Abstract

The ability to interact with challenging environments requires coordination of sensory and motor systems that underpin appropriate survival behaviours. All animals, including humans, use active and passive coping strategies to react to escapable or inescapable threats, respectively. Across species the neural pathways involved in survival behaviours are highly conserved and there is a consensus that knowledge of such pathways is a fundamental step towards understanding the neural circuits underpinning emotion in humans and treating anxiety or other prevalent emotional disorders. The midbrain periaqueductal grey (PAG) lies at the heart of the defence‐arousal system and its integrity is paramount to the expression of survival behaviours. To date, studies of ‘top down control’ components of defence behaviours have focused largely on the sensory and autonomic consequences of PAG activation. In this context, effects on motor activity have received comparatively little attention, despite overwhelming evidence of a pivotal role for the PAG in coordinating motor responses essential to survival (e.g. such as freezing in response to fear). In this article we provide an overview of top down control of sensory functions from the PAG, including selective control of different modalities of sensory, including proprioceptive, information forwarded to a major supsraspinal motor control centre, the cerebellum. Next, evidence from our own and other laboratories of PAG control of motor outflow is also discussed. Finally, the integration of sensorimotor functions by the PAG is considered, as part of coordinated defence behaviours that prepare an animal to be ready and able to react to danger.

Highlights

  • Motor outputStella Koutsikou completed her PhD in neurophysiology in 2004 with Sally Lawson, before joining the Bristol Sensory and Motor Systems Research Group

  • Defence behaviours essential to survival can be innate, but they can be learnt, and during evolution are conserved across species, including humans (Takahashi, 1992a,b; Blanchard et al 2001a,b; Gross & Canteras, 2012; LeDoux, 2012)

  • Active coping is evoked by activation of the dorsolateral/lateral periaqueductal grey (dl/lPAG), whereas passive coping is triggered by activation of the ventrolateral column

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Summary

Motor output

Stella Koutsikou completed her PhD in neurophysiology in 2004 with Sally Lawson, before joining the Bristol Sensory and Motor Systems Research Group. Bridget Lumb started her research career in Birmingham and moved to Bristol in the 1980s to pursue her interests in CNS mechanisms of acute and chronic pain. She became a Professor of Neuroscience in 2008. The authors share a common interest in the pathways and mechanisms that modulate sensory and motor circuits that contribute to survival behaviours. Their combined research methodology includes in situ whole-cell patch recording and in vivo electrophysiological, behavioural and neuroanatomical techniques.

Midbrain control of sensory and motor systems
Moderate to strong immobility with increased respiration
DM L
Concluding remarks
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