Locomotor behaviors are performed by organisms throughout life, despite developmental changes in cellular properties, neural connectivity, and biomechanics. The basic rhythmic activity in the central nervous system that underlies locomotion is thought to be generated via a complex balance between network and intrinsic cellular properties. Within mature mammalian spinal locomotor circuitry, we have yet to determine which properties of spinal interneurons (INs) are critical to rhythmogenesis and how they change during development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLocomotion is controlled by spinal circuits that interact with supraspinal drives and sensory feedback from the limbs. These sensorimotor interactions are disrupted following spinal cord injury. The thoracic lateral hemisection represents an experimental model of an incomplete spinal cord injury, where connections between the brain and spinal cord are abolished on one side of the cord.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLocomotion in mammals is directly controlled by the spinal neuronal network, operating under the control of supraspinal signals and somatosensory feedback that interact with each other. However, the functional architecture of the spinal locomotor network, its operation regimes, and the role of supraspinal and sensory feedback in different locomotor behaviors, including at different speeds, remain unclear. We developed a computational model of spinal locomotor circuits receiving supraspinal drives and limb sensory feedback that could reproduce multiple experimental data obtained in intact and spinal-transected cats during tied-belt and split-belt treadmill locomotion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThoracic spinal cord injury affects long propriospinal neurons that interconnect the cervical and lumbar enlargements. These neurons are crucial for coordinating forelimb and hindlimb locomotor movements in a speed-dependent manner. However, recovery from spinal cord injury is usually studied over a very limited range of speeds that may not fully expose circuitry dysfunction.
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