Article

Brain-wide neuronal dynamics during motor adaptation in zebrafish.

Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, 16 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA.
Nature (impact factor: 36.28). 05/2012; 485(7399):471-7. DOI:10.1038/nature11057 pp.471-7
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT A fundamental question in neuroscience is how entire neural circuits generate behaviour and adapt it to changes in sensory feedback. Here we use two-photon calcium imaging to record the activity of large populations of neurons at the cellular level, throughout the brain of larval zebrafish expressing a genetically encoded calcium sensor, while the paralysed animals interact fictively with a virtual environment and rapidly adapt their motor output to changes in visual feedback. We decompose the network dynamics involved in adaptive locomotion into four types of neuronal response properties, and provide anatomical maps of the corresponding sites. A subset of these signals occurred during behavioural adjustments and are candidates for the functional elements that drive motor learning. Lesions to the inferior olive indicate a specific functional role for olivocerebellar circuitry in adaptive locomotion. This study enables the analysis of brain-wide dynamics at single-cell resolution during behaviour.

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Keywords

adaptive locomotion
 
anatomical maps
 
behavioural adjustments
 
brain-wide dynamics
 
candidates
 
cellular level
 
fundamental question
 
genetically encoded calcium sensor
 
inferior olive
 
motor output
 
network dynamics
 
neuronal response properties
 
paralysed animals interact fictively
 
sensory feedback
 
single-cell resolution
 
specific functional role
 
study enables
 
subset
 
virtual environment
 
visual feedback
 

Misha B Ahrens