Current Biology
Volume 31, Issue 17, 13 September 2021, Pages 3820-3833.e4
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Article
Spinal V1 neurons inhibit motor targets locally and sensory targets distally

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2021.06.053Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Mapped connectivity from spinal V1 neurons to targets along the longitudinal axis

  • Despite long axons, V1s inhibit motor and premotor neurons only locally

  • Sensory CoPA neurons receive both local and long-range V1 inhibition

  • Local V1 inhibition to motor targets is required for smooth locomotion

Summary

Rostro-caudal coordination of spinal motor output is essential for locomotion. Most spinal interneurons project axons longitudinally to govern locomotor output, yet their connectivity along this axis remains unclear. In this study, we use larval zebrafish to map synaptic outputs of a major inhibitory population, V1 (Eng1+) neurons, which are implicated in dual sensory and motor functions. We find that V1 neurons exhibit long axons extending rostrally and exclusively ipsilaterally for an average of 6 spinal segments; however, they do not connect uniformly with their post-synaptic targets along the entire length of their axon. Locally, V1 neurons inhibit motor neurons (both fast and slow) and other premotor targets, including V2a, V2b, and commissural premotor neurons. In contrast, V1 neurons make robust long-range inhibitory contacts onto a dorsal horn sensory population, the commissural primary ascending neurons (CoPAs). In a computational model of the ipsilateral spinal network, we show that this pattern of short-range V1 inhibition to motor and premotor neurons underlies burst termination, which is critical for coordinated rostro-caudal propagation of the locomotor wave. We conclude that spinal network architecture in the longitudinal axis can vary dramatically, with differentially targeted local and distal connections, yielding important consequences for function.

Keywords

spinal cord
motor
differential connectivity
rostro-caudal coordination
zebrafish

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