Inhibition, Not Excitation, Drives Rhythmic Whisking.

Abstract

Sniffing and whisking typify the exploratory behavior of rodents. These actions involve separate oscillators in the medulla, located respectively in the pre-Bötzinger complex (preBötC) and the vibrissa-related region of the intermediate reticular formation (vIRt). We examine how these oscillators synergize to control sniffing and whisking. We find that the vIRt contains glycinergic/GABAergic cells that rhythmically inhibit vibrissa facial motoneurons. As a basis for the entrainment of whisking by breathing, but not vice versa, we provide evidence for unidirectional connections from the preBötC to the vIRt. The preBötC further contributes to the control of the mystacial pad. Lastly, we show that bilateral synchrony of whisking relies on the respiratory rhythm, consistent with commissural connections between preBötC cells. These data yield a putative circuit in which the preBötC acts as a master clock for the synchronization of vibrissa, pad, and snout movements, as well as for the bilateral synchronization of whisking.

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Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1016/j.neuron.2016.03.007

Publication Info

Deschênes, Martin, Jun Takatoh, Anastasia Kurnikova, Jeffrey D Moore, Maxime Demers, Michael Elbaz, Takahiro Furuta, Fan Wang, et al. (2016). Inhibition, Not Excitation, Drives Rhythmic Whisking. Neuron, 90(2). pp. 374–387. 10.1016/j.neuron.2016.03.007 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13003.

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Wang

Fan Wang

Adjunct Professor in the Department of Neurobiology

My lab studies neural circuit basis of sensory perception. 
Specifically we are interested in determining neural circuits underlying (1) active touch sensation including tactile processing stream and motor control of touch sensors on the face; (2) pain sensation including both sensory-discriminative and affective aspects of pain; and (3) general anesthesia including the active pain-suppression process. We use a combination of genetic, viral, electrophysiology, and in vivo imaging (in free-moving animals) techniques to study these questions.


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