4.6 Article

Correlation networks of spinal motor neurons that innervate lower limb muscles during a multi-joint isometric task

期刊

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1101/2021.10.13.460524

关键词

common drive; coherence; common input; electromyography; motor units; muscle synergies

资金

  1. Institut Universitaire de France (IUF)
  2. French government [ANR-15-IDEX-01]
  3. European Research Council [810346]
  4. EPSRC Transformative Healthcare, NISNEM Technology [EP/T020970]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates the control mechanism of muscle movement using a data-driven approach based on graph theory. The researchers found that motor neurons share common inputs and there is a partial mismatch between motor neuron groups and muscle anatomy.
Movements are reportedly controlled through the combination of synergies that generate specific motor outputs by imposing an activation pattern on a group of muscles. To date, the smallest unit of analysis of these synergies has been the muscle through the measurement of its activation. However, the muscle is not the lowest neural level of movement control. In this human study (n = 10), we used a purely data-driven method grounded on graph theory to extract networks of motor neurons based on their correlated activity during an isometric multi-joint task. Specifically, high-density surface electromyography recordings from six lower limb muscles were decomposed into motor neurons spiking activity. We analysed these activities by identifying their common low-frequency components, from which networks of correlated activity to the motor neurons were derived and interpreted as networks of common synaptic inputs. The vast majority of the identified motor neurons shared common inputs with other motor neuron(s). In addition, groups of motor neurons were partly decoupled from their innervated muscle, such that motor neurons innervating the same muscle did not necessarily receive common inputs. Conversely, some motor neurons from different muscles-including distant muscles-received common inputs. The study supports the theory that movements are produced through the control of small numbers of groups of motor neurons via common inputs and that there is a partial mismatch between these groups of motor neurons and muscle anatomy. We provide a new neural framework for a deeper understanding of the structure of common inputs to motor neurons.

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