Publication | Open Access
Pedunculopontine Chx10+ neurons control global motor arrest in mice
37
Citations
54
References
2023
Year
Neurobiological MechanismMolecular NeuroscienceNeurophysiologyBehavioral NeuroscienceGlobal Motor ArrestPhysiologyOngoing MovementsMotor SystemSensorimotor IntegrationNeurotransmissionNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemNervous SystemMotor NeurophysiologyGlutamatergic NeuronsSocial SciencesCellular NeurobiologyHealth Sciences
Arrest of ongoing movements is an integral part of executing motor programs. Behavioral arrest may happen upon termination of a variety of goal-directed movements or as a global motor arrest either in the context of fear or in response to salient environmental cues. The neuronal circuits that bridge with the executive motor circuits to implement a global motor arrest are poorly understood. We report the discovery that the activation of glutamatergic Chx10-derived neurons in the pedunculopontine nucleus (PPN) in mice arrests all ongoing movements while simultaneously causing apnea and bradycardia. This global motor arrest has a pause-and-play pattern with an instantaneous interruption of movement followed by a short-latency continuation from where it was paused. Mice naturally perform arrest bouts with the same combination of motor and autonomic features. The Chx10-PPN-evoked arrest is different to ventrolateral periaqueductal gray-induced freezing. Our study defines a motor command that induces a global motor arrest, which may be recruited in response to salient environmental cues to allow for a preparatory or arousal state, and identifies a locomotor-opposing role for rostrally biased glutamatergic neurons in the PPN.
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