Convergence of unisensory-evoked signals via multiple pathways to the cerebellum

2019 
The cerebellum receives signals directly from peripheral sensory systems and indirectly from the neocortex. To reveal how these different types of signals are processed in the cerebellar cortex, in vivo whole-cell recordings from granule cells and unit recordings from Purkinje cells were performed in mice in which primary somatosensory cortex (S1) could be optogenetically inhibited. Tactile stimulation of the upper lip produced two-phase granule cell responses (with latencies of ~8 ms and 28 ms), for which only the late phase was S1 dependent. Complex spikes and the late phase of simple spikes in Purkinje cells were also S1 dependent. These results indicate that individual granule cells integrate convergent inputs from the periphery and neocortex, and send their outputs to Purkinje cells, which then combine those signals with climbing fiber signals from the neocortex.
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