Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4321569 Neuron 2010 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryMovement is the behavioral output of neuronal activity in the spinal cord. Motor neurons are grouped into motor neuron pools, the functional units innervating individual muscles. Here we establish an anatomical rabies virus-based connectivity assay in early postnatal mice. We employ it to study the connectivity scheme of premotor neurons, the neuronal cohorts monosynaptically connected to motor neurons, unveiling three aspects of organization. First, motor neuron pools are connected to segmentally widely distributed yet stereotypic interneuron populations, differing for pools innervating functionally distinct muscles. Second, depending on subpopulation identity, interneurons take on local or segmentally distributed positions. Third, cholinergic partition cells involved in the regulation of motor neuron excitability segregate into ipsilaterally and bilaterally projecting populations, the latter exhibiting preferential connections to functionally equivalent motor neuron pools bilaterally. Our study visualizes the widespread yet precise nature of the connectivity matrix for premotor interneurons and reveals exquisite synaptic specificity for bilaterally projecting cholinergic partition cells.

► Monosynaptically restricted rabies virus reveals wide premotor neuron distributions ► Premotor interneurons connected to distinct motor neuron pools differ ► Neuromodulatory cholinergic partition cells divide in ipsi- and bilateral population ► Bilaterally projecting partition cells exhibit a high degree of synaptic specificity

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