4.8 Article

A cortico-cerebellar loop for motor planning

期刊

NATURE
卷 563, 期 7729, 页码 113-+

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0633-x

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资金

  1. Robert and Janice McNair Foundation
  2. Whitehall Foundation
  3. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
  4. Searle Scholars Program
  5. National Institutes of Health [NS104781]
  6. Simons Collaboration on the Global Brain
  7. Dutch Organization for Medical Sciences
  8. Erasmus MC fellowship
  9. ERC-PoC
  10. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  11. ERC-advanced
  12. Life Sciences

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Persistent and ramping neural activity in the frontal cortex anticipates specific movements(1-6). Preparatory activity is distributed across several brain regions(7,8), but it is unclear which brain areas are involved and how this activity is mediated by multi-regional interactions. The cerebellum is thought to be primarily involved in the short-timescale control of movement(9-12); however, roles for this structure in cognitive processes have also been proposed(13-16). In humans, cerebellar damage can cause defects in planning and working memory(13). Here we show that persistent representation of information in the frontal cortex during motor planning is dependent on the cerebellum. Mice performed a sensory discrimination task in which they used short-term memory to plan a future directional movement. A transient perturbation in the medial deep cerebellar nucleus (fastigial nucleus) disrupted subsequent correct responses without hampering movement execution. Preparatory activity was observed in both the frontal cortex and the cerebellar nuclei, seconds before the onset of movement. The silencing of frontal cortex activity abolished preparatory activity in the cerebellar nuclei, and fastigial activity was necessary to maintain cortical preparatory activity. Fastigial output selectively targeted the behaviourally relevant part of the frontal cortex through the thalamus, thus closing a cortico-cerebellar loop. Our results support the view that persistent neural dynamics during motor planning is maintained by neural circuits that span multiple brain regions(17), and that cerebellar computations extend beyond online motor control(13-15,18).

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