4.7 Article

Multidimensional encoding of movement and contextual variables by rat globus pallidus neurons during a novel environment exposure task

Journal

ISCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2022.105024

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation [1786/16]
  2. European Commission [824162]

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The basal ganglia are vital for animal survival, processing information from different brain areas and encoding it through direct and indirect pathways. In this study, we focused on how the globus pallidus encodes motor and cognitive input. Our findings show that GP neurons exhibit multidimensional responses to movement and contextual information.
The basal ganglia (BG) play a critical role in a variety of functions that are essential for animal survival. Information from different cortical areas propagates through the BG in anatomically segregated circuits along the parallel direct and indirect pathways. We examined how the globus pallidus (GP), a nucleus within the indirect pathway, encodes input from the motor and cognitive domains. We chronically recorded and analyzed neuronal activity in the GP of male rats engaged in a novel environment exposure task. GP neurons displayed multidimensional responses to movement and contextual information. A model predicting single unit activity required many task-related behavioral variables, thus confirming the multidimensionality of GP neurons. In addition, populations of GP neurons, but not single units, reliably encoded the animals' locomotion speed and the environmental novelty. We posit that the GP independently processes information from different domains, effectively compresses it and collectively conveys it to successive nuclei.

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