Hermer-Vazquez L, Hermer-Vazquez R, Moxon K A, Kuo K-H, Viau V, Zhan Y, Chapin J K
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, SUNY Health Science Center, Room 5-5, 450 Clarkson Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11203, USA.
Behav Brain Res. 2004 Apr 2;150(1-2):93-107. doi: 10.1016/S0166-4328(03)00226-2.
The mammalian motor system contains multiple interconnected supraspinal networks, but little is known about their relative roles in producing different movements and behaviors, particularly given their apparently fused activity in primates. We tested whether the task context, as well as using a phylogenetically older mammal, rats, could distinguish the separate contributions of these networks. We obtained simultaneous multi-single neuron recordings from the forelimb motor cortex and magnocellular red nucleus as rats performed two contextually different, but kinematically similar, forelimb reach-like tasks: highly learned, skilled reaching for food through a narrow slot, a task requiring extensive training, versus the swing phases of treadmill locomotion. In both the M1 and the mRN, large subpopulations of neurons peaked in their spike firing rates near the onset and the end of the swing phase during treadmill locomotion. In contrast, neural subgroups in the two areas displayed different temporal sequences of activity during the skilled reaching task. In the mRN, the majority of task-modulated neurons peaked in their firing rate in the middle of the reach when the rat was preparing to project the arm through the slot, whereas large subgroups of M1 neurons displayed elevated firing rates during the initial and terminal phases of the reach. These results suggest that motor-behavioral context can alter the degree of overlapping activity in different supraspinal sensorimotor networks. Moreover, results for the skilled reaching task in rats may have highlighted a distinct processing role of the rubral complex: adapting natural muscle synergies across joints and limbs to novel task demands, in concert with cortically based learning.
哺乳动物的运动系统包含多个相互连接的脊髓上网络,但对于它们在产生不同运动和行为中的相对作用,我们却知之甚少,特别是考虑到它们在灵长类动物中明显融合的活动。我们测试了任务背景以及使用一种在系统发育上更古老的哺乳动物——大鼠,是否能够区分这些网络的单独贡献。当大鼠执行两种在背景上不同但运动学上相似的前肢伸展类任务时,我们从前肢运动皮层和大细胞红核同时进行多单神经元记录:高度熟练、通过狭窄缝隙抓取食物的任务,这需要大量训练,以及跑步机运动的摆动阶段。在M1和红核中,在跑步机运动摆动阶段开始和结束附近,大量神经元亚群的放电频率达到峰值。相比之下,在熟练抓取任务期间,这两个区域的神经亚群表现出不同的活动时间序列。在红核中,大多数任务调制神经元在大鼠准备将手臂伸进缝隙时,在伸展过程中间放电频率达到峰值,而M1神经元的大量亚群在伸展的初始和末期阶段放电频率升高。这些结果表明,运动行为背景可以改变不同脊髓上感觉运动网络中重叠活动的程度。此外,大鼠熟练抓取任务的结果可能突出了红核复合体的独特加工作用:与基于皮层的学习协同作用,使跨关节和肢体的自然肌肉协同适应新的任务需求。