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J Neurophysiol 79: 2447-2459, 1998;
0022-3077/98 $5.00
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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 79 No. 5 May 1998, pp. 2447-2459
Copyright ©1998 The American Physiological Society

Effects of Cerebellar Nuclear Inactivation on the Learning of a Complex Forelimb Movement in Cats

Jian-Jun Wang, Yury Shimansky, Vlastislav Bracha, and James R. Bloedel

Division of Neurobiology, Barrow Neurological Institute, Phoenix, Arizona 85013

Wang, Jian-Jun, Yury Shimansky, Vlastislav Bracha, andJames R. Bloedel. Effects of cerebellar nuclear inactivation on thelearning of a complex forelimb movement in cats. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 2447-2459, 1998. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of inactivating concurrently the cerebellar interposed and dentate nuclei on the capacity of cats to acquire and retain a complex, goal-directed forelimb movement. To assess the effects on acquisition, cats were required to learn to move a vertical manipulandum bar through a two-segment template with a shape approximating an inverted "L" after the injection of muscimol (saline for the control group) in the interposed and dentate cerebellar nuclei. During training periods, they were exposed progressively to more difficult templates, which were created by decreasing the angle between the two segments of the template. After determining the most difficult template the injected animals could learn within the specified time and performance constraints, the retraining phase of the experiment was initiated in which the cats were required to execute the same sequence of templates in the absence of any injection. This stage of the experiment assessed retention and determined the extent of any relearning required to execute the task at criterion levels. Next, the animals were overtrained without any injection on the most difficult template they could perform. Finally, to determine the effects of nuclear inactivation on retention after extensive retraining, their capacity to perform the same template was determined after muscimol injection in the interposed and dentate nuclei. The findings show that during the inactivation of the dentate and interposed nuclei the animals could learn to execute the more difficult templates. However, when required to execute the most difficult template learned under muscimol on the day after injections were discontinued, the cats had to "relearn" (reacquire) the movement. Finally, when the cerebellar nuclei were inactivated after the animals learned the task in the absence of any injections during the retraining phase, retention was not blocked. The data indicate that the intermediate and lateral cerebellum are not required either for learning this type of complex voluntary movement or for retaining the capacity to perform the task once it is learned. Nevertheless, when the cerebellum becomes available for executing a task learned in the absence of this structure, reacquisition of the behavior usually is necessary. It is hypothesized that the relearning observed after acquisition during muscimol inactivation reflects the tendency of the system to incorporate the cerebellum into the interactions responsible for the learning and performance of a motor sequence that is optimal for executing the task.




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