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X-WR-CALNAME:Bordeaux Neurocampus
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230113T113000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230113T113000
DTSTAMP:20260410T082434
CREATED:20221107T091619Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221220T105142Z
UID:151831-1673609400-1673609400@www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr
SUMMARY:Seminar - Gregorio Galiñanes
DESCRIPTION:Venue: Centre Broca \n\nGregorio Galiñanes\nGregorio Galiñanes\nDaniel Huber Group\, Department of Basic Neuroscience\nUniversity of Geneva\, Switzerland\nhttps://www.huberlab.org/ \nInvited by Mario Carta (IINS) \nTitle\nWhat but not how: motor cortex neurons in mice encode movement goals rather than its kinematics \nAbstract\nMotor cortex controls voluntary movements through descending commands via the brainstem and spinal cord. To better understand the cortical role in motor control\, we studied the activity of layer 2/3 motor cortex neurons of mice performing a multi-directional water-reaching task. We found that task-related neurons became sequentially active across all phases of the behavior: from target presentation to reaching and water consumption. Interestingly\, while all task-related neurons displayed strong selectivity for the location of the reaching target\, few were modulated by the arm’s actual trajectory. This suggests that task-related neurons encode spatial information of reaching endpoints rather than kinematic parameters of movements. We analyzed this spatial representation and found that neurons were clustered into three roughly segregated groups representing reaching targets located to the left\, center or right of the animal’s snout\, conforming a coarse reaching endpoint map. As a whole\, subsets of layer 2/3 neurons represent specific combinations of spatial and temporal aspects of the task. We hypothesized that these subsets form functional modules that are recruited dynamically during task execution. To test this hypothesis\, we analyzed the neuronal activity while the reaching target was suddenly moved from one location to another during an ongoing reach. As predicted\, activity of the neuronal modules was consistently updated to match the novel target location and upcoming phases of the task. In summary\, our data suggests that cortical activity in the mouse does not solely reflect motor commands\, but processes spatio-temporal information related to the ongoing behavior and we speculate that layer 2/3 motor cortex neurons play a cognitive role related to attentional or perceptual mechanisms. \nKey publications\nGaliñanes GL\, Bonardi C\, Huber D. Directional Reaching for Water as a Cortex-Dependent Behavioral Framework for Mice. Cell Rep. 2018 Mar 6;22(10): 2767-2783.doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.02.042. PMID: 29514103; PMCID: PMC5863030. \nPrsa M\, Galiñanes GL\, Huber D. Rapid Integration of Artificial Sensory Feedback during Operant Conditioning of Motor Cortex Neurons. Neuron. 2017 Feb 22;93(4):929-939.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2017.01.023. PMID: 28231470; PMCID: PMC5330804. \nGaliñanes GL\, Huber D. Circuits for Raiders. Neuron. 2018 Sep 5;99(5):872-873. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2018.08.024. PMID: 30189206. \nGaliñanes GL\, Marchand PJ\, Turcotte R\, Pellat S\, Ji N\, Huber D. Optical alignment device for two-photon microscopy. Biomed Opt Express. 2018 Jul 9;9(8):3624-3639. doi: 10.1364/BOE.9.003624. PMID: 30338144; PMCID: PMC6191613. \nAndrásfalvy BK\, Galiñanes GL\, Huber D\, Barbic M\, Macklin JJ\, Susumu K\, Delehanty JB\, Huston AL\, Makara JK\, Medintz IL. Quantum dot-based multiphoton fluorescent pipettes for targeted neuronal electrophysiology. Nat Methods. 2014 Dec;11(12):1237-1241. doi: 10.1038/nmeth.3146. Epub 2014 Oct 19. PMID: 25326662; PMCID: PMC4245189. \nBarkus C\, Bergmann C\, Branco T\, Carandini M\, Chadderton PT\, Galiñanes GL\, Gilmour G\, Huber D\, Huxter JR\, Khan AG\, King AJ\, Maravall M\, O’Mahony T\, Ragan CI\, Robinson ESJ\, Schaefer AT\, Schultz SR\, Sengpiel F\, Prescott MJ. Refinements to rodent head fixation and fluid/food control for neuroscience. J Neurosci Methods. 2022 Nov 1;381:109705. doi: 10.1016/j.jneumeth.2022.109705. Epub 2022 Sep 9. PMID: 36096238. \n
URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/event/seminar-gregorio-galinanes/
CATEGORIES:A la une,Pour les scientifiques,Séminaire du vendredi
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