Department of Neuroscience, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, 303 E Chicago Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
Department of Neuroscience, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, 303 E Chicago Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
Curr Biol. 2022 Nov 21;32(22):4842-4853.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.09.045. Epub 2022 Oct 14.
Food handling offers unique yet largely unexplored opportunities to investigate how cortical activity relates to forelimb movements in a natural, ethologically essential, and kinematically rich form of manual dexterity. To determine these relationships, we recorded high-speed (1,000 fps) video and multi-channel electrophysiological cortical spiking activity while mice handled food. The high temporal resolution of the video allowed us to decompose active manipulation ("oromanual") events into characteristic submovements, enabling event-aligned analysis of cortical activity. Activity in forelimb M1 was strongly modulated during food handling, generally higher during oromanual events and lower during holding intervals. Optogenetic silencing and stimulation of forelimb M1 neurons partially affected food-handling movements, exerting suppressive and activating effects, respectively. We also extended the analysis to forelimb S1 and lateral M1, finding broadly similar oromanual-related activity across all three areas. However, each area's activity displayed a distinct timing and phasic/tonic temporal profile, which was further analyzed by non-negative matrix factorization and demonstrated to be attributable to area-specific composition of activity classes. Current or future forelimb position could be accurately predicted from activity in all three regions, indicating that the cortical activity in these areas contains high information content about forelimb movements during food handling. These results thus establish that cortical activity during food handling is manipulation specific, distributed, and broadly similar across multiple sensorimotor areas while also exhibiting area- and submovement-specific relationships with the fast kinematic hallmarks of this natural form of complex free-object-handling manual dexterity.
在自然的、生态必需的和运动学丰富的灵巧形式的手动操作中,食物处理提供了独特但在很大程度上尚未被探索的机会,可以研究皮质活动如何与前肢运动相关。为了确定这些关系,我们在老鼠处理食物时记录了高速(1000 fps)视频和多通道电生理皮质尖峰活动。视频的高时间分辨率使我们能够将主动操作(“双手操作”)事件分解为特征子运动,从而实现皮质活动的事件对齐分析。在前肢 M1 中的活动在食物处理过程中被强烈调制,通常在双手操作事件中更高,而在握持间隔中更低。前肢 M1 神经元的光遗传沉默和刺激部分影响了食物处理运动,分别产生抑制和激活作用。我们还将分析扩展到前肢 S1 和外侧 M1,发现所有三个区域的双手操作相关活动都广泛相似。然而,每个区域的活动显示出不同的时间和相位/紧张时间分布,通过非负矩阵分解进一步分析,并证明归因于活动类别的区域特异性组成。当前或未来的前肢位置可以从前肢的所有三个区域的活动中准确预测,这表明这些区域的皮质活动在食物处理过程中包含有关前肢运动的高信息量。这些结果因此表明,食物处理过程中的皮质活动是特定于操作的,分布在多个感觉运动区域中,同时与这种自然形式的复杂自由物体处理灵巧的快速运动学特征具有区域和子运动特异性关系。