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Distinct locomotor precursors in newborn babies. | LitMetric

Distinct locomotor precursors in newborn babies.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Laboratory of Neuromotor Physiology, Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico Fondazione Santa Lucia, 00179 Rome, Italy;

Published: April 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mature locomotion involves complex spinal drives that create distinct patterns of muscle activation during movement, but how these patterns develop is still uncertain.
  • Newborns display two types of movement: spontaneous kicking, which is frequent both before and after birth, and weight-bearing stepping, which occurs when they first stand on the ground.
  • The study found that kicking has adult-like activation patterns but lacks stable muscle coordination, while stepping shows fewer patterns with better muscle synergy, suggesting that development in locomotion integrates experiences from both behaviors.

Article Abstract

Mature locomotion involves modular spinal drives generating a set of fundamental patterns of motoneuron activation, each timed at a specific phase of locomotor cycles and associated with a stable muscle synergy. How locomotor modules develop and to what extent they depend on prior experience or intrinsic programs remains unclear. To address these issues, we herein leverage the presence at birth of two types of locomotor-like movements, spontaneous kicking and weight-bearing stepping. The former is expressed thousands of times in utero and postnatally, whereas the latter is elicited de novo by placing the newborn on the ground for the first time. We found that the neuromuscular modules of stepping and kicking differ substantially. Neonates kicked with an adult-like number of temporal activation patterns, which lacked a stable association with systematic muscle synergies across movements. However, on the ground neonates stepped with fewer temporal patterns but all structured in stable synergies. Since kicking and ground-stepping coexist at birth, switching between the two behaviors may depend on a dynamic reconfiguration of the underlying neural circuits as a function of sensory feedback from surface contact. We tracked the development of ground-stepping in 4- to 48-mo-old infants and found that, after the age of 6 mo, the number of temporal patterns increased progressively, reaching adult-like conformation only after independent walking was established. We surmise that mature locomotor modules may derive by combining the multiple patterns of repeated kicking, on the one hand, with synergies resulting from fractionation of those revealed by sporadic weight-bearing stepping, on the other hand.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7196819PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1920984117DOI Listing

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