Abstract

Alpha-motoneurons (MNs) innervating ankle extensor muscles show reduced peripheral inputs from Ia proprioceptive afferents and cholinergic afferents after chronic spinalization (SCT). That phenomenon is not observed on ankle flexor MNs, indicating a smaller vulnerability of the latter MNs circuit to SCT. Locomotor training of spinal rats which partially restored those inputs to extensor MNs tended to hyper innervate flexor MNs, disclosing a need for selective approaches. In rats with intact spinal cord 7-days of low-threshold proprioceptive stimulation of the tibial nerve enriched glutamatergic Ia and cholinergic innervation of lateral gastrocnemius (LG) MNs, suggesting usefulness of selective stimulation for restoration of inputs to extensor MNs after SCT. Accordingly, to examine its effectiveness after SCT, tibial nerves and soleus muscles were implanted bilaterally, and for MN identification fluorescence tracers to LG and tibialis anterior (TA) muscles were injected two weeks prior to spinalization. Stimulation of tibial nerve, controlled by H-reflex recorded in the soleus muscle, started on the third post-SCT day and continued for 7 days. Nine days post-SCT the number and volume of glutamatergic Ia and of cholinergic C-boutons on LG MNs was decreased, but stimulation affected neither of them. Postsynaptically, a threefold decrease of NMDAR NR1 subunit and thirtyfold decrease of M2 muscarinic receptor transcripts caused by SCT were not counteracted by stimulation, whereas a threefold decrease of AMPAR GluR2 subunit tended to deepen after stimulation. We conclude that LG MNs, supported with proprioceptive stimuli after SCT, do not transcribe the perceived cues into compensatory response at the transcriptional level in the early post-SCT period.

Highlights

  • Spontaneous reorganization of spinal circuit observed after complete spinal cord injury (SCT) includes changes of cholinergic innervation of the ankle extensor but not flexor MNs operating at the ankle joint muscles [1]

  • We observed the recruitment of the complex R2 and R3 responses after stimulation with continuous bursts of 3 pulses, indicating that a fraction of low-threshold proprioceptive fibers was successfully activated in the H-reflex loop

  • The aim of the presented experiment was to enhance synaptic Ia proprioceptive input to the MNs innervating the ankle extensor muscles, which were found to be vulnerable to the complete spinal cord transection (SCT) several weeks thereafter [1, 9]

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Summary

Introduction

Spontaneous reorganization of spinal circuit observed after complete spinal cord injury (SCT) includes changes of cholinergic innervation of the ankle extensor but not flexor MNs operating at the ankle joint muscles [1]. In our previous study we verified usefulness of selective treatment, by applying stimulation of low-threshold muscle afferents (predominantly Ia fibers) in the tibial nerve, controlled by means of Hoffmann (H) reflex, recorded in Sol muscle of the rats with the intact spinal cord We hypothesized that it would bring enrichment of excitatory proprioceptive signaling to the ankle extensor MNs. Our assumption was that stimulation could reinforce Ia glutamatergic input to the extensor MNs innervated by this nerve branch and exert widespread effect through spinal interneurons, including those terminating on the cholinergic V0c group of neurons, the source of C-boutons abutting on MNs. seven days of continuous bursts of low-threshold stimulation of proprioceptive fibers in the tibial nerve was effective in enrichment of glutamatergic Ia and cholinergic terminals innervating the ankle extensor MNs in rats with intact spinal cord. As the maintenance of glutamatergic Ia terminals on MNs [11, 12] and enhancement of their excitatory transmission depend on NT3 [13,14,15], the latter observation is a good predictor of synaptic modifications and compensatory effect on the low-threshold proprioceptive innervation of MNs under study

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