RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Synergistic Organization of Neural Inputs from Spinal Motor Neurons to Extrinsic and Intrinsic Hand Muscles JF The Journal of Neuroscience JO J. Neurosci. FD Society for Neuroscience SP 6878 OP 6891 DO 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0419-21.2021 VO 41 IS 32 A1 Simone Tanzarella A1 Silvia Muceli A1 Marco Santello A1 Dario Farina YR 2021 UL http://www.jneurosci.org/content/41/32/6878.abstract AB Our current understanding of synergistic muscle control is based on the analysis of muscle activities. Modules (synergies) in muscle coordination are extracted from electromyographic (EMG) signal envelopes. Each envelope indirectly reflects the neural drive received by a muscle; therefore, it carries information on the overall activity of the innervating motor neurons. However, it is not known whether the output of spinal motor neurons, whose number is orders of magnitude greater than the muscles they innervate, is organized in a low-dimensional fashion when performing complex tasks. Here, we hypothesized that motor neuron activities exhibit a synergistic organization in complex tasks and therefore that the common input to motor neurons results in a large dimensionality reduction in motor neuron outputs. To test this hypothesis, we factorized the output spike trains of motor neurons innervating 14 intrinsic and extrinsic hand muscles and analyzed the dimensionality of control when healthy individuals exerted isometric forces using seven grip types. We identified four motor neuron synergies, accounting for >70% of the variance of the activity of 54.1 ± 12.9 motor neurons, and we identified four functionally similar muscle synergies. However, motor neuron synergies better discriminated individual finger forces than muscle synergies and were more consistent with the expected role of muscles actuating each finger. Moreover, in a few cases, motor neurons innervating the same muscle were active in separate synergies. Our findings suggest a highly divergent net neural inputs to spinal motor neurons from spinal and supraspinal structures, contributing to the dimensionality reduction captured by muscle synergies.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT We addressed whether the output of spinal motor neurons innervating multiple hand muscles could be accounted for by a modular organization, i.e., synergies, previously described to account for the coordination of multiple muscles. We found that motor neuron synergies presented similar dimensionality (implying a >10-fold reduction in dimensionality) and structure as muscle synergies. Nonetheless, the synergistic behavior of subsets of motor neurons within a muscle was also observed. These results advance our understanding of how neuromuscular control arises from mapping descending inputs to muscle activation signals. We provide, for the first time, insights into the organization of neural inputs to spinal motor neurons which, to date, has been inferred through analysis of muscle synergies.