In the spinal cord, classes of interneurons have been studied in vitro to determine their role in producing or regulating locomotion. It is unclear whether all locomotor behaviors are produced by the same circuitry or engage different subsets of neurons. Here, in neonatal mice of either sex, we test this idea by comparing the actions of a class of spinal, inhibitory interneuron (V1) expressing channelrhodopsin driven by the engrailed-1 transcription factor on the rhythms elicited by different methods. We find that, although the overall locomotor activities in vitro are similar, V1 interneuron depolarization produces opposite effects depending of the mode of activation of the locomotor circuitry. The differential behavior of V1 neurons suggests that their function depends on how the locomotor rhythm is activated and is consistent with the idea that the functional organization of the corresponding locomotor networks also differs.
CITATION STYLE
Falgairolle, M., & O’Donovan, M. J. (2021). Optogenetic activation of v1 interneurons reveals the multimodality of spinal locomotor networks in the neonatal mouse. Journal of Neuroscience, 41(41), 8545–8561. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0875-21.2021
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