EMERGENCE OF INTER-INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIORAL VARIABILITY IN UNPREDICTABLE ENVIRONMENTS
Paris Brain Institute
Presentation
Date TBA
Event Information
Poster Board
PS07-10AM-377
Poster
View posterAbstract
To interrogate the outputs of the SC we focus on Lypd1 neurons, a population of glutamatergic projection neurons, labelled with a Cre line. We show Lypd1 neurons project to motor thalamus, an interface with the basal ganglia, and hindbrain nuclei, providing them with broad access to motor circuits. In vivo optogenetic activation elicited robust contralateral orienting, pupil dilation and orofacial movement implicating this population in the control of movement and arousal state. We next evaluated their role in goal-directed behaviour using a trained pursuit task. Silencing Lypd1 neurons during pursuit caused a transient disruption of performance, from which mice recovered within the stimulation period, suggesting the engagement of parallel mechanisms supporting behaviour.
These findings suggest that Lypd1 neurons in the SC are well equipped to shape ongoing movements. Dissecting the distinct contributions of ascending and descending SC output pathways will be essential for understanding how visually guided motor commands are integrated with ongoing motor activity to support adaptive behaviour.
Recommended posters
DISSECTING THE NEURAL CIRCUITS OF MOTOR CONTROL IN THE MOUSE SUPERIOR COLLICULUS
Ayesha Pointer, Ines Razafindrahaba, Xavier Cano-Ferrer, Marcelo Moglie, Florencia Iacaruso
MIDBRAIN CIRCUITS FOR THE PURSUIT OF MOVING TARGETS IN MICE
Marcelo Moglie, Yi Yang, Ayesha Pointer, Gaia Bianchini, Ainiah Masood, Xavier Cano-Ferrer, Florencia Iacaruso
CORTICAL INPUTS TO THE LATERAL SUPERIOR COLLICULUS ADAPT THE TACTILE ORIENTING RESPONSE
James Auwn, Emilio Isaias-Camacho, Jesus Martin-Cortecero, Katharina Ziegler, Defne Bozbey, Kira Andrea, Alexander Groh
AN ALTERNATIVE NEURAL PATHWAY FOR ESCAPE BEHAVIOUR: THE PARABIGEMINAL–SUPERIOR COLLICULUS CIRCUIT
Camilla Lodetti, Cinar Furkan Ilhan, Anna Carboncino, Katja Reinhard
CONTRIBUTIONS OF SUPERIOR COLLICULUS AND PRIMARY VISUAL CORTEX TO VISUAL SPATIAL DETECTION IN FREELY MOVING MICE
Jisoo Kim, Riccardo Beltramo, Jasper Poort
CORTICO-SUBCORTICAL DYNAMICS UNDERLYING ADAPTIVE LOCOMOTION
Martin Esparza, Ioana Lazar, Catia Fortunato, Mostafa Safaie, Juan Gallego