOR适应性学习发生位置的不同结论。最后,我们提出了行为和生理实验,能够区分跟踪驱动命令维持位点的这两种可能性,进而区分VOR适应性学习和记忆的位点。