Abstract

During perinatal development, corticospinal tract (CST) projections into the spinal cord help refine spinal circuitry. Although the normal developmental processes that are controlled by the arrival of corticospinal input are becoming clear, little is known about how perinatal cortical damage impacts specific aspects of spinal circuit development, particularly the inhibitory microcircuitry that regulates spinal reflex circuits. In this study, we sought to determine how ischemic cortical damage impacts the synaptic attributes of a well-characterized population of inhibitory, GABAergic interneurons, called GABApre neurons, which modulates the efficiency of proprioceptive sensory terminals in the sensorimotor reflex circuit. We found that putative GABApre interneurons receive CST input and, using an established mouse model of perinatal stroke, that cortical ischemic injury results in a reduction of CST density within the intermediate region of the spinal cord, where these interneurons reside. Importantly, CST alterations were restricted to the side contralateral to the injury. Within the synaptic terminals of the GABApre interneurons, we observed a dramatic upregulation of the 65-isoform of the GABA synthetic enzyme glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65). In accordance with the CST density reduction, GAD65 was elevated on the side of the spinal cord contralateral to cortical injury. This effect was not seen for other GABApre synaptic markers or in animals that received sham surgery. Our data reveal a novel effect of perinatal stroke that involves severe deficits in the architecture of a descending spinal pathway, which in turn appear to promote molecular alterations in a specific spinal GABAergic circuit.

Highlights

  • Corticospinal tract (CST) innervation takes place during a critical period of spinal cord maturation and is thought to contribute to a reorganization of spinal circuitry, including the proprioceptive sensorimotor reflex circuit, thereby refining locomotor control (Clowry, 2007)

  • DESCENDING CORTICAL PATHWAYS FORM CONTACTS ON PUTATIVE GABAPRE INTERNEURONS In order to visualize the synaptic terminals of layer V cortical neurons that descend through the CST into the spinal cord, we examined the selective immunolabeling of CST terminals in the mouse spinal cord

  • We observe CST input onto putative GABApre interneurons in the intermediate region of the spinal cord and show that a unilateral carotid artery ligation disrupts the density of CST innervation in the intermediate region of the spinal cord contralateral to injury

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Summary

Introduction

Corticospinal tract (CST) innervation takes place during a critical period of spinal cord maturation and is thought to contribute to a reorganization of spinal circuitry, including the proprioceptive sensorimotor reflex circuit, thereby refining locomotor control (Clowry, 2007). Perinatal stroke occurs in 1 of every 4000 term births (Lynch and Nelson, 2001) and may lead to diverse neurologic morbidities, including a range of motor deficits (Ganesan et al, 2000), suggesting altered output from the spinal cord as a potential component of the underlying pathophysiology. These alterations in spinal circuit function may arise from damage to the CST, as the presence and severity of motor impairments have been associated with degeneration and atrophy of the CST (Domi et al, 2009; van der Aa et al, 2011). It remains unknown how perinatal CST disruption affects specific spinal circuits at the synaptic level, with regard to the inhibitory interneuronal populations that modulate sensorimotor output

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