TY - JOUR
T1 - Short latency cerebellar modulation of the basal ganglia
AU - Chen, Christopher H.
AU - Fremont, Rachel
AU - Arteaga-Bracho, Eduardo E.
AU - Khodakhah, Kamran
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the members of the Khodakhah laboratory for invaluable discussions and comments on the manuscript. This work was supported by grants from the US National Institutes of Health (NS050808, NS079750 and NS071665).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Nature America, Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2014/1/1
Y1 - 2014/1/1
N2 - The graceful, purposeful motion of our body is an engineering feat that remains unparalleled in robotic devices using advanced artificial intelligence. Much of the information required for complex movements is generated by the cerebellum and the basal ganglia in conjunction with the cortex. Cerebellum and basal ganglia have been thought to communicate with each other only through slow, multi-synaptic cortical loops, begging the question as to how they coordinate their outputs in real time. We found that the cerebellum rapidly modulates the activity of the striatum via a disynaptic pathway in mice. Under physiological conditions, this short latency pathway was capable of facilitating optimal motor control by allowing the basal ganglia to incorporate time-sensitive cerebellar information and by guiding the sign of cortico-striatal plasticity. Conversely, under pathological condition, this pathway relayed aberrant cerebellar activity to the basal ganglia to cause dystonia.
AB - The graceful, purposeful motion of our body is an engineering feat that remains unparalleled in robotic devices using advanced artificial intelligence. Much of the information required for complex movements is generated by the cerebellum and the basal ganglia in conjunction with the cortex. Cerebellum and basal ganglia have been thought to communicate with each other only through slow, multi-synaptic cortical loops, begging the question as to how they coordinate their outputs in real time. We found that the cerebellum rapidly modulates the activity of the striatum via a disynaptic pathway in mice. Under physiological conditions, this short latency pathway was capable of facilitating optimal motor control by allowing the basal ganglia to incorporate time-sensitive cerebellar information and by guiding the sign of cortico-striatal plasticity. Conversely, under pathological condition, this pathway relayed aberrant cerebellar activity to the basal ganglia to cause dystonia.
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U2 - 10.1038/nn.3868
DO - 10.1038/nn.3868
M3 - Article
C2 - 25402853
AN - SCOPUS:84925223399
SN - 1097-6256
VL - 17
SP - 1767
EP - 1775
JO - Nature Neuroscience
JF - Nature Neuroscience
IS - 12
ER -