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Dive into the research topics where Simon Gosgnach is active.

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Featured researches published by Simon Gosgnach.


Neuron | 2004

Genetic Identification of Spinal Interneurons that Coordinate Left-Right Locomotor Activity Necessary for Walking Movements

Guillermo M. Lanuza; Simon Gosgnach; Alessandra Pierani; Thomas M. Jessell; Martyn Goulding

The sequential stepping of left and right limbs is a fundamental motor behavior that underlies walking movements. This relatively simple locomotor behavior is generated by the rhythmic activity of motor neurons under the control of spinal neural networks known as central pattern generators (CPGs) that comprise multiple interneuron cell types. Little, however, is known about the identity and contribution of defined interneuronal populations to mammalian locomotor behaviors. We show a discrete subset of commissural spinal interneurons, whose fate is controlled by the activity of the homeobox gene Dbx1, has a critical role in controlling the left-right alternation of motor neurons innervating hindlimb muscles. Dbx1 mutant mice lacking these ventral interneurons exhibit an increased incidence of cobursting between left and right flexor/extensor motor neurons during drug-induced locomotion. Together, these findings identify Dbx1-dependent interneurons as key components of the spinal locomotor circuits that control stepping movements in mammals.


Nature | 2006

V1 spinal neurons regulate the speed of vertebrate locomotor outputs

Simon Gosgnach; Guillermo M. Lanuza; Simon J. B. Butt; Harald Saueressig; Ying Zhang; Tomoko Velasquez; Dieter Riethmacher; Edward M. Callaway; Ole Kiehn; Martyn Goulding

The neuronal networks that generate vertebrate movements such as walking and swimming are embedded in the spinal cord. These networks, which are referred to as central pattern generators (CPGs), are ideal systems for determining how ensembles of neurons generate simple behavioural outputs. In spite of efforts to address the organization of the locomotor CPG in walking animals, little is known about the identity and function of the spinal interneuron cell types that contribute to these locomotor networks. Here we use four complementary genetic approaches to directly address the function of mouse V1 neurons, a class of local circuit inhibitory interneurons that selectively express the transcription factor Engrailed1. Our results show that V1 neurons shape motor outputs during locomotion and are required for generating ‘fast’ motor bursting. These findings outline an important role for inhibition in regulating the frequency of the locomotor CPG rhythm, and also suggest that V1 neurons may have an evolutionarily conserved role in controlling the speed of vertebrate locomotor movements.


Neuron | 2008

V3 Spinal Neurons Establish a Robust and Balanced Locomotor Rhythm during Walking

Ying Zhang; Sujatha Narayan; Eric J. Geiman; Guillermo M. Lanuza; Tomoko Velasquez; Bayle Shanks; Turgay Akay; Jason R. B. Dyck; Keir G. Pearson; Simon Gosgnach; Chen-Ming Fan; Martyn Goulding

A robust and well-organized rhythm is a key feature of many neuronal networks, including those that regulate essential behaviors such as circadian rhythmogenesis, breathing, and locomotion. Here we show that excitatory V3-derived neurons are necessary for a robust and organized locomotor rhythm during walking. When V3-mediated neurotransmission is selectively blocked by the expression of the tetanus toxin light chain subunit (TeNT), the regularity and robustness of the locomotor rhythm is severely perturbed. A similar degeneration in the locomotor rhythm occurs when the excitability of V3-derived neurons is reduced acutely by ligand-induced activation of the allatostatin receptor. The V3-derived neurons additionally function to balance the locomotor output between both halves of the spinal cord, thereby ensuring a symmetrical pattern of locomotor activity during walking. We propose that the V3 neurons establish a regular and balanced motor rhythm by distributing excitatory drive between both halves of the spinal cord.


