Abstract

Axotomy produces changes in the electrical properties of neurons and in their synaptic inputs, leading to alterations in firing pattern. We have considered the possibility that these changes occur as a result of the target deprivation induced by the lesion. Thus, we have provided a novel target to axotomized central neurons by grafting embryonic tissue at the lesion site to study the target dependence of discharge characteristics. The extracellular single-unit electrical activity of abducens internuclear neurons was recorded in the alert behaving cat in control, after axotomy, and after axotomy plus the implantation of cerebellar primordium. As recently characterized (de la Cruz et al. [2000] J. Comp. Neurol. 427:391-404), firing alterations induced by axotomy included an overall decrease in firing rate and a loss of eye-related signals, i.e., eye position and velocity neuronal sensitivities, that do not resume to normality with time. The grafting of a novel target to the injured abducens internuclear neurons restored the normal firing and sensitivities as recorded in the majority of units. To study the reinnervation of the implant, we performed anterograde labeling with biocytin combined with electron microscopy visualization. Axons of abducens internuclear neurons grew into the transplant sprouting into granule cell and molecular layers, as characterized by the immunostaining for gamma-aminobutyric acid and calbindin D-28k. Ultrastructural examination of labeled axons and boutons revealed the establishment of synaptic contacts, mainly axodendritic, with different cell types of the grafted cerebellar cortex. Therefore, these data indicate that axotomized central neurons resume to normal firing after the reinnervation of a novel target.

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