PUBLICATION

A brainstem integrator for self-location memory and positional homeostasis in zebrafish

Authors
Yang, E., Zwart, M.F., James, B., Rubinov, M., Wei, Z., Narayan, S., Vladimirov, N., Mensh, B.D., Fitzgerald, J.E., Ahrens, M.B.
ID
ZDB-PUB-221224-40
Date
2022
Source
Cell   185: 50115027.e205011-5027.e20 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Ahrens, Misha, Narayan, Sujatha
Keywords
brainstem, cerebellum, hippocampus, inferior olive, memory, motor control, navigation, neural circuits, neuroscience, path integration, zebrafish
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Brain/physiology
  • Homeostasis
  • Mammals
  • Neurons*/physiology
  • Rhombencephalon/physiology
  • Swimming/physiology
  • Zebrafish*/physiology
PubMed
36563666 Full text @ Cell
Abstract
To track and control self-location, animals integrate their movements through space. Representations of self-location are observed in the mammalian hippocampal formation, but it is unknown if positional representations exist in more ancient brain regions, how they arise from integrated self-motion, and by what pathways they control locomotion. Here, in a head-fixed, fictive-swimming, virtual-reality preparation, we exposed larval zebrafish to a variety of involuntary displacements. They tracked these displacements and, many seconds later, moved toward their earlier location through corrective swimming ("positional homeostasis"). Whole-brain functional imaging revealed a network in the medulla that stores a memory of location and induces an error signal in the inferior olive to drive future corrective swimming. Optogenetically manipulating medullary integrator cells evoked displacement-memory behavior. Ablating them, or downstream olivary neurons, abolished displacement corrections. These results reveal a multiregional hindbrain circuit in vertebrates that integrates self-motion and stores self-location to control locomotor behavior.
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