Neuron | 2006

Selective and Quickly Reversible Inactivation of Mammalian Neurons In Vivo Using the Drosophila Allatostatin Receptor

Elaine M. Tan; Yoshiaki Yamaguchi; Gregory D. Horwitz; Simon Gosgnach; Edward S. Lein; Martyn Goulding; Thomas D. Albright; Edward M. Callaway

Genetic strategies for perturbing activity of selected neurons hold great promise for understanding circuitry and behavior. Several such strategies exist, but there has been no direct demonstration of reversible inactivation of mammalian neurons in vivo. We previously reported quickly reversible inactivation of neurons in vitro using expression of the Drosophila allatostatin receptor (AlstR). Here, adeno-associated viral vectors are used to express AlstR in vivo in cortical and thalamic neurons of rats, ferrets, and monkeys. Application of the receptors ligand, allatostatin (AL), leads to a dramatic reduction in neural activity, including responses of visual neurons to optimized visual stimuli. Additionally, AL eliminates activity in spinal cords of transgenic mice conditionally expressing AlstR. This reduction occurs selectively in AlstR-expressing neurons. Inactivation can be reversed within minutes upon washout of the ligand and is repeatable, demonstrating that the AlstR/AL system is effective for selective, quick, and reversible silencing of mammalian neurons in vivo.


Neuron | 2005

Cholinergic Input Is Required during Embryonic Development to Mediate Proper Assembly of Spinal Locomotor Circuits

Christopher P. Myers; Joseph W. Lewcock; M. Gartz Hanson; Simon Gosgnach; James B. Aimone; Fred H. Gage; Kuo-Fen Lee; Lynn T. Landmesser; Samuel L. Pfaff

Rhythmic limb movements are controlled by pattern-generating neurons within the ventral spinal cord, but little is known about how these locomotor circuits are assembled during development. At early stages of embryogenesis, motor neurons are spontaneously active, releasing acetylcholine that triggers the depolarization of adjacent cells in the spinal cord. To investigate whether acetylcholine-driven activity is required for assembly of the central pattern-generating (CPG) circuit, we studied mice lacking the choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) enzyme. Our studies show that a rhythmically active spinal circuit forms in ChAT mutants, but the duration of each cycle period is elongated, and right-left and flexor-extensor coordination are abnormal. In contrast, blocking acetylcholine receptors after the locomotor network is wired does not affect right-left or flexor-extensor coordination. These findings suggest that the cholinergic neurotransmitter pathway is involved in configuring the CPG during a transient period of development.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Calnexin Deficiency Leads to Dysmyelination

Allison Kraus; Jody Groenendyk; Karen Bedard; Troy A. Baldwin; Karl-Heinz Krause; Michel Dubois-Dauphin; Jason R. B. Dyck; Erica E. Rosenbaum; Lawrence Korngut; Nansi Jo Colley; Simon Gosgnach; Douglas W. Zochodne; Kathryn G. Todd; Luis B. Agellon; Marek Michalak

Calnexin is a molecular chaperone and a component of the quality control of the secretory pathway. We have generated calnexin gene-deficient mice (cnx−/−) and showed that calnexin deficiency leads to myelinopathy. Calnexin-deficient mice were viable with no discernible effects on other systems, including immune function, and instead they demonstrated dysmyelination as documented by reduced conductive velocity of nerve fibers and electron microscopy analysis of sciatic nerve and spinal cord. Myelin of the peripheral and central nervous systems of cnx−/− mice was disorganized and decompacted. There were no abnormalities in neuronal growth, no loss of neuronal fibers, and no change in fictive locomotor pattern in the absence of calnexin. This work reveals a previously unrecognized and important function of calnexin in myelination and provides new insights into the mechanisms responsible for myelin diseases.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Spontaneous sleep-like brain state alternations and breathing characteristics in urethane anesthetized mice.

Silvia Pagliardini; Simon Gosgnach; Clayton T. Dickson

Brain state alternations resembling those of sleep spontaneously occur in rats under urethane anesthesia and they are closely linked with sleep-like respiratory changes. Although rats are a common model for both sleep and respiratory physiology, we sought to determine if similar brain state and respiratory changes occur in mice under urethane. We made local field potential recordings from the hippocampus and measured respiratory activity by means of EMG recordings in intercostal, genioglossus, and abdominal muscles. Similar to results in adult rats, urethane anesthetized mice displayed quasi-periodic spontaneous forebrain state alternations between deactivated patterns resembling slow wave sleep (SWS) and activated patterns resembling rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. These alternations were associated with an increase in breathing rate, respiratory variability, a depression of inspiratory related activity in genioglossus muscle and an increase in expiratory-related abdominal muscle activity when comparing deactivated (SWS-like) to activated (REM-like) states. These results demonstrate that urethane anesthesia consistently induces sleep-like brain state alternations and correlated changes in respiratory activity across different rodent species. They open up the powerful possibility of utilizing transgenic mouse technology for the advancement and translation of knowledge regarding sleep cycle alternations and their impact on respiration.


