| Literature DB >> 34453971 |
Matthew Crowley1, Alayna Lilak1, Joseph P Garner1, Corinna Darian-Smith2.
Abstract
A long held view in the spinal cord injury field is that corticospinal terminal sprouting is needed for new connections to form, that then mediate behavioral recovery. This makes sense, but tells us little about the relationship between corticospinal sprouting extent and recovery potential. The inference has been that more extensive axonal sprouting predicts greater recovery, though there is little evidence to support this. Here we addressed this by comparing behavioral data from monkeys that had received one of two established deafferentation spinal injury models in monkeys (Darian-Smith et al., 2014, Fisher et al., 2019, 2020). Both injuries cut similar afferent pools supplying the thumb, index and middle fingers of one hand but each resulted in a very different corticospinal tract (CST) sprouting response. Following a cervical dorsal root lesion, the somatosensory CST retracted significantly, while the motor CST stayed largely intact. In contrast, when a dorsal column lesion was combined with the DRL, somatosensory and motor CSTs sprouted dramatically within the cervical cord. How these two responses relate to the behavioral outcome was not clear. Here we analyzed the behavioral outcome for the two lesions, and provide a clear example that sprouting extent does not track with behavioral recovery.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioral recovery; Corticospinal tract; Primary afferent lesion; Somatosensory plasticity; Spinal cord injury
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34453971 PMCID: PMC8492525 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113533
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Brain Res ISSN: 0166-4328 Impact factor: 3.332