4.7 Article

Cerebellar granule cells acquire a widespread predictive feedback signal during motor learning

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NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
卷 20, 期 5, 页码 727-+

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nn.4531

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资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 NS045193, R01 MH093727]
  2. New Jersey Council on Brain Injury Research fellowship [CBIR12FEL031]
  3. Searle Scholars program
  4. DARPA [N66001-15-C-4032]
  5. National Science Foundation [DGE-1148900]
  6. Nancy Lurie Marks Family Foundation
  7. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (Innovational Research Incentives Scheme Veni)
  8. Dutch Fundamental Organization for Medical Sciences (ZonMW)
  9. Life Sciences (NWO-ALW)
  10. Social and Behavioral Sciences (NWO-MAGW)
  11. ERC-adv
  12. ERC-POC

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Cerebellar granule cells, which constitute half the brain's neurons, supply Purkinje cells with contextual information necessary for motor learning, but how they encode this information is unknown. Here we show, using two-photon microscopy to track neural activity over multiple days of cerebellum-dependent eyeblink conditioning in mice, that granule cell populations acquire a dense representation of the anticipatory eyelid movement. Initially, granule cells responded to neutral visual and somatosensory stimuli as well as periorbital airpuffs used for training. As learning progressed, two-thirds of monitored granule cells acquired a conditional response whose timing matched or preceded the learned eyelid movements. Granule cell activity covaried trial by trial to form a redundant code. Many granule cells were also active during movements of nearby body structures. Thus, a predictive signal about the upcoming movement is widely available at the input stage of the cerebellar cortex, as required by forward models of cerebellar control.

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