Gerbella Marzio, Rozzi Stefano, Rizzolatti Giacomo
Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT), Center for Biomolecular Nanotechnologies (CBN), Lecce, Italy.
Brain Center for Social and Motor Cognition (BCSMC), Parma, Italy.
Exp Brain Res. 2017 Oct;235(10):2903-2916. doi: 10.1007/s00221-017-5007-3. Epub 2017 Jul 26.
Grasping is the most important skilled motor act of primates. It is based on a series of sensorimotor transformations through which the affordances of the objects to be grasped are transformed into appropriate hand movements. It is generally accepted that a circuit formed by inferior parietal areas AIP and PFG and ventral premotor area F5 represents the core circuit for sensorimotor transformations for grasping. However, selection and control of appropriate grip should also depend on higher-order information, such as the meaning of the object to be grasped, and the overarching goal of the action in which grasping is embedded. In this review, we describe recent findings showing that specific sectors of the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex are instrumental in controlling higher-order aspects of grasping. We show that these prefrontal sectors control the premotor cortex through two main gateways: the anterior subdivision of ventral area F5-sub-area F5a-, and the pre-supplementary area (area F6). We then review functional studies showing that both F5a and F6, besides being relay stations of prefrontal information, also play specific roles in grasping. Namely, sub-area F5a is involved in stereoscopic analysis of 3D objects, and in planning cue-dependent grasping activity. As for area F6, this area appears to play a crucial role in determining when to execute the motor program encoded in the parieto-premotor circuit. The recent discovery that area F6 contains a set of neurons encoding specific grip types suggests that this area, besides controlling "when to go", also may control the grip type, i.e., "how to go". We conclude by discussing clinical syndromes affecting grasping actions and their possible mechanisms.
抓握是灵长类动物最重要的熟练运动行为。它基于一系列感觉运动转换,通过这些转换,待抓握物体的可供性被转化为适当的手部动作。人们普遍认为,由顶下区域AIP和PFG以及腹侧运动前区F5形成的回路代表了抓握感觉运动转换的核心回路。然而,选择和控制合适的抓握方式还应取决于更高层次的信息,例如待抓握物体的意义以及抓握所嵌入动作的总体目标。在这篇综述中,我们描述了最近的研究发现,表明腹外侧前额叶皮层的特定区域有助于控制抓握的更高层次方面。我们表明,这些前额叶区域通过两个主要通道控制运动前皮层:腹侧区域F5的前部分——F5a亚区,以及前补充运动区(F6区)。然后,我们回顾了功能研究,这些研究表明F5a和F6除了是前额叶信息的中继站外,在抓握中也发挥着特定作用。具体而言,F5a亚区参与三维物体的立体分析以及依赖线索的抓握活动规划。至于F6区,该区域似乎在决定何时执行顶叶-运动前回路中编码运动程序方面起着关键作用。最近发现F6区包含一组编码特定抓握类型的神经元,这表明该区域除了控制“何时执行”外,还可能控制抓握类型,即 “如何执行”。我们通过讨论影响抓握动作的临床综合征及其可能机制来结束本文。