Yasui Kotaro, Gupta Astha, Fu Qiyuan, Suzuki Shura, Hainer Jeffrey, Paez Laura, Lutek Keegan, Arreguit Jonathan, Kano Takeshi, Standen Emily M, Ijspeert Auke J, Ishiguro Akio
Frontier Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Sciences, Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8578, Japan.
Research Institute of Electrical Communication, Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8577, Japan.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Aug 26;122(34):e2422248122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2422248122. Epub 2025 Aug 18.
Vertebrate locomotion is due to the interplay of neural oscillators and sensory feedback loops in the spinal cord that interact with the body and the environment. Here, we study these circuits with a focus on undulatory locomotion as produced by elongated fish such as eels and lampreys. We address three questions: i) How do proprioception (stretch feedback) and exteroception (pressure on skin) interact with local oscillators to generate stable swimming patterns? ii) Can these feedback loops also contribute to dry ground locomotion? iii) Can they explain the remarkable robustness of eels against spinal cord transections? To address these questions, we developed abstract models of the locomotion circuits based on coupled phase oscillators, local stretch and pressure feedback loops, and simulated muscle models that were tested both in simulation and with a real undulatory robot. We also performed swimming experiments with eels before and after spinal cord transections. We found that stretch and pressure feedback work well together in swimming, as they contribute to rapid pattern generation and can, in principle, both replace direct couplings between oscillators. Interestingly, the swimming controllers could generate good ground locomotion when placed in an arena with pegs. For ground locomotion, the stretch feedback is more beneficial than pressure feedback. Finally, our models could replicate the remarkable ability of eels to keep swimming shortly after a full spinal cord transection. We found that stretch feedback and the ability of oscillators to spontaneously oscillate are likely explanations for keeping the neural oscillators active and coordinated below the transection.
脊椎动物的运动是由于脊髓中的神经振荡器和感觉反馈回路相互作用,这些回路与身体和环境相互影响。在此,我们研究这些回路,重点关注鳗鱼和七鳃鳗等细长鱼类产生的波动运动。我们探讨三个问题:i)本体感觉(拉伸反馈)和外感受(皮肤压力)如何与局部振荡器相互作用以产生稳定的游泳模式?ii)这些反馈回路是否也有助于在陆地上运动?iii)它们能否解释鳗鱼对脊髓横断具有显著的抵抗力?为了解决这些问题,我们基于耦合相位振荡器、局部拉伸和压力反馈回路开发了运动回路的抽象模型,并模拟了肌肉模型,这些模型在模拟和实际波动机器人中都进行了测试。我们还对脊髓横断前后的鳗鱼进行了游泳实验。我们发现,拉伸和压力反馈在游泳中协同良好,因为它们有助于快速生成模式,并且原则上两者都可以替代振荡器之间的直接耦合。有趣的是,当置于有桩的场地中时,游泳控制器可以产生良好的陆地运动。对于陆地运动,拉伸反馈比压力反馈更有益。最后,我们的模型可以复制鳗鱼在完全脊髓横断后仍能短时间继续游泳的显著能力。我们发现,拉伸反馈和振荡器自发振荡的能力可能是使神经振荡器在横断下方保持活跃和协调的原因。