DO PROPRIOSPINAL PROJECTIONS CONTRIBUTE TO HINDLIMB RECOVERY WHEN ALL LONG TRACTS ARE CUT IN NEONATAL OR WEANLING RATS

被引:41
作者
STELZNER, DJ
CULLEN, JM
机构
[1] Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, S.U.N.Y. Health Science Center, Syracuse
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0014-4886(91)90036-C
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Lateral hemisection lesions separated by 1 to 3 spinal segments were made on opposite sides of the midthoracic spinal cord in 1-month-old (N = 15; weanling operates) and newborn albino rats (N = 16; neonatal operates). Hindlimb behavior was assessed between 1 and 6 months p.o. for both groups of operates using a protocol and rating system that have previously proved effective in differentiating behavioral recovery of the hindlimbs as a function of age of spinal transection. In addition, at the conclusion of behavioral testing, operates received spinal injections of [3H]proline and HRP caudal to the spinal lesions to determine if lesions were complete and if neurons within the region between the two lesions (interlesion zone) projected into the caudal spinal cord. In both groups of operates, neurons were retrogradely labeled within the interlesion zone bilaterally, primarily in laminae VII-VIII. When both lesions were complete lateral hemisections in weanling operates, little behavioral recovery was observed, similar to complete spinal cord transection (N = 3). However, much greater behavioral recovery was seen, including supporting reactions and locomotor responses, when one or both lesions spared axons along the ventrolateral rim of the white matter. Neurons were retrogradely labeled in the brain stem reticular formation (N = 12) in these cases. All lesions were complete lateral hemisections in neonatal operates but much greater behavioral recovery was seen than in weanling operates with the same lesions, including supporting, placing, and locomotor responses. In an additional group of eight neonatal operates, the spinal cord rostral to the spinal hemisections was transected at 1 month of age. Supportive, placing, and locomotor responses were seen immediately after recovery from anesthesia and responses returned to pretransection levels in six of eight operates over the 10-day survival period. Fink-Heimer impregnation showed that degeneration argyrophilia from the transection bilaterally filled the interlesion zone but little argyrophilia was seen caudal to this region. Our results indicate that an intact propriospinal circuit remains in both neonatal and weanling operates but does not appear to contribute to hindlimb response development or recovery. The greater behavioral recovery in neonatal operates appears due to intrinsic connections (doral root, interneuronal) continuing to be able to drive the spinal circuitry underlying the spared behaviors. © 1991.
引用
收藏
页码:193 / 205
页数:13
相关论文
共 57 条
[1]   LONG C3-C5 PROPRIOSPINAL NEURONS IN THE CAT [J].
ALSTERMARK, B ;
LUNDBERG, A ;
PINTER, M ;
SASAKI, S .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1987, 404 (1-2) :382-388
[2]   SUBPOPULATIONS AND FUNCTIONS OF LONG C3-C5 PROPRIOSPINAL NEURONS [J].
ALSTERMARK, B ;
LUNDBERG, A ;
PINTER, M ;
SASAKI, S .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1987, 404 (1-2) :395-400
[4]   INTEGRATION IN DESCENDING MOTOR PATHWAYS CONTROLLING THE FORELIMB IN THE CAT .9. DIFFERENTIAL BEHAVIORAL DEFECTS AFTER SPINAL-CORD LESIONS INTERRUPTING DEFINED PATHWAYS FROM HIGHER CENTERS TO MOTO-NEURONS [J].
ALSTERMARK, B ;
LUNDBERG, A ;
NORRSELL, U ;
SYBIRSKA, E .
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 1981, 42 (3-4) :299-318
[6]   RECOVERY OF LOCOMOTION AFTER CHRONIC SPINALIZATION IN THE ADULT CAT [J].
BARBEAU, H ;
ROSSIGNOL, S .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1987, 412 (01) :84-95
[7]  
BARILARI MG, 1969, BRAIN RES, V14, P321
[8]   CONDUCTION OF EFFECTS OF NOXIOUS STIMULATION BY SHORT-FIBER MULTISYNAPTIC SYSTEMS OF SPINAL-CORD IN RAT [J].
BASBAUM, AI .
EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY, 1973, 40 (03) :699-716
[9]   PLASTICITY OF THE CORTICOSPINAL TRACT FOLLOWING MIDTHORACIC SPINAL-INJURY IN THE POSTNATAL RAT [J].
BERNSTEIN, DR ;
STELZNER, DJ .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, 1983, 221 (04) :382-400
[10]  
BERNSTEIN JJ, 1973, BRAIN BEHAV EVOLUT, V8, P135, DOI 10.1159/000124351