Plateau potentials in sacrocaudal motoneurons of chronic spinal rats, recorded in vitro. (17/130)

Intracellular recordings were made from sacrocaudal tail motoneurons of acute and chronic spinal rats to examine whether plateau potentials contribute to spasticity associated with chronic injury. The spinal cord was transected at the S2 level, causing, over time, exaggerated long-lasting reflexes (hyperreflexia) associated with a general spasticity syndrome in the tail muscles of chronic spinal rats (1-5 mo postinjury). The whole sacrocaudal spinal cord of chronic or acute spinal rats was removed and maintained in vitro in normal artificial cerebral spinal fluid (ACSF). Hyperreflexia in chronic spinal rats was verified by recording the long-lasting ventral root responses to dorsal root stimulation in vitro. The intrinsic properties of sacrocaudal motoneurons were studied using intracellular injections of slow triangular current ramps or graded current pulses. In chronic spinal rats, the current injection triggered sustained firing and an associated sustained depolarization (plateau potential; 34/35 cells; mean, 5.5 mV; duration >5 s; normal ACSF). The threshold for plateau initiation was low and usually corresponded to an acceleration in the membrane potential just before recruitment. After recruitment and plateau activation, the firing rate changed linearly with current during the slow ramps [63% of cells had a linear frequency-current (F-I) relation] despite the presence of the plateau. The persistent inward current (I(PIC)) producing the plateau and sustained firing was estimated to be on average 0.8 nA as determined by the reduction in injected current needed to stop the sustained firing [DeltaI = -0.8 +/- 0.6 (SD) nA], compared with the current needed to start firing (I = 1.7 +/- 1.5 nA; 47% reduction). In motoneurons of acute spinal rats, plateaus were rarely seen (3/22), although they could be made to occur with bath application of serotonin. In motoneurons of chronic spinal rats there were no significant changes in the mean passive input resistance, rheobase or amplitude of the spike afterhyperpolarization (AHP) as compared with acute spinal rats. However, there were significant increases in AHP duration and initial firing rate at recruitment and decreases in minimum firing rate and F-I slope. We suggest that the higher initial firing rate resulted from the plateau activation at recruitment and the lower F-I slope resulted from an increase in active conductance during firing, due to I(PIC). Brief dorsal root stimulation also triggered a plateau and sustained discharge (long-lasting reflexes; 2-5 s) in motoneurons of chronic (but not acute) spinal rats. When the plateau was eliminated by a hyperpolarizing current bias, the reflex response was significantly shortened (to 1 s). Thus plateaus contributed substantially to the long-lasting reflexes in vitro and therefore should contribute significantly to the corresponding exaggerated reflexes and spasticity in awake chronic spinal rats.  (+info)

A clinical and pathological study of motor neurone disease on Guam. (18/130)

Despite over 40 years of intensive study, the cause of the high incidence of motor neurone disease (MND) on Guam, and the relationship between this disease and MND seen in the rest of the world are still uncertain. We present a series of 45 cases of Guamanian MND, which reaffirm the clinical similarity between this disease and MND seen in other countries. However, the occurrence of MND among the indigenous Chamorros of Guam is distinguished by four factors: (i) high prevalence; (ii) frequent familial occurrence; (iii) co-occurrence with the parkinsonism-dementia complex (PDC); and (iv) association with an unusual and distinctive linear retinopathy termed Guam retinal pigment epitheliopathy (GRPE). These distinguishing factors were not present in four non-Chamorros who resided on Guam when their MND symptoms occurred. Pathologically, the classical features of MND were seen in Guamanian Chamorro cases including ubiquitin inclusions. Neurofibrillary tangles were frequently seen. The neurofibrillary tangles appeared in the same distribution as described in the PDC but, unlike classical PDC, they were not usually associated with cell loss and occurred less frequently. While neurofibrillary tangle formation and the clinicopathological syndrome of MND may occur in parallel, observations from this series suggest that pathologically classical MND on Guam may occur independently of neurofibrillary degeneration and the clinical features of PDC.  (+info)

Functional redundancy of ventral spinal locomotor pathways. (19/130)

