Neuroscience and Mental Health Institute and Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Alberta , Edmonton, Alberta , Canada.
Department of Physiology, Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine , Chicago, Illinois.
J Neurophysiol. 2019 Apr 1;121(4):1352-1367. doi: 10.1152/jn.00776.2018. Epub 2019 Jan 9.
Spinal cord injury leads to a devastating loss of motor function and yet is accompanied by a paradoxical emergence of muscle spasms, which often involve complex muscle activation patterns across multiple joints, reciprocal muscle timing, and rhythmic clonus. We investigated the hypothesis that spasms are a manifestation of partially recovered function in spinal central pattern-generating (CPG) circuits that normally coordinate complex postural and locomotor functions. We focused on the commissural propriospinal V3 neurons that coordinate interlimb movements during locomotion and examined mice with a chronic spinal transection. When the V3 neurons were optogenetically activated with a light pulse, a complex coordinated pattern of motoneuron activity was evoked with reciprocal, crossed, and intersegmental activity. In these same mice, brief sensory stimulation evoked spasms with a complex pattern of activity very similar to that evoked by light, and the timing of these spasms was readily reset by activation of V3 neurons. Given that V3 neurons receive abundant sensory input, these results suggest that sensory activation of V3 neurons is alone sufficient to generate spasms. Indeed, when we silenced V3 neurons optogenetically, sensory evoked spasms were inhibited. Also, inhibiting general CPG activity by blocking N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors inhibited V3 evoked activity and associated spasms, whereas NMDA application did the opposite. Furthermore, overwhelming the V3 neurons with repeated optogenetic stimulation inhibited subsequent sensory evoked spasms, both in vivo and in vitro. Taken together, these results demonstrate that spasms are generated in part by sensory activation of V3 neurons and associated CPG circuits. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We investigated whether locomotor-related excitatory interneurons (V3) play a role in coordinating muscle spasm activity after spinal cord injury (SCI). Unexpectedly, we found that these neurons not only coordinate reciprocal motor activity but are critical for initiating spasms, as well. More generally, these results suggest that V3 neurons are important in initiating and coordinating motor output after SCI and thus provide a promising target for restoring residual motor function.
脊髓损伤导致运动功能的毁灭性丧失,但伴随着肌肉痉挛的出现,这种痉挛常常涉及多个关节的复杂肌肉激活模式、肌肉的交互时序和有节奏的阵挛。我们假设痉挛是脊髓中枢模式发生器(CPG)回路部分恢复功能的表现,这些回路通常协调复杂的姿势和运动功能。我们专注于 commissural propriospinal V3 神经元,这些神经元在运动过程中协调四肢运动,并检查了慢性脊髓横切的小鼠。当 V3 神经元用光脉冲进行光遗传学激活时,会引发复杂的协调运动神经元活动模式,具有交互、交叉和节段间的活动。在这些相同的小鼠中,短暂的感觉刺激会引发具有与光刺激非常相似的复杂活动模式的痉挛,并且 V3 神经元的激活可以轻松重置这些痉挛的时间。鉴于 V3 神经元接收大量的感觉输入,这些结果表明,V3 神经元的感觉激活本身足以产生痉挛。事实上,当我们用光遗传学沉默 V3 神经元时,感觉诱发的痉挛被抑制了。此外,通过阻断 N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸(NMDA)受体抑制 V3 诱发的活动和相关痉挛来抑制一般 CPG 活动,而 NMDA 的应用则相反。此外,通过重复光遗传学刺激来淹没 V3 神经元也抑制了体内和体外随后的感觉诱发痉挛。综上所述,这些结果表明,痉挛部分是由 V3 神经元和相关 CPG 回路的感觉激活产生的。新的和值得注意的是,我们研究了运动相关兴奋性中间神经元(V3)在脊髓损伤(SCI)后协调肌肉痉挛活动中是否发挥作用。出乎意料的是,我们发现这些神经元不仅协调交互运动活动,而且对引发痉挛也很重要。更一般地说,这些结果表明 V3 神经元在 SCI 后发起和协调运动输出中很重要,因此为恢复残留运动功能提供了一个有前途的靶点。