Abstract
SummarySpinal circuits produce diverse motor outputs that coordinate the rhythm and pattern of locomotor movements. Despite the episodic nature of these behaviours, the neural mechanisms encoding these episodes are not well understood. This study investigated mechanisms producing episodic rhythms evoked by dopamine in isolated neonatal mouse spinal cords. Dopamine-induced rhythms were primarily synchronous and propagated rostro-caudally across spinal segments, with occasional asynchronous episodes. Electrical stimulation of the L5 dorsal root could entrain episodes across segments, indicating afferent control of the rhythm generator and a distributed rostro-caudal network. Episodic activity was observed in isolated thoracic or sacral segments after full spinal transection or bilateral ventrolateral funiculus (VLF) lesions, suggesting a distributed network coupled via VLF projections. Rhythmicity was recorded from axons projecting through the VLF and dorsal roots, but not from cholinergic recurrent excitation via motoneurons or isolated dorsal inhibitory circuits. The data suggest episodic rhythmicity is generated by a flexibly coupled network of spinal interneurons distributed throughout the spinal cord.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory