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Cerebellar Granule Cells in Motor Coordination

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cell627 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Cerebellar Granule Cells in Motor Coordination

Overview

Cerebellar granule cells are the most abundant neurons in the brain, comprising approximately 50 billion cells in the human cerebellum. These small, glutamatergic excitatory interneurons are located in the granule cell layer, the innermost layer of the cerebellar cortex. Granule cells serve as the primary computational nodes that integrate mossy fiber inputs from the spinal cord, brainstem, and cortex, transmitting processed information to Purkinje cells through parallel fibers. Their extraordinary numerical abundance and highly organized connectivity make them fundamental to cerebellar function in motor coordination, learning, and timing.

Function and Biology

Granule cells receive convergent input from multiple mossy fiber terminals through their dendrites, which typically extend into specialized structures called glomeruli. Each granule cell soma is remarkably small (4-5 micrometers), representing an evolutionary adaptation for packing maximal numbers of neurons into the cerebellar cortex. The cells extend a single axon that bifurcates to form parallel fibers, which run perpendicular to the cerebellar foliation and synapse onto the dendritic arbors of Purkinje cells spanning hundreds of micrometers.

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