Literature DB >> 27760818

Descending propriospinal neurons mediate restoration of locomotor function following spinal cord injury.

Katelyn N Benthall1, Ryan A Hough1, Andrew D McClellan2,3.   

Abstract

Following spinal cord injury (SCI) in the lamprey, there is virtually complete recovery of locomotion within a few weeks, but interestingly, axonal regeneration of reticulospinal (RS) neurons is mostly limited to short distances caudal to the injury site. To explain this situation, we hypothesize that descending propriospinal (PS) neurons relay descending drive from RS neurons to indirectly activate spinal central pattern generators (CPGs). In the present study, the contributions of PS neurons to locomotor recovery were tested in the lamprey following SCI. First, long RS neuron projections were interrupted by staggered spinal hemitransections on the right side at 10% body length (BL; normalized from the tip of the oral hood) and on the left side at 30% BL. For acute recovery conditions (≤1 wk) and before axonal regeneration, swimming muscle burst activity was relatively normal, but with some deficits in coordination. Second, lampreys received two spaced complete spinal transections, one at 10% BL and one at 30% BL, to interrupt long-axon RS neuron projections. At short recovery times (3-5 wk), RS and PS neurons will have regenerated their axons for short distances and potentially established a polysynaptic descending command pathway. At these short recovery times, swimming muscle burst activity had only minor coordination deficits. A computer model that incorporated either of the two spinal lesions could mimic many aspects of the experimental data. In conclusion, descending PS neurons are a viable mechanism for indirect activation of spinal locomotor CPGs, although there can be coordination deficits of locomotor activity. NEW & NOTEWORTHY: In the lamprey following spinal lesion-mediated interruption of long axonal projections of reticulospinal (RS) neurons, sensory stimulation still elicited relatively normal locomotor muscle burst activity, but with some coordination deficits. Computer models incorporating the spinal lesions could mimic many aspects of the experimental results. Thus, after disruption of long-axon projections from RS neurons in the lamprey, descending propriospinal (PS) neurons appear to be a viable compensatory mechanism for indirect activation of spinal locomotor networks.
Copyright © 2017 the American Physiological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CPGs; coordination; locomotion; reticulospinal; spinal cord injury; swimming

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27760818      PMCID: PMC5209543          DOI: 10.1152/jn.00544.2016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  64 in total

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Authors:  Jessica A Benes; Kylie N House; Frank N Burks; Kris P Conaway; Donald P Julien; Jeffrey P Donley; Michael A Iyamu; Andrew D McClellan
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4.  Elimination of Left-Right Reciprocal Coupling in the Adult Lamprey Spinal Cord Abolishes the Generation of Locomotor Activity.

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6.  Silencing long ascending propriospinal neurons after spinal cord injury improves hindlimb stepping in the adult rat.

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7.  AAV-KLF7 Promotes Descending Propriospinal Neuron Axonal Plasticity after Spinal Cord Injury.

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9.  Descending motor circuitry required for NT-3 mediated locomotor recovery after spinal cord injury in mice.

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