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The whisking oscillator circuit.

Jun TakatohVincent PrevostoP M ThompsonJinghao LuLeeyup ChungAndrew HarrahillShun LiShengli ZhaoZhigang HeDavid GolombDavid KleinfeldFan Wang
Published in: Nature (2022)
Central oscillators are primordial neural circuits that generate and control rhythmic movements 1,2 . Mechanistic understanding of these circuits requires genetic identification of the oscillator neurons and their synaptic connections to enable targeted electrophysiological recording and causal manipulation during behaviours. However, such targeting remains a challenge with mammalian systems. Here we delimit the oscillator circuit that drives rhythmic whisking-a motor action that is central to foraging and active sensing in rodents 3,4 . We found that the whisking oscillator consists of parvalbumin-expressing inhibitory neurons located in the vibrissa intermediate reticular nucleus (vIRt PV ) in the brainstem. vIRt PV neurons receive descending excitatory inputs and form recurrent inhibitory connections among themselves. Silencing vIRt PV neurons eliminated rhythmic whisking and resulted in sustained vibrissae protraction. In vivo recording of opto-tagged vIRt PV neurons in awake mice showed that these cells spike tonically when animals are at rest, and transition to rhythmic bursting at the onset of whisking, suggesting that rhythm generation is probably the result of network dynamics, as opposed to intrinsic cellular properties. Notably, ablating inhibitory synaptic inputs to vIRt PV neurons quenched their rhythmic bursting, impaired the tonic-to-bursting transition and abolished regular whisking. Thus, the whisking oscillator is an all-inhibitory network and recurrent synaptic inhibition has a key role in its rhythmogenesis.
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