Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States.
Département de Neurosciences, Faculté de Médecine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, QC, Canada.
Front Neural Circuits. 2017 Dec 8;11:98. doi: 10.3389/fncir.2017.00098. eCollection 2017.
The central pattern generator (CPG) architecture for rhythm generation remains partly elusive. We compare cat and frog locomotion results, where the component unrelated to pattern formation appears as a temporal grid, and traveling wave respectively. Frog spinal cord microstimulation with N-methyl-D-Aspartate (NMDA), a CPG activator, produced a limited set of force directions, sometimes tonic, but more often alternating between directions similar to the tonic forces. The tonic forces were topographically organized, and sites evoking rhythms with different force subsets were located close to the constituent tonic force regions. Thus CPGs consist of topographically organized modules. Modularity was also identified as a limited set of muscle synergies whose combinations reconstructed the EMGs. The cat CPG was investigated using proprioceptive inputs during fictive locomotion. Critical points identified both as abrupt transitions in the effect of phasic perturbations, and burst shape transitions, had biomechanical correlates in intact locomotion. During tonic proprioceptive perturbations, discrete shifts between these critical points explained the burst durations changes, and amplitude changes occurred at one of these points. Besides confirming CPG modularity, these results suggest a fixed temporal grid of anchoring points, to shift modules onsets and offsets. Frog locomotion, reconstructed with the NMDA synergies, showed a partially overlapping synergy activation sequence. Using the early synergy output evoked by NMDA at different spinal sites, revealed a rostrocaudal topographic organization, where each synergy is preferentially evoked from a few, albeit overlapping, cord regions. Comparing the locomotor synergy sequence with this topography suggests that a rostrocaudal traveling wave would activate the synergies in the proper sequence for locomotion. This output was reproduced in a two-layer model using this topography and a traveling wave. Together our results suggest two CPG components: modules, i.e., synergies; and temporal patterning, seen as a temporal grid in the cat, and a traveling wave in the frog. Animal and limb navigation have similarities. Research relating grid cells to the theta rhythm and on segmentation during navigation may relate to our temporal grid and traveling wave results. Winfree's mathematical work, combining critical phases and a traveling wave, also appears important. We conclude suggesting tracing, and imaging experiments to investigate our CPG model.
中央模式生成器(CPG)的节律产生架构仍然部分难以捉摸。我们比较了猫和青蛙的运动结果,其中与模式形成无关的成分分别表现为时间网格和行波。用 N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸(NMDA)对青蛙脊髓进行微刺激,产生了一组有限的力方向,有时是紧张性的,但更多时候是在类似于紧张性力的方向之间交替。紧张性力具有地形组织,并且诱发具有不同力子集的节律的部位靠近组成紧张性力区域。因此,CPG 由具有地形组织的模块组成。模块化也被确定为一组有限的肌肉协同作用,其组合重建了 EMG。使用虚构运动期间的本体感受输入来研究猫的 CPG。临界点被确定为相位扰动效应的突然转变和爆发形状转变的临界点,在完整运动中具有生物力学相关性。在紧张性本体感受扰动期间,这些临界点之间的离散转变解释了爆发持续时间的变化,并且振幅变化发生在这些临界点之一。除了证实 CPG 模块化之外,这些结果还表明存在固定的时间网格锚定点,以切换模块的起始和结束。使用 NMDA 协同作用重建的青蛙运动显示出部分重叠的协同作用激活序列。使用 NMDA 在不同脊髓部位引起的早期协同作用输出,揭示了一个头尾拓扑组织,其中每个协同作用都优先从少数但重叠的脊髓区域中诱发。将运动协同作用序列与该地形进行比较表明,头尾行波将以适当的顺序激活协同作用以进行运动。在使用该地形和行波的两层模型中重现了此输出。总之,我们的结果表明存在两个 CPG 组件:模块,即协同作用;以及时间模式,在猫中表现为时间网格,在青蛙中表现为行波。动物和肢体导航有相似之处。与网格细胞与 theta 节律相关的研究以及导航过程中的分段可能与我们的时间网格和行波结果有关。温弗里的数学工作,结合关键相位和行波,似乎也很重要。我们得出结论,建议进行追踪和成像实验,以研究我们的 CPG 模型。