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Excitatory Cerebellar Nucleocortical Circuit Provides Internal Amplification during Associative Conditioning.


ABSTRACT: Closed-loop circuitries between cortical and subcortical regions can facilitate precision of output patterns, but the role of such networks in the cerebellum remains to be elucidated. Here, we characterize the role of internal feedback from the cerebellar nuclei to the cerebellar cortex in classical eyeblink conditioning. We find that excitatory output neurons in the interposed nucleus provide efference-copy signals via mossy fibers to the cerebellar cortical zones that belong to the same module, triggering monosynaptic responses in granule and Golgi cells and indirectly inhibiting Purkinje cells. Upon conditioning, the local density of nucleocortical mossy fiber terminals significantly increases. Optogenetic activation and inhibition of nucleocortical fibers in conditioned animals increases and decreases the amplitude of learned eyeblink responses, respectively. Our data show that the excitatory nucleocortical closed-loop circuitry of the cerebellum relays a corollary discharge of premotor signals and suggests an amplifying role of this circuitry in controlling associative motor learning.

SUBMITTER: Gao Z 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4742536 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Excitatory Cerebellar Nucleocortical Circuit Provides Internal Amplification during Associative Conditioning.

Gao Zhenyu Z   Proietti-Onori Martina M   Lin Zhanmin Z   Ten Brinke Michiel M MM   Boele Henk-Jan HJ   Potters Jan-Willem JW   Ruigrok Tom J H TJ   Hoebeek Freek E FE   De Zeeuw Chris I CI  

Neuron 20160201 3


Closed-loop circuitries between cortical and subcortical regions can facilitate precision of output patterns, but the role of such networks in the cerebellum remains to be elucidated. Here, we characterize the role of internal feedback from the cerebellar nuclei to the cerebellar cortex in classical eyeblink conditioning. We find that excitatory output neurons in the interposed nucleus provide efference-copy signals via mossy fibers to the cerebellar cortical zones that belong to the same module  ...[more]

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