Genetic Ablation of V2a Ipsilateral Interneurons Disrupts Left-Right Locomotor Coordination in Mammalian Spinal Cord

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Steven A. Crone
  • Katharina A. Quinlan
  • Laskaro Zagoraiou
  • Steven Droho
  • Carlos Ernesto Restrepo
  • Line Lundfald
  • Toshiaki Endo
  • Jennifer Setlak
  • Thomas M. Jessell
  • Kiehn, Ole
  • Kamal Sharma

The initiation and coordination of activity in limb muscles are the main functions of neural circuits that control locomotion. Commissural neurons connect locomotor circuits on the two sides of the spinal cord, and represent the known neural substrate for left-right coordination. Here we demonstrate that a group of ipsilateral interneurons, V2a interneurons, plays an essential role in the control of left-right alternation. In the absence of V2a interneurons, the spinal cord fails to exhibit consistent left-right alternation. Locomotor burst activity shows increased variability, but flexor-extensor coordination is unaffected. Anatomical tracing studies reveal a direct excitatory input of V2a interneurons onto commissural interneurons, including a set of molecularly defined V0 neurons that drive left-right alternation. Our findings imply that the neural substrate for left-right coordination consists of at least two components; commissural neurons and a class of ipsilateral interneurons that activate commissural pathways.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNeuron
Volume60
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)70-83
Number of pages14
ISSN0896-6273
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Oct 2008

    Research areas

  • CELLBIO, DEVBIO, MOLNEURO

ID: 194978103