At EPFL, the team of Auke Ijspeert has made good progress on computational modeling and robotic experiments. They have developed a simulation framework called FARMS (Framework for Animal and Robot Modeling and Simulation) with biomechanical models of the salamander in different environments (abstract presentations at Society of Neuroscience (SfN) meeting 2022, and Arreguit et al. BioRxiv 2023). Ijspeert’s team has also developed different types of models of the locomotor circuits, ranging from coupled oscillator circuits to integrate-and-fire neural networks (abstract presentations at SfN 2022, Adaptive Motion in Animals and Machines conference (AMAM), Motor Control in Spinal Circuits and Beyond meeting 2023). Finally, his team has tested some of these circuits on amphibious robots (abstract at AMAM 2023), and is finalizing the construction of a new salamander robot with more sensors than previous versions. A review article of the integration of feedforward and feedback control in the neuromechanics of vertebrate locomotion has also been published (Ijspeert and Daley, JEB 2023).
At Karolinska Institute, the team of Andras Simon has started generating genetically modified Pleurodeles for the visualization, recording and manipulation of neuronal activity. They are now testing and validating the first generations of these animals together with the Ryczko’s lab. To facilitate genome modifications and to characterize neuronal subtypes, Simon’s team obtained a high-quality genome assembly and several transcriptome sets (Brown et al. BioRxiv 2022). The transcriptome dataset has already proved itself instrumental to classify neurons in the Pleurodeles brain (Woych et al. Science 2022), and these tools will also be used to further characterize the cellular composition of the locomotor circuitry. They have established and characterized a spinal cord transection injury model that leads to impaired locomotion and subsequent recovery of walking and swimming (presentations at SfN 2022, Salamandra workshop 2023, ISRB 2023). They have collected videos of walking and swimming salamanders in the context of this experimental paradigm that are being analyzed by Ryczko’s team using deep learning (presentations at SfN 2022, Salamandra workshop 2023, ISRB 2023). The team also established preclinical MRI methods that allowed them to image longitudinally the nervous system of the same animals non-invasively (presentations at SfN 2022, Salamandra workshop 2023, ISRB 2023). To characterize the cellular substrates of natural locomotion and functional regeneration after spinal cord injury, they have generated single nucleus RNA sequencing data of key timepoints along the regeneration process (presentations at SfN 2022, Salamandra workshop 2023, ISRB 2023).
At Université de Sherbrooke, the team of Dimitri Ryczko has successfully developed the use of deep learning to analyze motor behaviors in salamanders before and after spinal cord injury (abstract presentations at FENS 2022, SfN 2022). The team also provided an anatomical and electrophysiological characterization of brainstem neurons that send the locomotor commands to the spinal cord (abstract presentations at FENS 2022, SfN 2022). The team has worked with Simon’s team to validate the Pleurodeles transgenic lines experimentally (presentations at Salamandra workshop 2023, Evolution of Motor Circuits Across Vertebrate Species meeting 2022 France, AMAM 2023 Japan). His lab also published reviews about the locomotor system in Journal of Neurophysiology and the Neuroscientist.
A list of publications and conference participations (oral presentations and posters) is available on the Salamandra project website:
https://salamandra.org/(öffnet in neuem Fenster)