Locomotion is an essential animal behavior used for translocation. The spinal cord acts as key executing center, but how it coordinates many body parts located across distance remains poorly understood. Here we employed mouse genetic and viral approaches to reveal organizational principles of long-projecting spinal circuits and their role in quadrupedal locomotion. Using neurotransmitter identity, developmental origin, and projection patterns as criteria, we uncover that spinal segments controlling forelimbs and hindlimbs are bidirectionally connected by symmetrically organized direct synaptic pathways that encompass multiple genetically tractable neuronal subpopulations. We demonstrate that selective ablation of descending spinal neurons l...
Within the nervous system, the spinal cord plays vital roles both at the initial steps of receiving ...
Walking is a special case of movement because it is rhythmic. An important area in current neuroscie...
Summary: Control of movement relies on the ability of circuits within the spinal cord to establish c...
Complexity, stability as well as flexibility of human and animal behavior is dependent on highly org...
Accurate motor-task execution relies on continuous comparison of planned and performed actions. Moto...
Locomotion is a ubiquitous behavior demonstrated by the majority, if not all animals. However, the m...
SummaryAccurate motor-task execution relies on continuous comparison of planned and performed action...
Networks at various levels of the nervous system coordinate different motor patterns such as respira...
The brainstem is an evolutionarily conserved structure in vertebrate species, holding motor centers ...
Locomotion is regulated by distributed circuits and achieved by the concerted activation of body mus...
From swimming to walking and flying, animals have evolved specific locomotor strategies to thrive in...
SummarySpinal circuits can generate locomotor output in the absence of sensory or descending input, ...
The spinal cord represents the final stage of generating motor behaviors, where descending commands ...
Identifying the spinal circuits controlling locomotion is critical for unravelling the mechanisms co...
Neuronal circuits in the spinal cord are essential for the control of locomotion. They integrate sup...
Within the nervous system, the spinal cord plays vital roles both at the initial steps of receiving ...
Walking is a special case of movement because it is rhythmic. An important area in current neuroscie...
Summary: Control of movement relies on the ability of circuits within the spinal cord to establish c...
Complexity, stability as well as flexibility of human and animal behavior is dependent on highly org...
Accurate motor-task execution relies on continuous comparison of planned and performed actions. Moto...
Locomotion is a ubiquitous behavior demonstrated by the majority, if not all animals. However, the m...
SummaryAccurate motor-task execution relies on continuous comparison of planned and performed action...
Networks at various levels of the nervous system coordinate different motor patterns such as respira...
The brainstem is an evolutionarily conserved structure in vertebrate species, holding motor centers ...
Locomotion is regulated by distributed circuits and achieved by the concerted activation of body mus...
From swimming to walking and flying, animals have evolved specific locomotor strategies to thrive in...
SummarySpinal circuits can generate locomotor output in the absence of sensory or descending input, ...
The spinal cord represents the final stage of generating motor behaviors, where descending commands ...
Identifying the spinal circuits controlling locomotion is critical for unravelling the mechanisms co...
Neuronal circuits in the spinal cord are essential for the control of locomotion. They integrate sup...
Within the nervous system, the spinal cord plays vital roles both at the initial steps of receiving ...
Walking is a special case of movement because it is rhythmic. An important area in current neuroscie...
Summary: Control of movement relies on the ability of circuits within the spinal cord to establish c...