PUBLICATION

Spinal basis of direction control during locomotion in larval zebrafish

Authors
Jay, M., MacIver, M.A., McLean, D.L.
ID
ZDB-PUB-230502-45
Date
2023
Source
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience   43(22): 4062-4074 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Jay, Michael, McLean, David
Keywords
none
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Interneurons/physiology
  • Larva/physiology
  • Locomotion*/physiology
  • Motor Neurons/physiology
  • Spinal Cord/physiology
  • Swimming/physiology
  • Zebrafish*/physiology
PubMed
37127363 Full text @ J. Neurosci.
Abstract
Navigation requires steering and propulsion, but how spinal circuits contribute to direction control during ongoing locomotion is not well understood. Here, we use drifting vertical gratings to evoke directed 'fictive' swimming in intact but immobilized larval zebrafish while performing electrophysiological recordings from spinal neurons. We find directed swimming involves unilateral changes in the duration of motor output and increased recruitment of motor neurons, without impacting the timing of spiking across or along the body. Voltage-clamp recordings from motor neurons reveal increases in phasic excitation and inhibition on the side of the turn. Current-clamp recordings from premotor interneurons that provide phasic excitation or inhibition reveal two types of recruitment patterns. A direction-agnostic pattern with balanced recruitment on the turning and non-turning sides is primarily observed in excitatory V2a neurons with ipsilateral descending axons, while a direction-sensitive pattern with preferential recruitment on the turning side is dominated by V2a neurons with ipsilateral bifurcating axons. Inhibitory V1 neurons are also divided into direction-sensitive and -agnostic subsets, although there is no detectable morphological distinction. Our findings support the modular control of steering and propulsion by spinal premotor circuits, where recruitment of distinct subsets of excitatory and inhibitory interneurons provide adjustments in direction while on the move.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT:Spinal circuits play an essential role in coordinating movements during locomotion. However, it is unclear how they participate in adjustments in direction that do not interfere with coordination. Here we have developed a system using larval zebrafish that allows us to directly record electrical signals from spinal neurons during 'fictive' swimming guided by visual cues. We find there are subsets of spinal interneurons for coordination and others that drive unilateral asymmetries in motor neuron recruitment for direction control. Our findings suggest a modular organization of spinal premotor circuits which enables uninterrupted adjustments in direction during ongoing locomotion.
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