Sobell Department of Motor Neuroscience and Movement Disorders, UCL Institute of Neurology, London, United Kingdom
Sobell Department of Motor Neuroscience and Movement Disorders, UCL Institute of Neurology, London, United Kingdom.
J Neurosci. 2018 Jan 31;38(5):1264-1276. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2869-17.2017. Epub 2017 Dec 20.
Changes in neural activity occur in the motor cortex before movement, but the nature and purpose of this preparatory activity is unclear. To investigate this in the human (male and female) brain noninvasively, we used transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to probe the excitability of distinct sets of excitatory inputs to corticospinal neurons during the warning period of various reaction time tasks. Using two separate methods (H-reflex conditioning and directional effects of TMS), we show that a specific set of excitatory inputs to corticospinal neurons are suppressed during motor preparation, while another set of inputs remain unaffected. To probe the behavioral relevance of this suppression, we examined whether the strength of the selective preparatory inhibition in each trial was related to reaction time. Surprisingly, the greater the amount of selective preparatory inhibition, the faster the reaction time was. This suggests that the inhibition of inputs to corticospinal neurons is not involved in preventing the release of movement but may in fact facilitate rapid reactions. Thus, selective suppression of a specific set of motor cortical neurons may be a key aspect of successful movement preparation. Movement preparation evokes substantial activity in the motor cortex despite no apparent movement. One explanation for the lack of movement is that motor cortical output in this period is gated by an inhibitory mechanism. This notion was supported by previous noninvasive TMS studies of human motor cortex indicating a reduction of corticospinal excitability. On the contrary, our data support the idea that there is a coordinated balance of activity upstream of the corticospinal output neurons. This includes a suppression of specific local circuits that supports, rather than inhibits, the rapid generation of prepared movements. Thus, the selective suppression of local circuits appears to be an essential part of successful movement preparation instead of an external control mechanism.
运动前大脑运动皮层会发生神经活动的改变,但这种预备性活动的性质和目的尚不清楚。为了在人类(男性和女性)大脑中进行非侵入性研究,我们使用经颅磁刺激(TMS)在各种反应时间任务的警告期内探测不同兴奋性传入到皮质脊髓神经元的兴奋性。使用两种独立的方法(H 反射的条件反射和 TMS 的方向效应),我们表明在运动准备期间,一组特定的兴奋性传入到皮质脊髓神经元受到抑制,而另一组传入不受影响。为了探究这种抑制的行为相关性,我们检查了每个试验中选择性预备性抑制的强度是否与反应时间有关。令人惊讶的是,选择性预备性抑制越强,反应时间越快。这表明抑制皮质脊髓神经元的传入并不是为了防止运动的释放,而是可能实际上促进了快速反应。因此,选择性抑制特定的一组运动皮层神经元可能是成功运动准备的关键方面。尽管没有明显的运动,但运动准备会引起运动皮层的大量活动。没有运动的一个解释是,运动皮层在此期间的输出受到抑制机制的控制。这一观点得到了先前对人类运动皮层的非侵入性 TMS 研究的支持,这些研究表明皮质脊髓兴奋性降低。相反,我们的数据支持这样一种观点,即在皮质脊髓输出神经元的上游存在活动的协调平衡。这包括抑制特定的局部回路,这些回路支持而不是抑制预备运动的快速产生。因此,局部回路的选择性抑制似乎是成功运动准备的一个重要组成部分,而不是外部控制机制。