194 research outputs found
Combined delivery of Nogo-A antibody, neurotrophin-3 and the NMDA-NR2d subunit establishes a functional ‘detour’ in the hemisected spinal cord
To encourage re-establishment of functional innervation of ipsilateral lumbar motoneurons by descending fibers after an intervening lateral thoracic (T10) hemisection (Hx), we treated adult rats with the following agents: (i) anti-Nogo-A antibodies to neutralize the growth-inhibitor Nogo-A; (ii) neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) via engineered fibroblasts to promote neuron survival and plasticity; and (iii) the NMDA-receptor 2d (NR2d) subunit via an HSV-1 amplicon vector to elevate NMDA receptor function by reversing the Mg2+ block, thereby enhancing synaptic plasticity and promoting the effects of NT-3. Synaptic responses evoked by stimulation of the ventrolateral funiculus ipsilateral and rostral to the Hx were recorded intracellularly from ipsilateral lumbar motoneurons. In uninjured adult rats short-latency (1.7-ms) monosynaptic responses were observed. After Hx these monosynaptic responses were abolished. In the Nogo-Ab + NT-3 + NR2d group, long-latency (approximately 10 ms), probably polysynaptic, responses were recorded and these were not abolished by re-transection of the spinal cord through the Hx area. This suggests that these novel responses resulted from new connections established around the Hx. Anterograde anatomical tracing from the cervical grey matter ipsilateral to the Hx revealed increased numbers of axons re-crossing the midline below the lesion in the Nogo-Ab + NT-3 + NR2d group. The combined treatment resulted in slightly better motor function in the absence of adverse effects (e.g. pain). Together, these results suggest that the combination treatment with Nogo-Ab + NT-3 + NR2d can produce a functional ‘detour’ around the lesion in a laterally hemisected spinal cord. This novel combination treatment may help to improve function of the damaged spinal cord
Early alterations in the electrophysiological properties of rat spinal motoneurones following neonatal axotomy
Early in development, motoneurones are critically dependent on their target muscles for survival and differentiation. Previous studies have shown that neonatal axotomy causes massive motoneurone death and abnormal function in the surviving motoneurones. We have investigated the electrophysiological and morphological properties of motoneurones innervating the flexor tibialis anterior (TA) muscle during the first week after a neonatal axotomy, at a time when the motoneurones would be either in the process of degeneration or attempting to reinnervate their target muscles. We found that a large number (∼75%) of TA motoneurones died within 3 weeks after neonatal axotomy. Intracellular recordings revealed a marked increase in motoneurone excitability, as indicated by changes in passive and active membrane electrical properties. These changes were associated with a shift in the motoneurone firing pattern from a predominantly phasic pattern to a tonic pattern. Morphologically, the dendritic tree of the physiologically characterized axotomized cells was significantly reduced compared with age-matched normal motoneurones. These data demonstrate that motoneurone electrical properties are profoundly altered shortly after neonatal axotomy. In a subpopulation of the axotomized cells, abnormally high motoneurone excitability (input resistance significantly higher compared with control cells) was associated with a severe truncation of the dendritic arbor, suggesting that this excitability may represent an early electrophysiological correlate of motoneurone degeneration
Molecular control of neuromuscular junction development
Skeletal muscle innervation is a multi-step process leading to the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) apparatus formation. The transmission of the signal from nerve to muscle occurs at the NMJ level. The molecular mechanism that orchestrates the organization and functioning of synapses is highly complex, and it has not been completely elucidated so far. Neuromuscular junctions are assembled on the muscle fibers at very precise locations called end plates (EP). Acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clusterization at the end plates is required for an accurate synaptic transmission. This review will focus on some mechanisms responsible for accomplishing the correct distribution of AChRs at the synapses. Recent evidences support the concept that a dual transcriptional control of AChR genes in subsynaptic and extrasynaptic nuclei is crucial for AChR clusterization. Moreover, new players have been discovered in the agrin–MuSK pathway, the master organizer of postsynaptical differentiation. Mutations in this pathway cause neuromuscular congenital disorders. Alterations of the postynaptic apparatus are also present in physiological conditions characterized by skeletal muscle wasting. Indeed, recent evidences demonstrate how NMJ misfunctioning has a crucial role at the onset of age-associated sarcopenia
