Koutsikou Stella, Apps Richard, Lumb Bridget M
School of Biological Sciences, Life Sciences Building, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Sensory and Motor Systems Group, School of Physiology, Pharmacology & Neuroscience, Biomedical Sciences Building, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
J Physiol. 2017 Jul 1;595(13):4151-4158. doi: 10.1113/JP273360. Epub 2017 Apr 24.
The ability to interact with challenging environments requires coordination of sensory and motor systems that underpin appropriate survival behaviours. All animals, including humans, use active and passive coping strategies to react to escapable or inescapable threats, respectively. Across species the neural pathways involved in survival behaviours are highly conserved and there is a consensus that knowledge of such pathways is a fundamental step towards understanding the neural circuits underpinning emotion in humans and treating anxiety or other prevalent emotional disorders. The midbrain periaqueductal grey (PAG) lies at the heart of the defence-arousal system and its integrity is paramount to the expression of survival behaviours. To date, studies of 'top down control' components of defence behaviours have focused largely on the sensory and autonomic consequences of PAG activation. In this context, effects on motor activity have received comparatively little attention, despite overwhelming evidence of a pivotal role for the PAG in coordinating motor responses essential to survival (e.g. such as freezing in response to fear). In this article we provide an overview of top down control of sensory functions from the PAG, including selective control of different modalities of sensory, including proprioceptive, information forwarded to a major supsraspinal motor control centre, the cerebellum. Next, evidence from our own and other laboratories of PAG control of motor outflow is also discussed. Finally, the integration of sensorimotor functions by the PAG is considered, as part of coordinated defence behaviours that prepare an animal to be ready and able to react to danger.
与具有挑战性的环境进行互动的能力需要感觉和运动系统的协调,这些系统支撑着适当的生存行为。所有动物,包括人类,分别使用主动和被动应对策略来应对可逃避或不可逃避的威胁。在物种间,参与生存行为的神经通路高度保守,并且人们一致认为,了解这些通路是理解人类情绪背后的神经回路以及治疗焦虑或其他常见情绪障碍的基本步骤。中脑导水管周围灰质(PAG)位于防御-唤醒系统的核心,其完整性对于生存行为的表达至关重要。迄今为止,对防御行为“自上而下控制”成分的研究主要集中在PAG激活的感觉和自主神经后果上。在这种情况下,尽管有大量证据表明PAG在协调对生存至关重要的运动反应(例如因恐惧而僵住)中起关键作用,但对运动活动的影响相对较少受到关注。在本文中,我们概述了PAG对感觉功能的自上而下控制,包括对不同感觉模式(包括本体感觉)的选择性控制,这些感觉信息被转发到一个主要的脊髓上运动控制中心——小脑。接下来,还将讨论我们自己和其他实验室关于PAG对运动输出控制的证据。最后,PAG对感觉运动功能的整合被视为协调防御行为的一部分,这些行为使动物做好准备并能够对危险做出反应。