Identification of long tracts responsible for the initiation of spontaneous locomotion is critical for spinal cord injury (SCI) repair strategies. Pathways derived from the mesencephalic locomotor region and pontomedullary medial reticular formation responsible for fictive locomotion in decerebrate preparations project to the thoracolumbar levels of the spinal cord via reticulospinal axons in the ventrolateral funiculus (VLF). However, white matter regions critical for spontaneous over-ground locomotion remain unclear because cats, monkeys, and humans display varying degrees of locomotor recovery after ventral SCIs. We studied the contributions of myelinated tracts in the VLF and ventral columns (VC) to spontaneous over-ground locomotion in the adult rat using demyelinating lesions. Animals received ethidium bromide plus photon irradiation producing discrete demyelinating lesions sufficient to stop axonal conduction in the VLF, VC, VLF-VC, or complete ventral white matter (CV). Behavior [open-field Basso, Beattie, and Bresnahan (BBB) scores and grid walking] and transcranial magnetic motor-evoked potentials (tcMMEP) were studied at 1, 2, and 4 weeks after lesion. VLF lesions resulted in complete loss or severe attenuation of tcMMEPs, with mean BBB scores of 18.0, and no grid walking deficits. VC lesions produced behavior similar to VLF-lesioned animals but did not significantly affect tcMMEPs. VC-VLF and CV lesions resulted in complete loss of tcMMEP signals with mean BBB scores of 12.7 and 6.5, respectively. Our data support a diffuse arrangement of axons within the ventral white matter that may comprise a system of multiple descending pathways subserving spontaneous over-ground locomotion in the intact animal.  (+info)

Defective cortical drive to muscle in Parkinson's disease and its improvement with levodopa. (20/130)

We recorded whole-scalp magnetoencephalographic (MEG) signals simultaneously with surface electromyographic (EMG) activity from eight patients with Parkinson's disease after withdrawal and reinstatement of treatment with levodopa. Variations were seen in the coherence between the forearm extensor EMG and the MEG signal originating near or in the hand region of the primary motor cortex. As a group, the parkinsonian patients withdrawn from levodopa showed a reduction in the coherence at 15-30 Hz and 35-60 Hz, and a further three untreated patients had abnormally strong MEG-EMG coherence at 5-12 Hz compared with when medicated or with eight healthy age-matched control subjects. We conclude that the basal ganglia have a specific effect on the temporal organization of motor cortical activity during voluntary tonic contraction. Abnormalities in this aspect of basal ganglia function may directly contribute to bradykinesia and weakness in Parkinson's disease.  (+info)

Neuronal death is enhanced and begins during foetal development in type I spinal muscular atrophy spinal cord. (21/130)

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutations in the survival motor neurone gene (SMN). The degeneration and loss of the anterior horn cells is the major neuropathological finding in SMA, but the mechanism and timing of this abnormal motor neurone death remain unknown. A quantitative study was carried out comparing neuronal death in controls and SMA foetuses and neonates. Between 12 and 15 weeks of gestational age, a significant increase in nuclear DNA vulnerability, as revealed with the method of in situ end-labelling of nuclear DNA fragmentation, was detected in SMA foetuses and was reflected by a decrease in the number of neurones of the anterior horn. Neurones with nuclear DNA vulnerability are no longer detected at the end of the foetal period and the post-natal period. On the other hand, abnormal morphology of motor neurones, mainly early chromatolytic changes, was observed only after birth. Our findings indicate that in type I SMA, the absence or dysfunction of SMN is reflected by an enhanced neuronal death that is already detectable at 12 weeks, the earliest SMA foetal stage analysed. This is associated with a progressive loss of motor neurones towards the neonatal period. Given that a proportion of the remaining SMA motor neurones in the neonatal period appear with pathological findings not detected at earlier stages, it can be hypothesized that type I SMA results in differential age-dependent responses leading to cell death and motor neurone degeneration during development.  (+info)

Regulation of AChR clustering by Dishevelled interacting with MuSK and PAK1. (22/130)