Ventrolateral Origin of Each Cycle of Rhythmic Activity Generated by the Spinal Cord of the Chick Embryo
BACKGROUND: The mechanisms responsible for generating rhythmic motor activity in the developing spinal cord of the chick embryo are poorly understood. Here we investigate whether the activity of motoneurons occurs before other neuronal populations at the beginning of each cycle of rhythmic discharge. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The spatiotemporal organization of neural activity in transverse slices of the lumbosacral cord of the chick embryo (E8-E11) was investigated using intrinsic and voltage-sensitive dye (VSD) imaging. VSD signals accompanying episodes of activity comprised a rhythmic decrease in light transmission that corresponded to each cycle of electrical activity recorded from the ipsilateral ventral root. The rhythmic signals were widely synchronized across the cord face, and the largest signal amplitude was in the ventrolateral region where motoneurons are located. In unstained slices we recorded two classes of intrinsic signal. In the first, an episode of rhythmic activity was accompanied by a slow decrease in light transmission that peaked in the dorsal horn and decayed dorsoventrally. Superimposed on this signal was a much smaller rhythmic increase in transmission that was coincident with each cycle of discharge and whose amplitude and spatial distribution was similar to that of the VSD signals. At the onset of a spontaneously occurring episode and each subsequent cycle, both the intrinsic and VSD signals originated within the lateral motor column and spread medially and then dorsally. By contrast, following a dorsal root stimulus, the optical signals originated within the dorsal horn and traveled ventrally to reach the lateral motor column. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These findings suggest that motoneuron activity contributes to the initiation of each cycle of rhythmic activity, and that motoneuron and/or R-interneuron synapses are a plausible site for the activity-dependent synaptic depression that modeling studies have identified as a critical mechanism for cycling within an episode
Laminin-induced Clustering of Dystroglycan on Embryonic Muscle Cells: Comparison with Agrin-induced Clustering
Synaptic differentiation: the role of agrin in the formation and maintenance of the neuromuscular junction
NMDA receptors mediate poly- and monosynaptic potentials in motoneurons of rat embryos
We determined the contribution of glutamate receptor subtypes to developing excitatory synaptic transmission in isolated spinal cord of rat embryos. Using electrophysiological and morphological techniques, we studied the pattern of development of synapses between dorsal root afferents and motoneurons in lumbar spinal cords of 15- to 21-d-old rat embryos. Motoneuron dendritic fields and afferent projections onto motoneurons were identified by labeling with HRP. Afferents first entered the gray matter at Day 15 of gestation, and by Day 16 they terminated close to motoneuron dendritic trees. Afferent axons projected onto motoneuron dendritic fields at Day 17, when boutons were detected on motoneuron dendrites that were crossed by afferent axons. To determine the time course of formation of functional sensorimotor synapses and their pharmacological properties, a dorsal root was stimulated while recording intracellularly from segmental motoneurons. At Day 16, excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) with long latencies, slow rates of rise, and long durations were recorded. The amplitudes of these EPSPs increased with membrane depolarization and in the absence of extracellular Mg2+. These EPSPs were blocked by D-2- amino-5-phosphonovalerate (APV) and ketamine, which are selective antagonists of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. These findings suggest that initial synaptic transmission in embryonic motoneurons is mediated solely by NMDA receptors. Short-latency EPSPs with fast rates of rise were first recorded in most motoneurons by Day 17. These EPSPs were composed of fast- and slow-rising potentials. The slow component was blocked by APV, while the fast component was eliminated by 6-cyano- 7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione and kynurenate. This indicates that the short-latency EPSPs are mediated by both NMDA and non-NMDA receptors. Dose-response curves of motoneurons to L-glutamate, NMDA, and kainate demonstrated that motoneurons are sensitive to these agonists prior to the formation of synapses between afferents and motoneurons. Motoneuron responses to NMDA and kainate increased immediately after the onset of short-latency EPSPs. This increased sensitivity could be due to extracellular factors influenced by growing sensory axons or intrinsic properties of differentiating motoneurons.</jats:p
Spatiotemporal Patterns of Dorsal Root–Evoked Network Activity in the Neonatal Rat Spinal Cord: Optical and Intracellular Recordings
Electrical Coupling between Locomotor-Related Excitatory Interneurons in the Mammalian Spinal Cord
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