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    Date Issued2021 (1)2020 (1)2018 (1)2017 (1)AuthorAlkema, Mark J (4)
    Hung, Wesley (4)
    Zhen, Mei (4)Kawano, Taizo (3)Alcaire, Salvador (2)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationAlkema Lab (4)Neurobiology (4)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Neuroscience Program (3)Document TypeJournal Article (3)Preprint (1)Keywordneuroscience (4)C. elegans (3)Neuroscience and Neurobiology (3)Behavioral Neurobiology (1)Central Pattern Generator (CPG) (1)View MoreJournaleLife (3)bioRxiv (1)

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    Corollary discharge promotes a sustained motor state in a neural circuit for navigation

    Ji, Ni; Venkatachalam, Vivek; Rodgers, Hillary Denise; Hung, Wesley; Kawano, Taizo; Clark, Christopher M.; Lim, Maria; Alkema, Mark J; Zhen, Mei; Samuel, Aravinthan D. T. (2021-04-21)
    Animals exhibit behavioral and neural responses that persist on longer timescales than transient or fluctuating stimulus inputs. Here, we report that Caenorhabditis elegans uses feedback from the motor circuit to a sensory processing interneuron to sustain its motor state during thermotactic navigation. By imaging circuit activity in behaving animals, we show that a principal postsynaptic partner of the AFD thermosensory neuron, the AIY interneuron, encodes both temperature and motor state information. By optogenetic and genetic manipulation of this circuit, we demonstrate that the motor state representation in AIY is a corollary discharge signal. RIM, an interneuron that is connected with premotor interneurons, is required for this corollary discharge. Ablation of RIM eliminates the motor representation in AIY, allows thermosensory representations to reach downstream premotor interneurons, and reduces the animal's ability to sustain forward movements during thermotaxis. We propose that feedback from the motor circuit to the sensory processing circuit underlies a positive feedback mechanism to generate persistent neural activity and sustained behavioral patterns in a sensorimotor transformation.
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    Flexible motor sequence generation during stereotyped escape responses

    Wang, Yuan; Zhang, Xiaoqian; Xin, Qi; Hung, Wesley; Florman, Jeremy; Huo, Jing; Xu, Tianqi; Xie, Yu; Alkema, Mark J; Zhen, Mei; et al. (2020-06-05)
    Complex animal behaviors arise from a flexible combination of stereotyped motor primitives. Here we use the escape responses of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to study how a nervous system dynamically explores the action space. The initiation of the escape responses is predictable: the animal moves away from a potential threat, a mechanical or thermal stimulus. But the motor sequence and the timing that follow are variable. We report that a feedforward excitation between neurons encoding distinct motor states underlies robust motor sequence generation, while mutual inhibition between these neurons controls the flexibility of timing in a motor sequence. Electrical synapses contribute to feedforward coupling whereas glutamatergic synapses contribute to inhibition. We conclude that C. elegans generates robust and flexible motor sequences by combining an excitatory coupling and a winner-take-all operation via mutual inhibition between motor modules.
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    Excitatory motor neurons are local oscillators for backward locomotion

    Gao, Shangbang; Guan, Sihui Asuka; Fouad, Anthony D.; Meng, Jun; Kawano, Taizo; Huang, Yung-Chi; Li, Yi; Alcaire, Salvador; Hung, Wesley; Lu, Yangning; et al. (2018-01-23)
    Cell- or network-driven oscillators underlie motor rhythmicity. The identity of C. elegans oscillators remains unknown. Through cell ablation, electrophysiology, and calcium imaging, we show: (1) forward and backward locomotion is driven by different oscillators; (2) the cholinergic and excitatory A-class motor neurons exhibit intrinsic and oscillatory activity that is sufficient to drive backward locomotion in the absence of premotor interneurons; (3) the UNC-2 P/Q/N high-voltage-activated calcium current underlies A motor neuron's oscillation; (4) descending premotor interneurons AVA, via an evolutionarily conserved, mixed gap junction and chemical synapse configuration, exert state-dependent inhibition and potentiation of A motor neuron's intrinsic activity to regulate backward locomotion. Thus, motor neurons themselves derive rhythms, which are dually regulated by the descending interneurons to control the reversal motor state. These and previous findings exemplify compression: essential circuit properties are conserved but executed by fewer numbers and layers of neurons in a small locomotor network.
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    Excitatory Motor Neurons are Local Central Pattern Generators in an Anatomically Compressed Motor Circuit for Reverse Locomotion [preprint]

    Gao, Shangbang; Guan, Sihui Asuka; Fouad, Anthony D.; Meng, Jun; Huang, Yung-Chi; Li, Yi; Alcaire, Salvador; Hung, Wesley; Kawano, Taizo; Lu, Yangning; et al. (2017-07-17)
    Central pattern generators are cell- or network-driven oscillators that underlie motor rhythmicity. The existence and identity of C. elegans CPGs remain unknown. Through cell ablation, electrophysiology, and calcium imaging, we identified oscillators for reverse locomotion. We show that the cholinergic and excitatory class A motor neurons exhibit intrinsic and oscillatory activity, and such an activity can drive reverse locomotion without premotor interneurons. Regulation of their oscillatory activity, either through effecting an endogenous constituent of oscillation, the P/Q/N high voltage-activated calcium channel UNC-2, or, via dual regulation, inhibition and activation, by the descending premotor interneurons AVA, determines the propensity, velocity, and sustention of reverse locomotion. Thus, the reversal motor executors themselves serve as oscillators; regulation of their intrinsic activity controls the reversal motor state. These findings exemplify anatomic and functional compression: motor executors integrate the role of rhythm generation in a locomotor network that is constrained by small cell numbers.
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