Petruska Jeffrey C, Ichiyama Ronaldo M, Jindrich Devin L, Crown Eric D, Tansey Keith E, Roy Roland R, Edgerton V Reggie, Mendell Lorne M
Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York 11794-5230, USA.
J Neurosci. 2007 Apr 18;27(16):4460-71. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2302-06.2007.
Although recovery from spinal cord injury is generally meager, evidence suggests that step training can improve stepping performance, particularly after neonatal spinal injury. The location and nature of the changes in neural substrates underlying the behavioral improvements are not well understood. We examined the kinematics of stepping performance and cellular and synaptic electrophysiological parameters in ankle extensor motoneurons in nontrained and treadmill-trained rats, all receiving a complete spinal transection as neonates. For comparison, electrophysiological experiments included animals injured as young adults, which are far less responsive to training. Recovery of treadmill stepping was associated with significant changes in the cellular properties of motoneurons and their synaptic input from spinal white matter [ipsilateral ventrolateral funiculus (VLF)] and muscle spindle afferents. A strong correlation was found between the effectiveness of step training and the amplitude of both the action potential afterhyperpolarization and synaptic inputs to motoneurons (from peripheral nerve and VLF). These changes were absent if step training was unsuccessful, but other spinal projections, apparently inhibitory to step training, became evident. Greater plasticity of axonal projections after neonatal than after adult injury was suggested by anatomical demonstration of denser VLF projections to hindlimb motoneurons after neonatal injury. This finding confirmed electrophysiological measurements and provides a possible mechanism underlying the greater training susceptibility of animals injured as neonates. Thus, we have demonstrated an "age-at-injury"-related difference that may influence training effectiveness, that successful treadmill step training can alter electrophysiological parameters in the transected spinal cord, and that activation of different pathways may prevent functional improvement.
尽管脊髓损伤后的恢复通常很有限,但有证据表明,阶梯训练可以改善行走能力,尤其是在新生儿脊髓损伤后。行为改善背后神经基质变化的位置和性质尚不清楚。我们研究了未训练和跑步机训练大鼠的行走运动学以及踝伸肌运动神经元的细胞和突触电生理参数,所有大鼠均在新生儿期接受了完全脊髓横断。为了进行比较,电生理实验包括成年后受伤的动物,它们对训练的反应要小得多。跑步机行走能力的恢复与运动神经元的细胞特性及其来自脊髓白质[同侧腹外侧索(VLF)]和肌梭传入纤维的突触输入的显著变化有关。在阶梯训练的有效性与动作电位超极化后电位的幅度以及运动神经元的突触输入(来自外周神经和VLF)之间发现了很强的相关性。如果阶梯训练不成功,这些变化就不会出现,但其他明显抑制阶梯训练的脊髓投射会变得明显。新生儿损伤后轴突投射的可塑性大于成年后损伤,这一点通过解剖学证明新生儿损伤后VLF对后肢运动神经元的投射更密集得到了证实。这一发现证实了电生理测量结果,并为新生儿期受伤动物对训练更敏感提供了一种可能的机制。因此,我们证明了一种可能影响训练效果的“受伤年龄”相关差异,成功的跑步机阶梯训练可以改变横断脊髓中的电生理参数,并且不同通路的激活可能会阻止功能改善。