Center for Motor Neuron Biology and Disease, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Department of Neurology, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Brain. 2023 Nov 2;146(11):4574-4593. doi: 10.1093/brain/awad221.
Neuromodulation by serotonin regulates the activity of neuronal networks responsible for a wide variety of essential behaviours. Serotonin (or 5-HT) typically activates metabotropic G protein-coupled receptors, which in turn initiate second messenger signalling cascades and induce short and long-lasting behavioural effects. Serotonin is intricately involved in the production of locomotor activity and gait control for different motor behaviours. Although dysfunction of serotonergic neurotransmission has been associated with mood disorders and spasticity after spinal cord injury, whether and to what extent such dysregulation is implicated in movement disorders has not been firmly established. Here, we investigated whether serotonergic neuromodulation is affected in spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), a neurodegenerative disease caused by ubiquitous deficiency of the SMN protein. The hallmarks of SMA are death of spinal motor neurons, muscle atrophy and impaired motor control, both in human patients and mouse models of disease. We used a severe mouse model of SMA, that closely recapitulates the severe symptoms exhibited by type I SMA patients, the most common and most severe form of the disease. Together, with mouse genetics, optogenetics, physiology, morphology and behavioural analysis, we report severe dysfunction of serotonergic neurotransmission in the spinal cord of SMA mice, both at early and late stages of the disease. This dysfunction is followed by reduction of 5-HT synapses on vulnerable motor neurons. We demonstrate that motor neurons innervating axial and trunk musculature are preferentially affected, suggesting a possible cause for the proximo-distal progression of disease, and raising the possibility that it may underlie scoliosis in SMA patients. We also demonstrate that the 5-HT dysfunction is caused by SMN deficiency in serotonergic neurons in the raphe nuclei of the brainstem. The behavioural significance of the dysfunction in serotonergic neuromodulation is underlined by inter-limb discoordination in SMA mice, which is ameliorated when selective restoration of SMN in 5-HT neurons is achieved by genetic means. Our study uncovers an unexpected dysfunction of serotonergic neuromodulation in SMA and indicates that, if normal function is to be restored under disease conditions, 5-HT neuromodulation should be a key target for therapeutic approaches.
血清素通过神经调制调节负责广泛基本行为的神经元网络的活性。血清素(或 5-HT)通常激活代谢型 G 蛋白偶联受体,后者继而启动第二信使信号级联,并诱导短期和长期的行为效应。血清素深入参与不同运动行为的运动活性和步态控制的产生。尽管血清素能神经传递的功能障碍与情绪障碍和脊髓损伤后的痉挛有关,但这种失调是否以及在何种程度上涉及运动障碍尚未得到确定。在这里,我们研究了神经调制的血清素是否在脊髓性肌萎缩症(SMA)中受到影响,SMA 是一种由普遍缺乏 SMN 蛋白引起的神经退行性疾病。SMA 的特征是脊髓运动神经元死亡、肌肉萎缩和运动控制受损,这在人类患者和疾病的小鼠模型中均有体现。我们使用一种严重的 SMA 小鼠模型,该模型紧密模拟了 I 型 SMA 患者表现出的严重症状,I 型是该疾病最常见和最严重的形式。通过结合小鼠遗传学、光遗传学、生理学、形态学和行为分析,我们报告了 SMA 小鼠脊髓中血清素能神经传递的严重功能障碍,无论是在疾病的早期还是晚期阶段。这种功能障碍伴随着 5-HT 突触在易受影响的运动神经元上的减少。我们证明了支配轴性和躯干肌肉的运动神经元受到优先影响,这表明疾病进展的近端-远端可能性,并且提出了它可能是 SMA 患者脊柱侧凸的原因。我们还证明,5-HT 功能障碍是由脑桥中缝核的血清素能神经元中的 SMN 缺乏引起的。通过遗传手段选择性恢复 5-HT 神经元中的 SMN 可改善 SMA 小鼠的 5-HT 功能障碍,这突出了血清素能神经调制功能障碍的行为意义。我们的研究揭示了 SMA 中血清素能神经调制的意外功能障碍,并表明如果要在疾病条件下恢复正常功能,5-HT 神经调制应该是治疗方法的关键目标。