Author:
Green John T.,Steinmetz Joseph E.
Abstract
The cerebellar anterior lobe may play a critical role in the execution and
proper timing of learned responses. The current study was designed to monitor
Purkinje cell activity in the rabbit cerebellar anterior lobe after eyeblink
conditioning, and to assess whether Purkinje cells in recording locations may
project to the interpositus nucleus. Rabbits were trained in an interstimulus
interval discrimination procedure in which one tone signaled a 250-msec
conditioned stimulus-unconditioned stimulus (CS-US) interval and a second tone
signaled a 750-msec CS-US interval. All rabbits showed conditioned responses
to each CS with mean onset and peak latencies that coincided with the CS-US
interval. Many anterior lobe Purkinje cells showed significant
learning-related activity after eyeblink conditioning to one or both of the
CSs. More Purkinje cells responded with inhibition than with excitation to CS
presentation. In addition, when the firing patterns of all
conditioning-related Purkinje cells were pooled, it appeared that the
population showed a pattern of excitation followed by inhibition during the
CS-US interval. Using cholera toxin-conjugated horseradish peroxidase,
Purkinje cells in recording areas were found to project to the interpositus
nucleus. These data support previous studies that have suggested a role for
the anterior cerebellar cortex in eyeblink conditioning as well as models of
cerebellar-mediated CR timing that postulate that Purkinje cell activity
inhibits conditioned response (CR) generation during the early portion of a
trial by inhibiting the deep cerebellar nuclei and permits CR generation
during the later portion of a trial through disinhibition of the cerebellar
nuclei.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
79 articles.
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