神经科学
等级制度
中间神经元
节奏
背
运动行为
电动机控制
中心图形发生器
秀丽隐杆线虫
计算机科学
生物
沟通
心理学
物理
解剖
生物化学
抑制性突触后电位
经济
声学
基因
市场经济
作者
Jing Huo,Tianqi Xu,Qi Liu,Mahiber Polat,Sandeep Kumar,Xiaoqian Zhang,Andrew M. Leifer,Quan Wen
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2410789121
摘要
Animal behavior is organized into nested temporal patterns that span multiple timescales. This behavior hierarchy is believed to arise from a hierarchical neural architecture: Neurons near the top of the hierarchy are involved in planning, selecting, initiating, and maintaining motor programs, whereas those near the bottom of the hierarchy act in concert to produce fine spatiotemporal motor activity. In Caenorhabditis elegans , behavior on a long timescale emerges from ordered and flexible transitions between different behavioral states, such as forward, reversal, and turn. On a short timescale, different parts of the animal body coordinate fast rhythmic bending sequences to produce directional movements. Here, we show that Sublateral Anterior A (SAA), a class of interneurons that enable cross-communication between dorsal and ventral head motor neurons, play a dual role in shaping behavioral dynamics on different timescales. On a short timescale, SAA regulate and stabilize rhythmic bending activity during forward movements. On a long timescale, the same neurons suppress spontaneous reversals and facilitate reversal termination by inhibiting Ring Interneuron M (RIM), an integrating neuron that helps maintain a behavioral state. These results suggest that feedback from a lower-level cell assembly to a higher-level command center is essential for bridging behavioral dynamics at different levels.
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