4.4 Article

The inferior olive is essential for long-term maintenance of a simple motor skill

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 116, Issue 4, Pages 1946-1955

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00085.2016

Keywords

operant conditioning; spinal cord; H-reflex; plasticity; sensorimotor cortex; cerebellum; memory; learning

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HD-36020, NS-061823, NS-22189, 1P41 EB-018783, HD-32571]
  2. VA Merit Award [1 I01 BX002550]
  3. NYS Spinal Cord Injury Research Trust Fund

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The inferior olive (IO) is essential for operant down-conditioning of the rat soleus H-reflex, a simple motor skill. To evaluate the role of the IO in long-term maintenance of this skill, the H-reflex was down-conditioned over 50 days, the IO was chemically ablated, and down-conditioning continued for up to 102 more days. H-reflex size just before IO ablation averaged 62(+/- 2 SE)% of its initial value (P < 0.001 vs. initial). After IO ablation, H-reflex size rose to 75-80% over similar to 10 days, remained there for +/- 30 days, rose over 10 days to above its initial value, and averaged 140(+/- 14)% for the final 10 days of study (P < 0.01 vs. initial). This two-stage loss of down-conditioning maintenance correlated with IO neuronal loss (r = 0.75, P < 0.01) and was similar to the loss of down-conditioning that follows ablation of the cerebellar output nuclei dentate and interpositus. In control (i.e., unconditioned) rats, IO ablation has no long-term effect on H-reflex size. These results indicate that the IO is essential for long-term maintenance of a down-conditioned H-reflex. With previous data, they support the hypothesis that IO and cortical inputs to cerebellum combine to produce cerebellar plasticity that produces sensorimotor cortex plasticity that produces spinal cord plasticity that produces the smaller H-reflex. H-reflex down-conditioning appears to depend on a hierarchy of plasticity that may be guided by the IO and begin in the cerebellum. Similar hierarchies may underlie other motor learning.

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