학술논문

Rhesus macaque versus rat divergence in the corticospinal projectome
Document Type
article
Source
Neuron. 110(18)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Aging
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Neurological
Animals
Axons
Brain Mapping
Macaca mulatta
Motor Cortex
Pyramidal Tracts
Rats
Spinal Cord
corticospinal
monkey
motor control
motor cortex
optogenetics
projectome mapping
rhesus macaque
spinal cord
trans-synaptic tracing
viral tracing
Psychology
Cognitive Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Biological psychology
Language
Abstract
We used viral intersectional tools to map the entire projectome of corticospinal neurons associated with fine distal forelimb control in Fischer 344 rats and rhesus macaques. In rats, we found an extraordinarily diverse set of collateral projections from corticospinal neurons to 23 different brain and spinal regions. Remarkably, the vast weighting of this "motor" projection was to sensory systems in both the brain and spinal cord, confirmed by optogenetic and transsynaptic viral intersectional tools. In contrast, rhesus macaques exhibited far heavier and narrower weighting of corticospinal outputs toward spinal and brainstem motor systems. Thus, corticospinal systems in macaques primarily constitute a final output system for fine motor control, whereas this projection in rats exerts a multi-modal integrative role that accesses far broader CNS regions. Unique structural-functional correlations can be achieved by mapping and quantifying a single neuronal system's total axonal output and its relative weighting across CNS targets.