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1.
J Neurophysiol ; 103(4): 2039-49, 2010 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20130039

ABSTRACT

We used micro-infusions during eyelid conditioning in rabbits to investigate the relative contributions of cerebellar cortex and the underlying deep nuclei (DCN) to the expression of cerebellar learning. These tests were conducted using two forms of cerebellum-dependent eyelid conditioning for which the relative roles of cerebellar cortex and DCN are controversial: delay conditioning, which is largely unaffected by forebrain lesions, and trace conditioning, which involves interactions between forebrain and cerebellum. For rabbits trained with delay conditioning, silencing cerebellar cortex by micro-infusions of the local anesthetic lidocaine unmasked stereotyped short-latency responses. This was also the case after extinction as observed previously with reversible blockade of cerebellar cortex output. Conversely, increasing cerebellar cortex activity by micro-infusions of the GABA(A) antagonist picrotoxin reversibly abolished conditioned responses. Effective cannula placements were clustered around the primary fissure and deeper in lobules hemispheric lobule IV (HIV) and hemispheric lobule V (HV) of anterior lobe. In well-trained trace conditioned rabbits, silencing this same area of cerebellar cortex or reversibly blocking cerebellar cortex output also unmasked short-latency responses. Because Purkinje cells are the sole output of cerebellar cortex, these results provide evidence that the expression of well-timed conditioned responses requires a well-timed decrease in the activity of Purkinje cells in anterior lobe. The parallels between results from delay and trace conditioning suggest similar contributions of plasticity in cerebellar cortex and DCN in both instances.


Subject(s)
Cerebellar Cortex/physiology , Conditioning, Eyelid/physiology , Reaction Time/physiology , Animals , GABA Antagonists/administration & dosage , GABA Antagonists/pharmacology , Infusions, Intraventricular , Lidocaine/administration & dosage , Lidocaine/pharmacology , Male , Models, Animal , Neuronal Plasticity/physiology , Picrotoxin/administration & dosage , Picrotoxin/pharmacology , Purkinje Cells/cytology , Purkinje Cells/drug effects , Purkinje Cells/physiology , Pyridazines/administration & dosage , Pyridazines/pharmacology , Rabbits , Receptors, GABA-A/drug effects , Receptors, GABA-A/physiology
2.
Learn Mem ; 16(1): 86-95, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19144967

ABSTRACT

Eyelid conditioning has proven useful for analysis of learning and computation in the cerebellum. Two variants, delay and trace conditioning, differ only by the relative timing of the training stimuli. Despite the subtlety of this difference, trace eyelid conditioning is prevented by lesions of the cerebellum, hippocampus, or medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), whereas delay eyelid conditioning is prevented by cerebellar lesions and is largely unaffected by forebrain lesions. Here we test whether these lesion results can be explained by two assertions: (1) Cerebellar learning requires temporal overlap between the mossy fiber inputs activated by the tone conditioned stimulus (CS) and the climbing fiber inputs activated by the reinforcing unconditioned stimulus (US), and therefore (2) trace conditioning requires activity that outlasts the presentation of the CS in a subset of mossy fibers separate from those activated directly by the CS. By use of electrical stimulation of mossy fibers as a CS, we show that cerebellar learning during trace eyelid conditioning requires an input that persists during the stimulus-free trace interval. By use of reversible inactivation experiments, we provide evidence that this input arises from the mPFC and arrives at the cerebellum via a previously unidentified site in the pontine nuclei. In light of previous PFC recordings in various species, we suggest that trace eyelid conditioning involves an interaction between the persistent activity of delay cells in mPFC-a putative mechanism of working memory-and motor learning in the cerebellum.


Subject(s)
Cerebellum/physiology , Conditioning, Eyelid/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Animals , Cerebellum/drug effects , Conditioning, Eyelid/drug effects , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Electric Stimulation , Electrodes, Implanted , GABA Agonists/pharmacology , Male , Muscimol/pharmacology , Nerve Fibers/drug effects , Nerve Fibers/physiology , Neural Pathways/drug effects , Neural Pathways/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/drug effects , Rabbits
3.
J Neurosci ; 26(49): 12656-63, 2006 Dec 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17151268

ABSTRACT

Evidence that cerebellar learning involves more than one site of plasticity comes from, in part, pavlovian eyelid conditioning, where disconnecting the cerebellar cortex abolishes one component of learning, response timing, but spares the expression of abnormally timed short-latency responses (SLRs). Here, we provide evidence that SLRs unmasked by cerebellar cortex lesions are mediated by an associative form of learning-induced plasticity in the anterior interpositus nucleus (AIN) of the cerebellum. We used pharmacological inactivation and/or electrical microstimulation of various sites afferent and efferent to the AIN to systematically eliminate alternative candidate sites of plasticity upstream or downstream from this structure. Collectively, the results suggest that cerebellar learning is mediated in part by plasticity in target nuclei downstream of the cerebellar cortex. These data demonstrate an instance in which an aspect of associative learning, SLRs, can be used as an index of plasticity at a specific site in the brain.


Subject(s)
Cerebellar Nuclei/physiology , Learning/physiology , Neuronal Plasticity/physiology , Animals , Rabbits
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