An important aspect of synapse development is the clustering of neurotransmitter receptors in the postsynaptic membrane. Although MuSK is required for acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clustering at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ), the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear. We report here that in muscle cells, MuSK interacts with Dishevelled (Dvl), a signaling molecule important for planar cell polarity. Disruption of the MuSK-Dvl interaction inhibits Agrin- and neuron-induced AChR clustering. Expression of dominant-negative Dvl1 in postsynaptic muscle cells reduces the amplitude of spontaneous synaptic currents at the NMJ. Moreover, Dvl1 interacts with downstream kinase PAK1. Agrin activates PAK, and this activation requires Dvl. Inhibition of PAK1 activity attenuates AChR clustering. These results demonstrate important roles of Dvl and PAK in Agrin/MuSK-induced AChR clustering and reveal a novel function of Dvl in synapse development.  (+info)

Hsp27 upregulation and phosphorylation is required for injured sensory and motor neuron survival. (23/130)

Peripheral nerve transection results in the rapid death by apoptosis of neonatal but not adult sensory and motor neurons. We show that this is due to induction and phosphorylation in all adult axotomized neurons of the small heat shock protein Hsp27 and the failure of such induction in most neonatal neurons. In vivo delivery of human Hsp27 but not a nonphosphorylatable mutant prevents neonatal rat motor neurons from nerve injury-induced death, while knockdown in vitro and in vivo of Hsp27 in adult injured sensory neurons results in apoptosis. Hsp27's neuroprotective action is downstream of cytochrome c release from mitochondria and upstream of caspase-3 activation. Transcriptional and posttranslational regulation of Hsp27 is necessary for sensory and motor neuron survival following peripheral nerve injury.  (+info)

Angiotensin AT(1)-receptors depolarize neonatal spinal motoneurons and other ventral horn neurons via two different conductances. (24/130)

Angiotensin receptors are highly expressed in neonatal spinal cord. To identify their influence on neuronal excitability, we used patch-clamp recordings in spinal cord slices to assess responses of neonatal rat (5-12 days) ventral horn neurons to bath-applied angiotensin II (ANG II; 1 microM). In 14/34 identified motoneurons tested under current clamp, ANG II induced a slowly rising and prolonged membrane depolarization, blockable with Losartan (n = 5) and (Sar(1), Val(5), Ala(8))-ANG II (Saralasin, n = 4) but not PD123319 (1 microM each; n = 4). Under voltage clamp (V(H) -65 mV), 7/22 motoneurons displayed an ANG-II-induced tetrodotoxin-resistant inward current (-128 +/- 31 pA) with a similar time course, an associated reduction in membrane conductance and net current reversal at -98.8 +/- 3.9 mV. Losartan-sensitive ANG II responses were also evoked in 27/78 tested ventral horn "interneurons." By contrast with motoneurons, their ANG-II-induced inward current was smaller (-39.9 +/- 5.2 pA) and analysis of their I-V plots revealed three patterns. In eight cells, membrane conductance decreased with net inward current reversing at -103.8 +/- 4.1 mV. In seven cells, membrane conductance increased with net current reversing at -37.9 +/- 3.6 mV. In 12 cells, I-V lines remained parallel with no reversal within the current range tested. Intracellular dialysis with GTP-gamma-S significantly prolonged the ANG II effect in seven responsive interneurons and GDP-beta-S significantly reduced the ANG II response in four other cells. Peak inward currents were significantly reduced in all 13 responding neurons recorded in slices incubated in pertussis toxin (5 microgram/ml) for 12-18 h or in 12 neurons perfused with N-ethylmaleimide. Of 29 interneurons sensitive to pertussis toxin or N-ethylmaleimide treatment, 9 cells displayed a decrease in membrane conductance that reversed at -101.3 +/- 3.8 mV. In eight cells, membrane conductance increased and reversed at -38.7 +/- 3.4 mV. In 12 cells, the I-V lines remained parallel with no reversal within the current range tested, suggesting that both conductances are modulated by pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins. These observations reveal a direct, G-protein-mediated depolarizing action of ANG II on neonatal rat ventral horn neurons. They also imply involvement of two distinct conductances that are differentially distributed among different cell types.  (+info)