Author:
Chen Xiang Yang,Wolpaw Jonathan R.
Abstract
While studies of cerebellar involvement in learning and memory have
described plasticity within the cerebellum, its role in acquisition of
plasticity elsewhere in the CNS is largely unexplored. This study set out to
determine whether the cerebellum is needed for acquisition of the spinal cord
plasticity that underlies operantly conditioned decrease in the H-reflex, the
electrical analog of the spinal stretch reflex. Rats in which the cerebellar
output nuclei dentate and interpositus (DIN) had been ablated were exposed for
50 d to the H-reflex down-conditioning protocol. DIN ablation, which in itself
had no significant long-term effect on H-reflex size, entirely prevented
acquisition of a smaller H-reflex. Since previous studies show that
corticospinal tract (CST) transection also prevents down-conditioning while
transection of the rubrospinal tract and other major descending tracts does
not, this result implies that DIN output that affects cortex is essential for
generation of the CST activity that induces the spinal cord plasticity, which
is, in turn, directly responsible for the smaller H-reflex. The result extends
the role of the cerebellum in learning and memory to include participation in
induction of plasticity elsewhere in the CNS, specifically in the spinal cord.
The cerebellum might simply support processes in sensorimotor cortex or
elsewhere that change the spinal cord, or the cerebellum itself might undergo
plasticity similar to that occurring with vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) or
eyeblink conditioning.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
46 articles.
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