eLife | 2015

A genetically defined asymmetry underlies the inhibitory control of flexor–extensor locomotor movements

Olivier Britz; Jingming Zhang; Katja S. Grossmann; Jason R. B. Dyck; Jun C. Kim; Susan M. Dymecki; Simon Gosgnach; Martyn Goulding

V1 and V2b interneurons (INs) are essential for the production of an alternating flexor–extensor motor output. Using a tripartite genetic system to selectively ablate either V1 or V2b INs in the caudal spinal cord and assess their specific functions in awake behaving animals, we find that V1 and V2b INs function in an opposing manner to control flexor–extensor-driven movements. Ablation of V1 INs results in limb hyperflexion, suggesting that V1 IN-derived inhibition is needed for proper extension movements of the limb. The loss of V2b INs results in hindlimb hyperextension and a delay in the transition from stance phase to swing phase, demonstrating V2b INs are required for the timely initiation and execution of limb flexion movements. Our findings also reveal a bias in the innervation of flexor- and extensor-related motor neurons by V1 and V2b INs that likely contributes to their differential actions on flexion–extension movements. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.04718.001


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2012

Functional characterization of dI6 interneurons in the neonatal mouse spinal cord

Jason R. B. Dyck; Guillermo M. Lanuza; Simon Gosgnach

Our understanding of the neural control of locomotion has been greatly enhanced by the ability to identify and manipulate genetically defined populations of interneurons that comprise the locomotor central pattern generator (CPG). To date, the dI6 interneurons are one of the few populations that settle in the ventral region of the postnatal spinal cord that have not been investigated. In the present study, we utilized a novel transgenic mouse line to electrophysiologically characterize dI6 interneurons located close to the central canal and study their function during fictive locomotion. The majority of dI6 cells investigated were found to be rhythmically active during fictive locomotion and could be divided into two electrophysiologically distinct populations of interneurons. The first population fired rhythmic trains of action potentials that were loosely coupled to ventral root output and contained several intrinsic membrane properties of rhythm-generating neurons, raising the possibility that these cells may be involved in the generation of rhythmic activity in the locomotor CPG. The second population fired rhythmic trains of action potentials that were tightly coupled to ventral root output and lacked intrinsic oscillatory mechanisms, indicating that these neurons may be driven by a rhythm-generating network. Together these results indicate that dI6 neurons comprise an important component of the locomotor CPG that participate in multiple facets of motor behavior.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2009

Whole Cell Recordings From Visualized Neurons in the Inner Laminae of the Functionally Intact Spinal Cord

Jason R. B. Dyck; Simon Gosgnach

The in vitro whole spinal cord preparation has been an invaluable tool for the study of the neural network that underlies walking because it provides a means of recording fictive locomotor activity following surgical and/or pharmacological manipulation. The recent use of molecular genetic techniques to identify discrete neuronal populations in the spinal cord and subsequent studies showing some of these populations to be involved in locomotor activity have been exciting developments that may lead to a better understanding of the structure and mechanism of function of this neural network. It would be of great benefit if the in vitro whole spinal cord preparation could be updated to allow for the direct targeting of genetically defined neuronal populations, allowing each to be characterized physiologically and anatomically. This report describes a new technique that enables the visualization of, and targeted whole cell patch-clamp recordings from, genetically defined populations of neurons while leaving connectivity largely intact. The key feature of this technique is a small notch cut in the lumbar spinal cord that reveals cells located in the intermediate laminae while leaving the ventral portion of the spinal cord-the region containing the locomotor neural network-untouched. Whole cell patch-clamp recordings demonstrate that these neurons are healthy and display large rhythmic depolarizations that are related to electroneurogram bursts recorded from ventral roots during fictive locomotion. Intracellular labeling demonstrates that this technique can also be used to map axonal projection patterns of neurons. We expect that this procedure will greatly facilitate electrophysiological and anatomical study of important neuronal populations that constitute neural networks throughout the CNS.

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Martyn Goulding

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Wei Zhang

University of Alberta

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Ying Zhang

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Henry Kao

University of British Columbia

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Edward M. Callaway

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Tomoko Velasquez

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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