Literature DB >> 17442831

Changes in motoneuron properties and synaptic inputs related to step training after spinal cord transection in rats.

Jeffrey C Petruska1, Ronaldo M Ichiyama, Devin L Jindrich, Eric D Crown, Keith E Tansey, Roland R Roy, V Reggie Edgerton, Lorne M Mendell.   

Abstract

Although recovery from spinal cord injury is generally meager, evidence suggests that step training can improve stepping performance, particularly after neonatal spinal injury. The location and nature of the changes in neural substrates underlying the behavioral improvements are not well understood. We examined the kinematics of stepping performance and cellular and synaptic electrophysiological parameters in ankle extensor motoneurons in nontrained and treadmill-trained rats, all receiving a complete spinal transection as neonates. For comparison, electrophysiological experiments included animals injured as young adults, which are far less responsive to training. Recovery of treadmill stepping was associated with significant changes in the cellular properties of motoneurons and their synaptic input from spinal white matter [ipsilateral ventrolateral funiculus (VLF)] and muscle spindle afferents. A strong correlation was found between the effectiveness of step training and the amplitude of both the action potential afterhyperpolarization and synaptic inputs to motoneurons (from peripheral nerve and VLF). These changes were absent if step training was unsuccessful, but other spinal projections, apparently inhibitory to step training, became evident. Greater plasticity of axonal projections after neonatal than after adult injury was suggested by anatomical demonstration of denser VLF projections to hindlimb motoneurons after neonatal injury. This finding confirmed electrophysiological measurements and provides a possible mechanism underlying the greater training susceptibility of animals injured as neonates. Thus, we have demonstrated an "age-at-injury"-related difference that may influence training effectiveness, that successful treadmill step training can alter electrophysiological parameters in the transected spinal cord, and that activation of different pathways may prevent functional improvement.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17442831      PMCID: PMC6672318          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2302-06.2007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  67 in total

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3.  OEG implantation and step training enhance hindlimb-stepping ability in adult spinal transected rats.

Authors:  Marc D Kubasak; Devin L Jindrich; Hui Zhong; Aya Takeoka; Kimberly C McFarland; Cintia Muñoz-Quiles; Roland R Roy; V Reggie Edgerton; Almudena Ramón-Cueto; Patricia E Phelps
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4.  Trunk sensorimotor cortex is essential for autonomous weight-supported locomotion in adult rats spinalized as P1/P2 neonates.

Authors:  Simon Giszter; Michelle R Davies; Arun Ramakrishnan; Ubong Ime Udoekwere; William J Kargo
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5.  The beneficial effects of treadmill step training on activity-dependent synaptic and cellular plasticity markers after complete spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Jocemar Ilha; Lígia A Centenaro; Núbia Broetto Cunha; Daniela F de Souza; Mariane Jaeger; Patrícia S do Nascimento; Janaína Kolling; Juliana Ben; Simone Marcuzzo; Angela T S Wyse; Carmem Gottfried; Matilde Achaval
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7.  Descending Systems Direct Development of Key Spinal Motor Circuits.

Authors:  Calvin C Smith; Julian F R Paton; Samit Chakrabarty; Ronaldo M Ichiyama
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2017-06-02       Impact factor: 6.167

8.  Functional recovery of stepping in rats after a complete neonatal spinal cord transection is not due to regrowth across the lesion site.

Authors:  N J K Tillakaratne; J J Guu; R D de Leon; A J Bigbee; N J London; H Zhong; M D Ziegler; R L Joynes; R R Roy; V R Edgerton
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  2009-12-17       Impact factor: 3.590

9.  Novel multi-system functional gains via task specific training in spinal cord injured male rats.

Authors:  Patricia J Ward; April N Herrity; Rebecca R Smith; Andrea Willhite; Benjamin J Harrison; Jeffrey C Petruska; Susan J Harkema; Charles H Hubscher
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10.  Exercise-induced motor improvement after complete spinal cord transection and its relation to expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and presynaptic markers.

Authors:  Matylda Macias; Dorota Nowicka; Artur Czupryn; Dorota Sulejczak; Małgorzata Skup; Jolanta Skangiel-Kramska; Julita Czarkowska-Bauch
Journal:  BMC Neurosci       Date:  2009-12-04       Impact factor: 3.288

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