Cerebellar-dependent expression of motor learning during eyeblink conditioning in head-fixed mice

Eyeblink conditioning in restrained rabbits has served as an excellent model of cerebellar-dependent motor learning for many decades. In mice, the role of the cerebellum in eyeblink conditioning is less clear and remains controversial, partly because learning appears to engage fear-related circuits...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of neuroscience 2014-11, Vol.34 (45), p.14845-14853
Hauptverfasser: Heiney, Shane A, Wohl, Margot P, Chettih, Selmaan N, Ruffolo, Luis I, Medina, Javier F
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container_end_page 14853
container_issue 45
container_start_page 14845
container_title The Journal of neuroscience
container_volume 34
creator Heiney, Shane A
Wohl, Margot P
Chettih, Selmaan N
Ruffolo, Luis I
Medina, Javier F
description Eyeblink conditioning in restrained rabbits has served as an excellent model of cerebellar-dependent motor learning for many decades. In mice, the role of the cerebellum in eyeblink conditioning is less clear and remains controversial, partly because learning appears to engage fear-related circuits and lesions of the cerebellum do not abolish the learned behavior completely. Furthermore, experiments in mice are performed using freely moving systems, which lack the stability necessary for mapping out the essential neural circuitry with electrophysiological approaches. We have developed a novel apparatus for eyeblink conditioning in head-fixed mice. Here, we show that the performance of mice in our apparatus is excellent and that the learned behavior displays two hallmark features of cerebellar-dependent eyeblink conditioning in rabbits: (1) gradual acquisition; and (2) adaptive timing of conditioned movements. Furthermore, we use a combination of pharmacological inactivation, electrical stimulation, single-unit recordings, and targeted microlesions to demonstrate that the learned behavior is completely dependent on the cerebellum and to pinpoint the exact location in the deep cerebellar nuclei that is necessary. Our results pave the way for using eyeblink conditioning in head-fixed mice as a platform for applying next-generation genetic tools to address molecular and circuit-level questions about cerebellar function in health and disease.
doi_str_mv 10.1523/jneurosci.2820-14.2014
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subjects Animals
Blinking
Cerebellum - physiology
Conditioning, Classical
Male
Mice
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Movement
Restraint, Physical - instrumentation
Restraint, Physical - methods
title Cerebellar-dependent expression of motor learning during eyeblink conditioning in head-fixed mice
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