原发性震颤
神经科学
小脑
光遗传学
丘脑
刺激
人口
运动前神经元活动
生物
心理学
医学
环境卫生
作者
Yimei Wang,C. Liu,Shun‐Ying Chen,Liang‐Yin Lu,Wen-Chuan Liu,Jia‐Huei Wang,Chun‐Lun Ni,Shi‐Bing Wong,Ami Kumar,Jye‐Chang Lee,Sheng‐Han Kuo,Shun‐Chi Wu,Ming‐Kai Pan
出处
期刊:Science Translational Medicine
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2024-05-15
卷期号:16 (747)
被引量:6
标识
DOI:10.1126/scitranslmed.adl1408
摘要
Essential tremor (ET) is the most prevalent movement disorder, characterized primarily by action tremor, an involuntary rhythmic movement with a specific frequency. However, the neuronal mechanism underlying the coding of tremor frequency remains unexplored. Here, we used in vivo electrophysiology, optogenetics, and simultaneous motion tracking in the Grid2 dupE3 mouse model to investigate whether and how neuronal activity in the olivocerebellum determines the frequency of essential tremor. We report that tremor frequency was encoded by the temporal coherence of population neuronal firing within the olivocerebellums of these mice, leading to frequency-dependent cerebellar oscillations and tremors. This mechanism was precise and generalizable, enabling us to use optogenetic stimulation of the deep cerebellar nuclei to induce frequency-specific tremors in wild-type mice or alter tremor frequencies in tremor mice. In patients with ET, we showed that deep brain stimulation of the thalamus suppressed tremor symptoms but did not eliminate cerebellar oscillations measured by electroencephalgraphy, indicating that tremor-related oscillations in the cerebellum do not require the reciprocal interactions with the thalamus. Frequency-disrupting transcranial alternating current stimulation of the cerebellum could suppress tremor amplitudes, confirming the frequency modulatory role of the cerebellum in patients with ET. These findings offer a neurodynamic basis for the frequency-dependent stimulation of the cerebellum to treat essential tremor.
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