Preprint · CC-BY
via bioRxiv
The brainstem's red nucleus was evolutionarily upgraded to support goal-directed action
Krimmel, S. R., Laumann, T. O., Chauvin, R., Hershey, T., Roland, J. L., Shimony, J. S., Willie, J. T., Norris, S. A., Marek, S., Van, A. N., Monk, J., Scheidter, K. M., Whiting, F., Ramirez-Perez, N., Metoki, A.
biorxiv · 2024
Abstract
The red nucleus is a large brainstem structure that coordinates limb movement for locomotion in quadrupedal animals (Basile et al., 2021). The humans red nucleus has a different pattern of anatomical connectivity compared to quadrupeds, suggesting a unique purpose (Hatschek, 1907). Previously the function of the human red nucleus remained unclear at least partly due to methodological limitations with brainstem functional neuroimaging (Sclocco et al., 2018). Here, we used our most advanced resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) based precision functional mapping (PFM) in highly sampled individuals (n = 5) and large group-averaged datasets (combined N [~] 45,000), to precisely examine red nucleus functional connectivity.
Notably, red nucleus functional connectivity to motor-effector networks (somatomotor hand, foot, and mouth) was minimal. Instead, red nucleus functional connectivity along the central sulcus was specific to regions of the recently discovered somato-cognitive action network (SCAN; (Gordon et al., 2023)). Outside of primary motor cortex, red nucleus connectivity was strongest to the cingulo-opercular (CON) and salience networks, involved in action/cognitive control (Dosenbach et al., 2007; Newbold et al., 2021) and reward/motivated behavior (Seeley, 2019), respectively. Functional connectivity to these two networks was organized into discrete dorsal-medial and ventral-lateral zones. Red nucleus functional connectivity to the thalamus recapitulated known structural connectivity of the dento-rubral thalamic tract (DRTT) and could prove clinically useful in functionally targeting the ventral intermediate (VIM) nucleus. In total, our results indicate that far from being a motor structure, the red nucleus is better understood as a brainstem nucleus for implementing goal-directed behavior, integrating behavioral valence and action plans.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- bioRxiv
- DOI
- 10.1101/2023.12.30.573730
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-05-31 MST
Cite this
APA
R., K.S., O., L.T., R., C., T., H., L., R.J., S., S.J., T., W.J., A., N.S., S., M., N., V.A., J., M., M., S.K., F., W., N., R., A., M., A., W., P., K.B., H., N., A., F.D., & J., L.C. (2024). The brainstem's red nucleus was evolutionarily upgraded to support goal-directed action. <em>biorxiv</em>. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.12.30.573730
Vancouver
R. KS, O. LT, R. C, T. H, L. RJ, S. SJ, et al. The brainstem's red nucleus was evolutionarily upgraded to support goal-directed action. biorxiv. 2024. doi:10.1101/2023.12.30.573730.
BibTeX
@unpublished{krimmel2024Thebra,
title = {The brainstem's red nucleus was evolutionarily upgraded to support goal-directed action},
author = {Krimmel, S. R. and Laumann, T. O. and Chauvin, R. and Hershey, T. and Roland, J. L. and Shimony, J. S. and Willie, J. T. and Norris, S. A. and Marek, S. and Van, A. N. and Monk, J. and Scheidter, K. M. and Whiting, F. and Ramirez-Perez, N. and Metoki, A. and Wang, A. and Kay, B. P. and Nahman-Averbuch, H. and Fair, D. A. and Lynch, C. J. and Raichle, M. E. and Gordon, E. M. and Dosenbach, N. U. F.},
journal = {biorxiv},
year = {2024},
doi = {10.1101/2023.12.30.573730},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Mechanisms of Ageing and Development 2018
Citation only
The impact of oxidative DNA damage and stress on telomere homeostasis
The Lancet 2022
Preprint · OA
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
Trends in Cell Biology 2019
Citation only
Epigenetic Regulation of Mesenchymal Stem Cell Homeostasis
biorxiv 2024
Preprint · CC-BY
Cell morphology as a quantifier for functional states of resident tissue macrophages
Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry 2013
Citation only
Protein Homeostasis as a Therapeutic Target for Diseases of Protein Conformation
biorxiv 2024
Preprint · CC-BY