4.8 Article

Cerebellar vermis is a target of projections from the motor areas in the cerebral cortex

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1107904108

关键词

motor system; virus tracing

资金

  1. Office of Research and Development, Medical Research Service, Department of Veterans Affairs
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01 NS24328, R01 MH56661, P40 RR018604, K12 HD00850, K12 HD052892]
  3. Pennsylvania Department of Health

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The cerebellum has a medial, cortico-nuclear zone consisting of the cerebellar vermis and the fastigial nucleus. Functionally, this zone is concerned with whole-body posture and locomotion. The vermis classically is thought to be included within the spinocerebellum and to receive somatic sensory input from ascending spinal pathways. In contrast, the lateral zone of the cerebellum is included in the cerebro-cerebellum because it is densely interconnected with the cerebral cortex. Here we report the surprising result that a portion of the vermis receives dense input from the cerebral cortex. We injected rabies virus into lobules VB-VIIIB of the vermis and used retrograde transneuronal transport of the virus to define disynaptic inputs to it. We found that large numbers of neurons in the primary motor cortex and in several motor areas on the medial wall of the hemisphere project to the vermis. Thus, our results challenge the classical view of the vermis and indicate that it no longer should be considered as entirely isolated from the cerebral cortex. Instead, lobules VB-VIIIB represent a site where the cortical motor areas can influence descending control systems involved in the regulation of whole-body posture and locomotion. We argue that the projection from the cerebral cortex to the vermis is part of the neural substrate for anticipatory postural adjustments and speculate that dysfunction of this system may underlie some forms of dystonia.

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